Sources: Barkley, Giants agree to 1 year, $11M

The Giants and RB Saquon Barkley have agreed to a 1-year deal worth up to $11 million, sources confirmed Tuesday to ESPN.

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New comment by iva_perspectiva in "Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (December 2022)"

Visual designer | Remote

Location: Zagreb

Willing to relocate: Yes, if sponsored

Contract | Freelance

Education: Master’s degree (Magister of Science in Graphic Technology)

Portfolio: https://bit.ly/IK_Portfolio

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Fields: Visual design, UI design, Branding, Communications Design, Marketing Design, Motion Graphics, Graphic Design

Experienced (7+ Y) creative designer, practicing a strategic and analytical, yet creative approach. I am a visual communication professional who can create or work under a specific and clear design language. I can deliver functional design systems and full-service assets based on data-driven insights. I offer strong communication skills, precision, and an ability to collaborate or lead as a dynamic and dedicated professional.

Email: iva@perspectiva.studio

6 Product Marketing Strategies That Will Get You More Sales

According to the Harvard Business School, the greatest problem faced by companies when launching a new product is a total lack of preparation.

Because of this, up to 30,000 new products are launched every year—and at least 95 percent end in failure.

While products can fail for many reasons, a solid product marketing strategy can help to mitigate many risk factors and boost your success.

What Is Product Marketing?

Product marketing is the entire process of bringing a new product to market, from the research and development to the launch and beyond.

It’s used by companies of all sizes with the ultimate goal of understanding and filling customers’ product needs.

Whether you’re launching your first product or your fiftieth, a solid product marketing plan can be the thing you need to push your success over the edge.

Benefits of Product Marketing

The main benefit of product marketing is to increase sales. However, an effective product marketing strategy can have more benefits than “just” profit.

First and foremost, product marketing can help you to position your product in the market for successful targeting and less advert waste.

A proper strategy would answer questions like “what product gap needs to be filled?” and “how does my product stand out from the competition?”

With product marketing, you also gain a deeper understanding of your customer base.

  • Who is your audience?
  • What are they buying?
  • What is their main reason for making a purchase?

By creating such buyer personas, you can increase your value proposition by up to 82 percent.

Then, to top it all off, you’ll get to unlock new insights about your competitors. While this isn’t often a huge concern for smaller businesses, up to 90 percent of Fortune 500 companies practice “competitive intelligence”—which has to say something for its value. If you want to grow, get ahead of your competitors while you still can.

Examples of Product Marketing

Before we get into our own strategies, let’s look at two brands with successful product marketing campaigns.

1. Poo Pourri

Poo Pourri is a great example of a brand that executed product marketing for an otherwise embarrassing and taboo subject (a toilet spray that eliminates the unpleasant odors associated with the bathroom.) It does so with humor and relatability because, after all, everybody poops.

They positioned their product perfectly.

Their first-ever video advertisement not only ranked as the number five most-watched video on the platform in 2013, but it also gained the brand a cult following that has continued to grow over the years.

An example of effective product marketing from Poo-Pourri.

How can other brands, even those with less taboo products, learn from Poo Pourri’s success?

First and foremost, find your platform and go hard. Poo Pourri used video advertising in its early years to continue to grow its following. This included television and online advertising where the brand was able to push the envelope with humor.

The brand also used customer personas to its advantage. It’s true, everybody poops. However, not everyone feels the need for a toilet spray.

Instead, their advertisements targeted certain markets and situations to really drive their point home.

2. Tesla

When you think of Tesla, what comes to mind? Electric cars. Clean energy. Solar power.

Your mental alignment of Tesla with these keywords and others in the clean energy space is for one simple reason: they built their entire identity, including each product marketing strategy, around their brand statement.

Just a snippet of Tesla’s brand statement is as follows:

“Tesla builds not only all-electric vehicles but also infinitely scalable clean energy generation and storage products. Tesla believes the faster the world stops relying on fossil fuels and moves towards a zero-emission future, the better.”

