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Description:

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Competing in a global world is a reality of the technology market
today. The production of goods and services no longer recognizes political
boundaries and corporate DNA is task-based, not geography-based. The "flat
world" phenomenom used to be perceived as a threat, but it's now
being embraced as an opportunity.
In this ITSMA Viewpoint, Malcolm Frank, senior vice president
of marketing and strategy at Cognizant, shares five key lessons on how
to achieve marketing success in the global marketplace:
- Employ "naked" marketing. In today's global world,
spin no longer works. Customers, and even your employees, have unbelievably
strong BS filters. If marketers don't understand this phenomenon, they
risk being designated as corporate liars.
- Understand cultural differences: What's the Same? To be successful
globally, you need a strategic intent and corporate culture that transcend
national boundaries. Marketing's role in communicating the strategy
and essence of the culture is invaluable.
- Understand the cultural differences: What's Different? Marketers
need to pay attention to how people in different regions learn. Marketing
is all about educating; if you can pique people's interest and educate
them in a way that feels natural to them, people will be receptive.
- Internal marketing programs are vitally important! With global
delivery, consultants may never see their clients, which creates some
very strange situations from a management perspective. How do you close
the gap between supply and demand in this circumstance? Internal marketing
programs.
- Be "atomically" global. You have to globalize
at the smallest level of activity so that the work takes place seamlessly
across the globe with the best person for each task doing each task,
regardless of his or her physical location.
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