Next to white papers, case studies are the most popular
tool in the technical marketer's toolkit
The ubiquitous case study can range from a 3- paragraph
online snippet to a full-blown magazine article. The most popular
case study in the marketing/PR arsenal is the 500-700 word success
story. They're not as challenging to write as white papers, but
you should structure them for maximum impact.
Different companies use different structures for
their case studies, but all should follow the same general pattern:
1. Company overview and challenge 2. Project details 3. Positive
results (of course)
Customer Overview and Challenge
Start with a 2-3 paragraph overview of the customer's
company. This should be very positive - since you're going to detail
a problem the customer was having, the last thing you want to do
is make them sound like jerks. So compliment them. Feel free to
adapt the overview from their own Website text, where they're already
placing themselves in the best possible light.
Then move on to the business challenge. Don't make
the customer sound stupid or incompetent. The challenge should always
be centered on something good that is happening to them - fast growth,
industry prominence, strategic IT changes - whatever. Their challenge
should be applicable to your readers' own business issues.
Project Details
No project goes perfectly, but save the debriefing
for the longer-form trade journal article. These short case studies
should report on the successful project by briefly discussing specific
products and benefits.
Don't go all over the map. If the project is fairly
narrow or specific, you won't have any trouble sticking with the
main point. In the case of large and complex installations, concentrate
on the main point. For example, Microsoft Great Plains has more
modules than you can shake a stick at. Concentrate on the ones that
had the most positive impact on your customer.
Business Benefits
Always quantify improvement when you can. Numbers
can be dollar savings, percentages, or other measures of saved staff
time, more efficient workflows, better customer service, etc. Be
sure that the benefits you list are the benefits the customer perceives
- hard costs are most easily quantified, but soft costs may have
the higher perceived benefit to a customer. Ideally you will list
both.
When NOT to Write a Case Study
What are the most common
blocks to partnering with a customer for a case study?
Your customer is really unhappy. They'd
do a case study all right, but you wouldn't want them to. If you're
the hapless individual setting up the initial interview, be sure
that the customer really is happy and is open to talking to you.
Otherwise they'll just give you an earful. Fix: promise the customer
that you'll pass on all of his comments to the technical support
team, or whoever you think will best handle it. Then do it, and
forget about it.
Customers who fear their market will punish
them. Prime example: legal firms with security issues. Sure
you helped them through a security project and now they're Fort
Knox, but they don't want their clients to dream that a problem
ever existed in the first place. Fix: Forget it. They'll never
give you permission to produce the study. Besides, they're probably
right.
Your customer is an exacting IT type who is
suspicious of the success story format. This customer considers
the project a success too, but they dislike purely positive spins
- and no project is perfect. Fix: If they are happy for the most
part, get a buy-in that the project really was successful. Don't
put him off about the negatives, capture those comments too and
promise to pass them on. (Then do it.) This is usually enough
to secure the interview.
Your customer is scared to be interviewed.
This is usually the IT guy who did all the footwork, and prefers
to stay behind the scenes. He (or she) will either be too nervous
to talk, or will despise you because he doesn't think you've got
the technical chops. Usually both. Fix: Understand the technology
you're interviewing about. You don't have to be an engineer, but
you should understand IT pressures and issues. Ask leading questions,
but if they clam up and won't talk, thank them and hang up. Tell
your customer contact that you're so happy you got to talk to
the technician, and now could you talk to a project manager too?
The Christine
Taylor Company
P.O. Box 3499
Wrightwood, CA 92397