An example of product marketing from Tesla, showing a red car driving on the road.
An example of effective product marketing from Tesla.

Tesla effectively cornered the electric vehicle market. It knew it had a target audience in the space, of course, but it never swayed from its brand statement when developing electric vehicles and other clean energy products.

What has that success looked like? Tesla currently boasts about 75 percent of the electric car market share with its Model 3 being the best-selling vehicle worldwide in 2021.

6 Product Marketing Strategies to Grow Your Business

If you’re excited to be a success story like the examples above, then consider these six product marketing strategies.

1. Pair With Robust Content Marketing

Did you ever think your product was too “boring” for content marketing to have an impact? Think again!

Blendtec, a seller of residential and commercial blenders, launched a series of videos aimed at making their boring product fun. The series was called “Will It Blend?,” and it’s just what it sounds like.

The company would test blend various inedible items in their blenders as a way to inject curiosity and humor into their product line.

An ad from Blendtec showing a man behind a blender on a table.
An example of robust content marketing from Blendtec.

The result? A 700 percent increase in sales over its first three years.

While your content marketing strategy doesn’t have to be quite so outlandish, it can be just as successful. There are plenty of content types to include in your strategy, including:

  • blog posts
  • videos
  • podcasts
  • infographics
  • white papers
  • downloadable guides

You just need to ensure your content marketing is compelling.

  1. First, understand what your customers need.
  2. Second, push on their pain points.
  3. Agitate that pain through storytelling.
  4. Offer to solve their problem.

As long as you touch those four points, your content marketing strategy will be off to a strong start.

2. Develop a Product Launch Plan

Product launches don’t always go as planned.

According to Gartner, 45 percent of product launches are delayed by at least one month. This can lead to a domino effect of poor results.

While this is a bitter pill to swallow, it’s also one that should give you sufficient motivation to invest time in a clear and detailed product marketing plan.

It needs to be effective, on time, and successful, and consider these three stages:

  1. Pre-launch.
  2. Launch.
  3. Post-launch.

Pre-launch is heavily focused on research and development. Consider what your industry is like, who your customers are, and what your product can offer that nothing else can.

This stage will also require heavy involvement with beta testing and finessing your messaging to the target audience.

  • What unexpected pain points come up during beta?
  • What is the feedback like?
  • What can you improve in your product or messaging?

Launch is all about getting the message out to the right audience. This means choosing the best channels to reach your target market and even hosting multiple online and in-person events to generate a buzz.

Finally, post-launch requires you to evaluate your targets versus actuals. Did you perform as well as you hoped? If not, why?

A poor initial launch isn’t a loss. It’s important not to lose momentum during post-launch and, eventually, shift your focus to retaining the customers you do have.

3. Retarget Your Existing Customers

Why?

Your existing customers will be your greatest source of revenue. With just a 5 percent increase in customer retention, you can increase company revenue by 25 percent to 95 percent.

While customer service plays a huge role in retention rates, there’s also the important step of retargeting your existing customers. That is, marketing directly to them to address their needs and invoke feelings of brand loyalty.

What does this look like?

A few ways to retarget existing customers include:

  • Create custom ad campaigns for previous and existing customers. These should focus heavily on brand loyalty and customer satisfaction. What is it that keeps customers coming back? Capitalize on it.
  • Build a retargeting email campaign for customers who haven’t purchased over various timeframes. Using segmentation, create different campaigns for customers who haven’t purchased over various periods of time (e.g., within the last 3 months, within the last 6 months, etc.)
  • Bid more aggressively on retargeting campaigns. Consider that customers who previously converted are more likely to convert than new customers. This means you can afford to have a higher Cost Per Conversion (CPC) for retargeting campaigns.

Ultimately, the goal of your retargeting strategy is to remind customers why they purchased from you in the first place. Place heavy emphasis on their initial experience and the value your product offers.

