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4 April 2001
12th Annual Cambashi Seminar
'Chinese Whispers win Marketing Marathons'
Which message Makes the sale?
Cambashi presents an informed opinion of
the users' perspective on the use of IT in Industry
Today, at its annual seminar for senior managers
from the IT industry, the Cambashi team and their guest speakers
will present the users' view of the market, the lessons to be learnt
from the past twelve months and also explore the more significant
opportunities they see for the coming year. The seminar, entitled
'Chinese Whispers win Marketing Marathons', is the twelfth organised
by Cambashi, and takes its name from one of the themes of the day,
the importance of adding local colour and significance to the marketing
message that is delivered to your desktop by the corporate website.
According to Mike Evans, Cambashi's managing director,
'By focussing their sales and marketing efforts on central web site
and co-ordinated international sales literature, vendors can definitely
improve the returns on their sales and marketing investments.'
He maintains, however, that this should not prevent local sales
teams from tuning the corporate message to suit local conditions
and the concerns of their particular customers. Business is
won by getting these local values ('Chinese Whispers') right, not
by eliminating them.
In their look into the future the seminar will
feature three hot application areas. Under the heading of
Design the focus will be on the growing interest in Collaborative
Engineering - getting Design to be a more 'joined up' activity.
In the broader Enterprise Applications area Cambashi will examine
the rigorous demands that online business creates not only for integration
of commercial and product information, but also for creation of
product catalogues. Lastly and very topically, the seminar
will take a software vendors view of the Application Service Provider
business model, and its impact on revenues and market opportunities.
Guest speaker Jeff Drust, Vice President, e-business,
Autodesk Inc will explain the challenges Autodesk has faced
in changing the corporate culture of the company and its channels
to take on board e-issues. He will explain that it is not
just a question of winning acceptance of new ideas, but also what
to change, when to change it and how to drive that change, whilst
continuing to meet the expectations of Wall Street - all within
the availability of scarce resources.
In a late change to the programme, Mike Roberts,
most recently Business Process Improvement director at Rolls Royce,
will address the IT Vendors in the audience under the challenging
title of 'If you want to talk to me more than once'. An opportunity
many of us must have wished for on at least one occasions!
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