Quicklet on Geoffrey A. Moore's Crossing the Chasm: Marketing and Selling High Tech Products to Mainstream Customers: Key terms and definitions

Nonfiction, Art & Architecture, General Art, Business & Finance, Marketing & Sales
Cover of the book Quicklet on Geoffrey A. Moore's Crossing the Chasm: Marketing and Selling High Tech Products to Mainstream Customers: Key terms and definitions by Richard  Childers, Hyperink
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Author: Richard Childers ISBN: 9781614641421
Publisher: Hyperink Publication: April 4, 2012
Imprint: Hyperink - Crossing the Chasm Quicklet Language: English
Author: Richard Childers
ISBN: 9781614641421
Publisher: Hyperink
Publication: April 4, 2012
Imprint: Hyperink - Crossing the Chasm Quicklet
Language: English

ABOUT THE BOOK

Since its first publication in 1991, Geoffrey Moores Crossing the Chasm: Marketing and Selling High Tech Products to Mainstream Customers has set the standard for tech business moguls. In fact, it has become the standard for all of us trying to make our way in the confusing world of technology business.

Moore argues that there is a chasm that exists between early adopters of a potentially disruptive technology product and what he calls the early majority, or the market segment that takes such a product to the upper ranges of success. Moore believes that early adopters and visionaries have very different expectations than the pragmatists that follow. In this book, he explores those differences and suggests specific techniques to successfully cross the "chasm."

These include choosing a target market, understanding the whole product concept, positioning the product, building a successful marketing strategy, and choosing the most appropriate distribution channel and pricing.

MEET THE AUTHOR

Richard Childers is an experienced writer and a member of the Hyperink Team, which works hard to bring you high-quality, engaging, fun content. Happy reading!

EXCERPT FROM THE BOOK

Moores major thesis is that there is something wrong with the High Tech Marketing Model. There are gaps separating the major groups described in the Technology Adoption Life Cycle. These gaps represent the fact that any group will have a hard time accepting a new product if it is marketed to them in the same manner it was marketed to the group that preceded them. Each of these gaps is an opportunity for marketing to lose momentum and miss the transition to the next group.

Two of these gaps are relatively small, what Moore calls cracks in the bell curve. The gap between innovators and early adopters occurs when a hot new technology product cannot be transitioned into a major new benefit. The enthusiast loves it for its architecture, but nobody can even figure out how to start using it.

There is a second crack of similar size that exists between the early majority and the late majority. It comes at a time in the product life cycle when the market is well developed and the technology product is in the mainstream. While the early majority was quite willing and able to achieve the level of technical competence required to gain benefit from the product, the late majority user is much less so. In order to continue developing their market by moving into the late majority segment, the product marketers must make the product easier to use and implement. If they fail to do so, they may fail in their attempts to transition to this next segment.

CHAPTER OUTLINE

Quicklet on Geoffrey A. Moore's Crossing the Chasm: Marketing and Selling High Tech Products to Mainstream Customers

Geoffrey A. Moore's Crossing the Chasm: Marketing and Selling High Tech Products to Mainstream Customers

+ The High Tech Marketer’s Bible

+ About the Author

+ About the Book

+ Overall Summary

+ ...and much more

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

ABOUT THE BOOK

Since its first publication in 1991, Geoffrey Moores Crossing the Chasm: Marketing and Selling High Tech Products to Mainstream Customers has set the standard for tech business moguls. In fact, it has become the standard for all of us trying to make our way in the confusing world of technology business.

Moore argues that there is a chasm that exists between early adopters of a potentially disruptive technology product and what he calls the early majority, or the market segment that takes such a product to the upper ranges of success. Moore believes that early adopters and visionaries have very different expectations than the pragmatists that follow. In this book, he explores those differences and suggests specific techniques to successfully cross the "chasm."

These include choosing a target market, understanding the whole product concept, positioning the product, building a successful marketing strategy, and choosing the most appropriate distribution channel and pricing.

MEET THE AUTHOR

Richard Childers is an experienced writer and a member of the Hyperink Team, which works hard to bring you high-quality, engaging, fun content. Happy reading!

EXCERPT FROM THE BOOK

Moores major thesis is that there is something wrong with the High Tech Marketing Model. There are gaps separating the major groups described in the Technology Adoption Life Cycle. These gaps represent the fact that any group will have a hard time accepting a new product if it is marketed to them in the same manner it was marketed to the group that preceded them. Each of these gaps is an opportunity for marketing to lose momentum and miss the transition to the next group.

Two of these gaps are relatively small, what Moore calls cracks in the bell curve. The gap between innovators and early adopters occurs when a hot new technology product cannot be transitioned into a major new benefit. The enthusiast loves it for its architecture, but nobody can even figure out how to start using it.

There is a second crack of similar size that exists between the early majority and the late majority. It comes at a time in the product life cycle when the market is well developed and the technology product is in the mainstream. While the early majority was quite willing and able to achieve the level of technical competence required to gain benefit from the product, the late majority user is much less so. In order to continue developing their market by moving into the late majority segment, the product marketers must make the product easier to use and implement. If they fail to do so, they may fail in their attempts to transition to this next segment.

CHAPTER OUTLINE

Quicklet on Geoffrey A. Moore's Crossing the Chasm: Marketing and Selling High Tech Products to Mainstream Customers

Geoffrey A. Moore's Crossing the Chasm: Marketing and Selling High Tech Products to Mainstream Customers

+ The High Tech Marketer’s Bible

+ About the Author

+ About the Book

+ Overall Summary

+ ...and much more

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