4. Address Customer Pain Points

Consider that 63 percent of B2C consumers and 76 percent of B2B customers expect businesses to anticipate and address their needs. This is the true value of understanding your customers’ pain points and addressing them with your products and services.

Pain is an important part of any marketing strategy, but one that can often be overlooked in e-commerce. Here’s why pain is so important:

  • Pain can help move a customer to action.
  • Pain can create a sense of relief in a customer.
  • Pain can tighten the conversion funnel.
  • Pain can improve conversion rates.

As mentioned in the content marketing section, the key to a successful product marketing strategy is to identify your customer’s pain, remind them of the pain, and then show them the solution to their pain.

These insights come from a robust market research strategy which includes keyword research, competitor reviews analysis, and customer surveys.

Take Qdoba, for example. They know that additional charges for popular add-ons, like guacamole or queso, are a pain point for their customer base. So, they don’t charge extra:

An ad from Qdoba showing a man eating food.
An example of addressing consumer pain points from Qdoba.

Pain points don’t stop with the purchase of your product, though. You should also have a plan in place for when your customers experience pain as part of the usual customer service journey. For example, an issue with the product.

This includes monitoring customer reviews, offering live chats with customer service agents, and reading through the results of customer surveys.

5. Reevaluate and Improve Product Positioning

Just because you’ve launched your product, it doesn’t mean you need to stick with previously chosen markets and marketing tactics. In fact, launch may have shown you a new possible market for your product or even a unique value proposition.

Pre-launch, you and your product team would have answered the following questions:

  • Why was this product made?
  • Who is this product made for?
  • What challenges does this product resolve?
  • What makes this product unique?

Post-launch, it’s time to consider whether the answers you and your team came up with held true. If not, what do the new answers look like and how do they differ from the original plan?

That difference can give you a whole new idea for repositioning your product in the ever-changing market.

When you reposition and how you do so is highly dependent on the product and costs involved. A few examples of repositioning a non-profiting product include repackaging, remarketing it to a different audience, or even adding new features.

Fortunately, you have the value of customer insights and their feedback—which wouldn’t have been available to you during the initial product launch. Use this to implement a full product positioning strategy.

6. Consider a Change to Your Pricing Structure

Another way to reposition your product is to consider a change to your pricing structure. This is helpful if you’re seeing less-than-profitable returns on your product.

A change to your pricing can be as simple as lowering (or increasing) your price or running exclusive promotions.

You can also follow the likes of Peloton and hundreds of other companies who successfully implemented the “good-better-best” approach to pricing.

In short, the good-better-best pricing strategy involves three tiers of the same product with increasing value. This enables you to make your product more accessible to new customers while also increasing spending for those customers who want more.

An ad from Peloton showcasing two different exercise bikes.
An example of pricing structure from Peloton.

To continue with the Peloton example, there are four options to choose from:

  1. The Peloton Bike (starting at $1,195).
  2. The Peloton Bike+ (starting at $1,995).
  3. The Peloton Tread (starting at $2,345).
  4. The Peloton Tread+ (starting at $4,295).

While the Peloton Bike and the Peloton Tread are unique products, they still offer one experience for the customer: a home workout device.

By offering your product at various price points, you open the product up to more customers. This can be a good step for companies hoping to break into more markets.

Product Marketing Frequently Asked Questions

What are the four types of products?

There are four product classifications, all of which can benefit from product marketing. They are convenience goods, shopping goods, specialty goods, and unsought goods.

What companies can benefit from product marketing?

If you think your business can’t benefit from product marketing, you’d be wrong. Companies of any size and configuration can benefit from a planned approach to product launch and sales.

What are the types of product marketing?

There are over 20 marketing activities that can fall under product marketing. These include advertising, branding, product management, product development, sales, and promotion.

What is the difference between marketing and product marketing?

Product marketing is a subset of marketing. Marketing is a broader term encompassing activities like marketing communications, operations, and project management.

