Incubation Week is a Hot Place to Be

Microsoft Dynamics CRM Incubation Week

Last month in “Hatching Success with Microsoft Dynamics CRM,” the Marketing Consigliere blogged about Microsoft Incubation Week and encouraged startup companies to take advantage of the program.

This week, the Marketing Consigliere was honored to be a guest of Sanjay Jain, ISV Architect Evangelist, and Dave Drach, Managing Director of the Emerging Business Team for Microsoft.  As an observer for part of the day, it was very interesting to meet some of the companies participating and listen to a mid-day guest speaker.  This was not your typical Washington, DC area startup event, full of VCs and entrepreneurs, and packed with the usual cast of supporters; rather it was a very exclusive program for a handful of companies that made it past Microsoft’s screening.  This is a national event and there were companies from outside the region.

Dan Blake at Microsoft Incubation Week

Dan Blake of CourseMax told the class of entrepreneurs about his community of continuing professional education service providers and the decisions he had to make regarding its architecture and the path of software development.  While the story of this company is still evolving, Dan underscored the benefits he derived from working in collaboration with Microsoft Dynamics CRM.

Some of the other noteworthy participants in this event for B2B startups were:

Nathan Haywood, VP of Technology for Channel Blade, a provider of online marketing, lead management and sales education solutions that drive customers and sales for thousands of manufacturers and dealers in the marine, RV and powersports industries;

Lon Orenstein, Owner of pinpointtools, which is developing an analytics tool that intelligently measures and analyzes revisions to Microsoft documents;

And a gentleman (Chris Hopkinson?)  from DubMeNow, which was blogged about in “Two Better Mousetraps?” earlier this month.  Since DubMeNow wants users to not use business cards and instead text or email their contact information to another person’s address book via a mobile phone, he didn’t have a business card to give out.    So the Marketing Consigliere feigns old age and can’t remember the gentleman’s name because since DubMeNow hasn’t launched its capability on Windows Mobile yet, he could not benefit from the DubMeNow service.

In “Two Better Mousetraps,” the Marketing Consigliere, a technology enthusiast himself, blogged about the need to keep old fashioned business cards.  And today he found another reason (besides his failing memory) to keep using business cards, and it came from Sanjay’s, which had Braille embossed upon it.  Once again, first impressions count, no pun intended; a visually impaired person immediately can benefit from this when they’re not anywhere in the vicinity of a special braille printer.

Sanjay Jain's Business Card

However, DubMeNow’s integration with Microsoft Dynamics CRM and other customer relationship management platforms is a very smart move that makes absolute business sense.  So maybe it pays to have both the old way and new way.  After all, techies like redundancy, don’t they?

The Marketing Consigliere would like to thank Sanjay and Microsoft for allowing him to sit in on Incubation Week and admires their accomodation for the visually impaired on a simple thing like a business card.  If invited back, he would definitely come to Incubation Week again and urges ambitious software startups to consider this great program.

Doing a 180 on Mingle360

Mingle360

In “Two Better Mousetraps,” the Marketing Consigliere blogged about his preference for one professional-to-professional communication technology over another.  He thought DubMeNow offered a less cumbersome way to electronically transfer information between networkers than Mingle360.  Living in the Washington, DC area, it was interesting to blog about the two companies.

Now the Marketing Consigliere would like to exercise his prerogative to correct a misperception he had about Mingle360.  You see, the messaging on the website at first impression talks to the consumer/enduser:

Start connecting to people in a safe and easy way!”

Meet | Click | Connect

Pre-order Your Minglestick Today!

Not to mention the mascot “MingleMan,” this site had all the trappings of a professional B2C site looking for viral product adoption.   However, yesterday evening at a networking event, the Marketing Consigliere had the pleasure of speaking with Bradley Blinn, Vice President of Sales & Marketing for Mingle360, who graciuosly clarified what the company and product were all about.

The MingleStick , a component of the Mingle360 service, is not meant to be a gadget for sale to individuals.  It is a self-liquidating premium targeted to event and conference managers who can emblazon their or a sponsor’s logo on it, and then give it away to attendees for their use.  At the event, end users can exchange “codes” via the devices which can later be used plugged into USB ports on computers to obtain contact information, specific literature and other content warehoused at the Mingle360 site.

The implications of this are great in that attendees do not have to be weighted down as much with hardcopy collateral as they work the aisles and crowds.  It also means that unlike the BuyerConnect service from CompuSystems , which I blogged about earlier this year in “FOSE Followup Folly,” there is the possibility for a higher level of information immediately available to the customer whose behavior can be measured.

It will be very interesting to see how well this concept is accepted by the B2B crowd.  The Marketing Consigliere appreciates the patience and professionalism of Mingle360 and regrets the misunderstanding from his previous blog.

Two Better Mousetraps?

Two companies in the Washington, DC area are approaching a time honored business ritual – the exchange of business cards between two professionals – in slightly different ways.

DubMeNow of Vienna, Virginia has a smart phone based application that allows people to quickly text or email their contact data to another user with the application loaded on their smart phone. The data appends directly to device’s address book and whenever contact information changes, it is automatically updated. At the time of this blog, they are live for Google Android and the BlackBerry – next come Apple iPhone and Windows Mobile devices.

Mingle360 of Fairfax, Virginia has developed a USB based device they call the “MingleStick” which wirelessly communicates to another Minglestick when they are pointed toward each other and both users press a button.  Along with a contact manager called “MingleManager,” a user can manage their identity by assigning “need to know” type privileges to contacts.

Both solutions intend to make obsolete the need to share, sort through, enter or amend printed data on those little analog rectangles.  On one hand, the Marketing Consigliere still has a few boxes of business cards ordered from VistaPrint that he wants to hand out:

Front
Back

Look at them.  They’re artistic (OK, they’re VistaPrint templates)  and you can write extraneous notes on them, stick them in your pocket, and quickly type the data in in less than 30 seconds if you’re coordinated. Perhaps that’s a big if.  While the Mingle360 may be useful at trade shows, there are a plethora of existing technologies that are being implemented, albeit at trade show rip-off prices.

Even if either of these products take off, once the novelty works off, where’s the impact known as “First Impression?“  A business card, with the right messaging (title, logo, tagline, etc.) , contributes to that along with the obvious human factors such as appearance, handshake, eye contact because it’s visual.

The Marketing Consigliere is old enough that he may “bitterly cling” to his business cards and conduct “old fashioned” social networking, but on the other hand, he does like gadgets.  However, he doesn’t need another proprietary device if one gadget can already do the trick.  And he’s not crazy about what amounts to be a proprietary CRM app.   So he opts for the the DubMeNow capability.  He just wishes they’d please release the Windows Mobile version.  It’s been two weeks since their launch party when this photo was taken:

Will Tweet for Drinks