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Lean Marketing House Giveaway

Posted onAugust 21, 2014November 12, 2017Authorbusiness901

Connect with Me on LinkedIn and Mention the Date of the Blog Post

I will send you a Free PDF of The Lean Marketing House

A few reasons to consider the Lean Marketing House book:

  1. Is there a reason to use Lean in Sales and Marketing?
  2. Do you have to be practicing Lean in the rest of the company?
  3. Is Lean Marketing the same as Agile Marketing?
  4. How does A3 problem solving relate to Marketing?
  5. Why is Social Media so Lean?
  6. Can your company ever complete a Lean Transformation without Sales on board?
  7. What does Knowledge Creation have to do with Lean?
  8. Develop stronger partnerships with your customers?
  9. Provide a methodology to become more precise in your sales and marketing?
  10. Begin a continuous improvement program in your sales and marketing?

Book Description: When you first hear the terms Lean and Value Stream most of our minds think about manufacturing processes and waste. Putting the words marketing behind both of them is hardly creative. Whether Marketing meets Lean under this name or another it will be very close to the Lean methodologies develop in software primarily under the Agile connotation. This book is about bridging that gap. It may not bring all the pieces in place, but it is a starting point for creating true iterative marketing cycles based on not only Lean principles but more importantly Customer Value.

It is not about being in a cozy facility or going to Gemba on the factory floor. It is about starting with collaboration with your customer and not ending there. It is about creating Sales Teams that are made up of different departments not other sales people. It is about using PDCA (Plan-Do-Check-Act) through-out the marketing cycle with constant feedback from customers that can only occur if they are part of the process. It is about creating value in your marketing that a customer needs to enable him to make a better decision.

It is about managing a Value Stream Process. This is going to require re-thinking about the way you do business and the way you think about your markets. More importantly the way you think about Value. Value in terms of how your market defines it. Stop thinking about product or even product benefits. Your marketing systems must support the delivery of value to your customer at a much higher rate than your competitor. Targeting that Value proposition through the methods described in this book will increase your ability to deliver quicker and more accurately than your competitor. It is a moving target and the principles of Lean and PDCA facilitates the journey to Customer Value.

We use the Lean Marketing HouseTM as a way of introducing Lean. In Lean Thinking: Banish Waste and Create Wealth in Your Corporation, Revised and Updated by Womack and Jones, the authors introduced five core concepts:

  1. Specify value from the standpoint of the end customer by product family.
  2. Identify all the steps in the value stream for each product family, eliminating whenever possible those steps that do not create value.
  3. Make the value-creating steps occur in tight sequence so the product will flow smoothly toward the customer.
  4. As flow is introduced, let customers pull value from the next upstream activity.
  5. As value is specified, value streams are identified, wasted steps are removed, and flow and pull are introduced, begin the process again and continue it until a state of perfection is reached in which perfect value is created with no waste.

The book uses the symbolic Lean House to symbolize the five basic principles of Lean:

1. Identify Value (Roof)
2. Map Value Stream (Header)
3. Create Flow (Value Stream – Pillars)
4. Establish Pull (Foundation)
5. Seek Perfection (Base)

Do you create valuable enough content that your customer would pay to get it? Marketing has to address value and the content they are distributing. As important, they have to address the time or the stream of their marketing system. The acceleration or throughput is extremely important. Creating systems within our process that are efficient and propels customers through Value Stream is imperative. Our days of leaving non-responsive customers on our mailing list, online or offline are ending. Creating advertising to the masses and expecting a reasonable return have already ended for small and maybe even medium size businesses. These statements are not meant to say that we only market to someone for 90 or 120 days and that’s it. It is more inline that we have to create interactive platforms that allow our customers to interact at their leisure, their timing and at their discretion. A good description of pull marketing, but is this how you manage a marketing funnel?

You must understand your Value Stream well enough to have a throttle. You must know where your constraint is, maybe even on a seasonal basis. You must address indicators that are built into your process and not built into month-end reports. Do you have a monitoring system that lets you know? Do you adjust your marketing message accordingly? Are you improving your stream with better information to qualify yourself to the customer? If you are proving a higher value of information to the customer, does that propel you through their decision making process?

CategoriesMarketing with Lean CategoryTagsABM Marketing, Account Based Marketing, Funnel of Opportunity, giveaway, house, Lean Marketing, marketing, Marketing Funnel, Sales Funnel

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  • Business901
  • About
    • Joe Dager CV
    • Policies
  • Funnel of Opportunity
    • Funnel of Opportunity Steps
  • Marketing Experiments
    • BRANOPS: Making Your Story Your Strategy
    • Strength Based Sales and Marketing
      • Appreciative Inquiry Category
    • Expanding The Use of Freelancers As Part Of Your Strategy
    • Lean Marketing Lab
      • Marketing Kata
      • Marketing Your Value Stream
      • The Simplicity of Lean
      • Lean Service Design
  • What Orgs Hire Us To Do
    • Key Outcomes of A Customer Value Program
  • Action Learning
  • Customer Value
  • eBooks
  • Funnel of Opportunity
    • Step 1: Identify Target, Key Customers
    • Step 2: Customer Outcomes (JTBD)
    • Step 3: Product/Service Offerings
    • Step 4: Value Proposition
    • Step 5: Sales/Marketing Activities – 3 E’s
    • Step 6: Marketing Channels
    • Step 7: Resources/Investments
    • Step 8: Clustering Customers for Opportunity
    • Step 9: Identify Adjacencies
    • Step 10: Co-create Vision
    • Step 11: Listening & Learning
    • Step 12: Sustain & Grow
  • Outcome Based Thinking
  • Appreciative Inquiry
  • Metaverse
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