Product Marketing Strategies: Conclusion

From product development to customer analysis to launch, a product marketing strategy can ensure you hit all the milestones in a set timeline.

In turn, you can launch your product on time and increase your odds of success.

As long as you have a solid product marketing plan in place (one that mitigates risks and anticipates customer needs), you’ll be off to a better start than most companies.

Which product marketing strategy do you think will be most effective for your up-and-coming product launch?

New comment by gofort in "Ask HN: Who is hiring? (May 2022)"

G-Core Labs | Remote-first | Full-time | https://gcorelabs.com/ | https://careers.gcorelabs.com/jobs/Careers We build CDN, DNS, DDoS Protection, Video Streaming, Edge Computing and other infrastructure solutions. We are looking for: * Systems Engineers (to operate global infrastructure of more than 800 nodes all over the world) * Systems Engineers (to operate Clickhouse Cluster and Kafka Cluster) * … Continue reading New comment by gofort in "Ask HN: Who is hiring? (May 2022)"

Generally Intelligent is hiring Machine Learning Research Engineers (Remote, SF)

Generally Intelligent is an AI research company. Our mission is to build human-like general intelligence and make it safely accessible in order to foster a more abundant, unconstrained, and equitable society. We take a first-principles approach, starting from simple self-supervised architectures and evolving them to tackle human developmental milestones of increasing complexity.

If you’re remote, see the Machine Learning Engineer role: https://generally-intelligent.breezy.hr/p/37984490dd0f-machine-learning-engineer-remote

If you want to be onsite in SF, see the Machine Learning Research Engineer role: https://generally-intelligent.breezy.hr/p/ed6849c074fb-machine-learning-research-engineer-san-francisco

Our YC jobs page is here: https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/generally-intelligent


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5 Coding Bootcamps to Help You Snag a Job In Digital Marketing

When you think of coding, your next thought probably isn’t digital marketing. It’s more likely to be UX design or software development.

Coding skills can be instrumental in digital marketing, and coding bootcamps can help set you up for a successful career.

What Are Coding Bootcamps?

Coding bootcamps are designed to give students the programming skills employers look for. Generally, between 12 and 40 weeks long, these courses aim to get students into the tech field without spending years in undergraduate school.

With the internet and software playing such an essential part in our lives, more and more skilled programmers are needed to develop and maintain the tools we need to thrive.

For the past several years, many employers have said they’ve seen skills gaps in recent graduates—that is, students are often graduating with skills that are a bit out of date.

Coding bootcamps have moved to fill that gap, designing intensive courses designed to get people ready for the current workforce in a short amount of time. In true modern fashion, many of these courses are remote, but there are also options for in-person teaching.

How Much Do Coding Bootcamps Cost?

Coding bootcamps are significantly cheaper than most undergraduate educations.

When you commit to a four-year university degree, you can expect to pay about $10,000 per year at a public school in your state—approximately $40,000 total. If you attend a private or out-of-state college, the cost rises exponentially.

Meanwhile, the average tuition for a coding boot camp is just under $14,000 for the entire program.

Bootcamps may also allow you to pay your tuition over time, and some, like Flockjay, waive your tuition if you don’t land a well-paying job after completing the program.

How Can Coding Bootcamp Help You Get a Job in Digital Marketing?

When it comes to digital marketing, you don’t have to have incredible coding skills—but they can make a big difference. The more knowledge you have about how the technology your brand runs on works, the better.

Think of it like the “required” and “preferred” skills sections on job postings. Chances are, most applicants will have nearly all of the “required” skills, but having some of the more unique “preferred” skills could help you stand out.

If you have coding as one of your skills, a potential employer knows you should be able to speak the same language as the UX and development teams. This could make things smoother for everyone, as it means at least one member of the marketing team understands what’s possible given budgets, deadlines, and other restrictions and can create marketing campaigns accordingly.

Additionally, if you’re working at a small business or start-up, it may need someone to wear multiple hats.

Regardless of your company’s size, your coding skills could help you as a marketer in various ways.

Interacting with Websites

It’s become much easier to build and run websites in recent years. With platforms such as WordPress, Shopify, Wix, and SquareSpace, you don’t need coding skills to create a functional site.

But, if you’re reliant on the in-built tools of these platforms, you don’t have the same level of flexibility. When something doesn’t work, you need external support to fix it, and any downtime is money lost.

We talk a lot in marketing about owning the medium (one of the main reasons you should have a website). When you’ve got coding skills, it’s like you’ve got greater ownership of your assets.

Working With Data

Data is essential to digital marketing. We’re constantly learning about our audience and tweaking our strategies to improve performance, which isn’t possible without understanding how to use data.

Coding and data science go hand in hand, and bootcamps courses could teach you to detect patterns in large data sets using artificial intelligence and machine learning. This way of thinking is extremely useful in digital marketing, and we already see a shift towards these technologies in the industry.

Working with data is a vital part of digital marketing, and coding skills, particularly those offered in a data science course, can be valuable.

Decisions About the Future

Digital marketing advances closely align with advances in technology. If you’re not keeping up with the latest trends in marketing, you risk falling behind. This is why businesses need innovators in their marketing departments.

When you have high-level coding skills, it not only makes you more adaptable but also means you could help shape the future of digital marketing by designing your own application and bringing new ideas to life.

Looking at the impact marketing software has on the industry, it’s clear we need people who can understand these applications on a deep level and get the most out of them.

Managing Projects

If you find yourself managing an extensive digital marketing project, you need to bring lots of people together. Some of these folks will likely be developers.

A frequent challenge in these situations is that the marketing manager doesn’t know what the developers do, making both communication and hiring challenging. How do you know you’ve got the right person for the job if you don’t know what coding or web development entail?

A coding bootcamp can mean having informed, direct input on the project management and hiring processes, giving you greater control over what’s happening.

5 Coding Bootcamps for Digital Marketers

Online education has taken off in recent years, and there are lots of great programs that could help you find a job in digital marketing. With more than six million Americans studying online, online learning of all stripes is becoming more accepted by employers than ever before.

Here are some examples of coding bootcamps that could help you land a job or expand your skills in digital marketing.

Springboard

Springboard offers a variety of online courses in analytics, design, coding, and cybersecurity. Its Software Engineering Bootcamp says you’ll be able to “become a software engineer, guaranteed.”

This is an 800-hour program, so with 20 hours of study a week, it should take you around nine months to complete. Springboard offers flexible ways of paying, starting at $8,500 if you pay upfront. There are also options to pay monthly, defer payments (paying monthly once you land a software engineering job; if you don’t get a job in six months, you don’t pay), or obtain a low-interest loan.

While Springboard focuses on software engineering, these skills are transferable to digital marketing. A big part of this program is the opportunity to work one on one with a mentor and a career coach to help guide you through your career path.

Springboard doesn’t offer success rates, but their similar Data Science Bootcamp resulted in 97% of their graduates finding jobs in their field within six months. They also gained an average salary increase of $25,800.

Key Info

  • courses in analytics, design, coding, and cybersecurity
  • $8,500 for software engineering course
  • option to pay when you land a job (nothing to pay if you don’t find a job within six months)
  • 800-hour program (nine months studying 20 hours a week)
  • average salary increase for graduates of $25,800

Alchemy Code Lab

On average, graduates of the Alchemy Code Lab bootcamp found a related job in just 11 weeks, with a median salary of $80,000. Not bad for a 25-week program!

This full-time program is designed to get you ready for jobs in the real world. Teaching you skills in modern programming languages and development methods, Alchemy Code Lab takes six cohorts per year, with total program tuition costing $24,000.

Just as with Springboard, there are lots of different ways to pay. Choose from self-funding, Income Share Agreement (don’t pay until you get a job), and financing through partner lenders. There are also diversity-based tuition scholarships and GI Bill benefits available.

Alchemy Code Lab is based in Portland, but with a focus on the remote jobs of the future, it’s all accessible online. With solid results and 87 percent of graduates going on to work in tech, it’s been a good investment for many people.

Key Info

  • $24,000
  • flexible payment options including income share agreement
  • full-time study
  • 25-week course

Flatiron School

In Career Karma’s 2020 awards, Flatiron School was named the best coding bootcamp and best online bootcamp. The school claims to launch your career, and the stats back this up: 82% of grads land a job with an average starting salary of $69,000 a year.

Flatiron offers both in-person classes in New York City and an online program. They offer programs specializing in software engineering, data science, cybersecurity analytics, and cybersecurity engineering, each of which teaches you skills that can help in digital marketing.

The online software engineering course offers three different ways to study: full-time, part-time, and self-paced, giving students great flexibility with how they learn. The program costs $16,900 with options to pay upfront, in installments, or through a loan.

Courses begin every month, meaning you can quickly get started.

Key Info

  • courses in software engineering, data science, cybersecurity analytics, cybersecurity engineering
  • $16,900 for software engineering course
  • flexible payment options
  • full-time study, part-time study, and self-paced learning options available
  • 82% of grads land a job, the average starting salary of $69,000 per year

Thinkful

Thinkful is a platform that prides itself on allowing you to pay only when you land a job in your career. It offers a range of tech-related subjects, including a specialist digital marketing bootcamp.

Coding Bootcamps for Digital Marketers  - Thinkful

Each option has a slightly different timeframe (the full-time digital marketing course allows you to graduate in just six weeks), with the software engineering course offered as both full-time and part-time programs. The full-time option will require 50-60 hours a week and allow you to graduate in five months, with the part-time version requiring 25-30 hours a week over six months.

The courses vary in price, with the digital marketing one costing $7,500 while the software engineering bootcamp is $16,000. You also have lots of different payment options, some of which guarantee you don’t pay anything until you land a job.

Graduates have noted how Thinkful is focused on your career, which seems to translate into real-life results. Eighty-seven percent of software engineering students were offered a job within 180-days of graduating, with 27% reporting an annual base salary between $70,000 and $90,000 and 50% reporting a yearly base salary between $50,000 and $70,000.

Key Info:

  • courses in software engineering, data science, data analytics, UX/UI design, digital marketing, product management, technical project management
  • $16,000 for software engineering course
  • flexible payment options
  • full-time and part-time options
  • 87% of grads land jobs within 180-days

Flockjay

Flockjay isn’t strictly a coding bootcamp, but it teaches similar ideas as a tech sale program. It’s more focused on the sales aspect of technology, which could be a helpful combination in digital marketing.

Coding Bootcamps for Digital Marketers  - Flockjay

This ten-week program costs $6,000 for most US residents ($7,650 for California) and aims to give you “future proof” skills that are in demand now. Again, you have the option to pay zero tuition until you get a job paying at least $40,000, potentially making it an attractive investment for your career.

Flockjay provides instruction in the sales essentials and, importantly, has a strong emphasis on technology. While it’s not quite coding, it could satisfy many students interested in tech and equip them with important skills in digital marketing.

Key Info:

  • tech sales course
  • $6,000
  • flexible payment options
  • 10-week program
  • average full-time job offer of $75,000 a year

Conclusion

Coding bootcamps could be a great alternative to four-year college degrees for students interested in technology. With payment options that allow you to pay nothing until you secure a job and courses that can be completed in less than a year, they’re a great way to propel yourself into the tech workforce.

As digital marketing is closely aligned with technology, these courses can also be an excellent way to snag a job in digital marketing. These skills are in demand in so many industries, so the main point is that you’re opening all kinds of doors for yourself.

You may not go into a coding bootcamp to become a digital marketer, but you may find digital marketing is a career you’re perfectly suited for.

Have you tried a coding bootcamp?

Top 10 Garage Door Podcasts You Must Follow in 2021

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