Author

Topic: 9 Common Mistakes - Companies Make When Marketing Their ICO (Read 144 times)

full member
Activity: 336
Merit: 102
One big mistake is wasting money to list on hitbtc just to be listed.  Better to let people trade on dexes until you get on a half decent exchange.  Hitbtc has led to the death of many projects.
full member
Activity: 504
Merit: 122
ICO should be extinct. Almost all of them are scam or will be scam.
Everyday a lot of ppl/group creates a new coin/token that worth nothing and it is a simple copy of another coin.

Is that simple scam, they just do ICO, take the money and disapear.
Another scam is create a new shitcoin with premine. Sell masternodes and sold the premine at exchange then desapear.
Im sure that some scammers is doing it over and over times.

Must regulate the creation of new coins, maybe prohibiting premine and requiring devs identification would be good to avoid scammers.
newbie
Activity: 112
Merit: 0
In short they don't fully prepared their proposal, business study, feasibility preparation, broadcast and drafts, mostly this ICO won't be successful before they reach their final sale and sometime they don't return money that's why they are lable also as scam.
newbie
Activity: 28
Merit: 0
9 Common Mistakes Companies Make When Marketing Their ICO


1. Not having a clear idea of who their ideal target market is.

Knowing your ideal target customer is the key to a successful business, and an even more successful ICO. Most marketers think marketing personas just internalize the ideal target market, however they can help you clarify your ideal customer profile.

Personas allow you to check how well your assumptions match with existing customers and social followers. Evaluating the fit of your personas and current market can result in a clarified ideal customer profile for your company to work with.

2. Not leveraging your existing assets.

Too often companies preparing to market their ICO overlook the wealth of information and data they are already holding.

Building an audience has been a long-term task, resulting in large amounts of customer files, email databases and social profiles.This presents you with a very valuable data mining and target marketing opportunity. By looking at customer information you can use everything from their characteristics to their interests to build custom audiences. Custom audiences can then be leveraged across different channels to expand your ICO’s overall audience.

Building a brand, on the other hand, has created a great deal of content, much of which has ended up in the archives. With some tweaking and recycling your company can consistently distribute high quality content to engage with your audiences.

3. Not having a clear and strong USP.

USP (unique selling proposition) is a fundamental marketing concept and should form the foundation of any campaign you run. Understanding what differentiates you from other companies and makes you unique will give make your company stand out. Make your elevator pitch and sales presentations memorable by tapping into this. Although you will usually represent 3–4 different marketing personas when marketing an ICO, your USP must act as a common thread. It should be concise, with a strong call to action and show value to everyone in your target market.

4. Lack of understanding how organic and paid media should be leveraged to drive results.

Understanding the different roles organic and paid media play in your ICO marketing campaign is crucial. For example, using organic media for community management and paid media to emphasize a core message means you are effectively using all your assets. Attaching specific KPIs to both organic and paid will not only allow you to make sure they are playing active and important roles in your ICO, but that they are also complementing each other’s efforts.

5. Not leveraging communities, groups, forums and social media effectively.

All too often we hear about multi-channel marketing but don’t implement it. As we continue to grow with the evolution of the digital world, one thing is certain: we must understand how all available and emerging platforms are used and the difference between them. This ability will separate the mediocre ICOs from the rewarding ICOs.

Every platform serves a unique role in your digital marketing strategy, whether it be traffic, awareness, amplification, impressions or engagement. Knowing how to use each platform purposefully and effectively will elevate your marketing plan and build your ICO audience.

6. Relying on just PR to do all the heavy lifting.

Running a successful ICO marketing campaign requires all hands on deck, so don’t leave it to just your PR professional.

Remember marketing seeks to reach potential and current customers, inspires them to think about the company and gets them to take direct, sales-focused actions. PR, on the other hand, focuses on generating positive reputations of, and relationships with, the brand through customers, media, stakeholders and shareholders. While PR releases important statements, marketing is responsible for the dripping of ongoing information to the community — and without that communication dries out.

7. Chasing competitors.

Know your competitors but don’t become like them. Your brand and ICO will be very different to another’s, similar to how your USP is unique to just you. Use that difference and make it your competitive advantage — find your own voice and content to drive meaningful results. ICOs don’t operate in a one size fits all manner.

8. Giving everyone a marketing voice.

Collaboration is key in developing your marketing voice and good teamwork will show. Make it a priority to coordinate efforts between your internal marketing team, PR team and social media team to create one strong and unified voice.

9. Failing to measure and track results.

Measuring everything from conception to execution will give you consistent opportunities to improve. Building metrics and taking time out to understand and analyse them will help you see what works and what doesn’t. This will result in you optimizing channels, creative and creating specific goals for KPIs — driving what will be a successful ICO.

10. Doing the “shotgun” approach.

Have a clear target in every component of your marketing plan with specific and measurable KPIs attached to it. Throwing things at the wall and hoping something sticks doesn’t work. With the growth of digital marketing the most significant and important change is transitioning from mass marketing to highly targeted marketing. This means that the voice, positioning, content and distribution of all ICO-related marketing activities in your company should have a goal.

I agree with you.. one thing to add for is the token metrics and distribution some ICO asking a very big amount..

D24
newbie
Activity: 100
Merit: 0
I think a lot of ICOs are guilty of all of the above.

What I find is that they don't understand the market and the potential users and what they are looking for.
full member
Activity: 1316
Merit: 105
The biggest mistake is not understanding that people are investing. They sell the tokens with ridiculous discounts like if they were selling potatoes and I don´t invest in potatoes.

many of them have just one purpose - to sell as much tokens as they can and run away with big money that's why we can see such discounts.
legendary
Activity: 2100
Merit: 1167
MY RED TRUST LEFT BY SCUMBAGS - READ MY SIG
Most ICO's dont understand they will never complete their whitepaper or even 50% of it. They think they will raise a chunk of bucks and find mystery geniuses of near nobel prize level and there are teams of these people just dying to work on their junk.

Then they realise they have the funds and it will be easier to let down over time the investors and just start another ico and raise those funds all over again.
member
Activity: 322
Merit: 20
The biggest mistake is not understanding that people are investing. They sell the tokens with ridiculous discounts like if they were selling potatoes and I don´t invest in potatoes.
sr. member
Activity: 686
Merit: 250
Some people running ico's don't get that it's not always about the easy money, those are the ones that fail.
newbie
Activity: 364
Merit: 0
Pretty much agree with you. ICOs fails in many sides while dealing with users. But from user’s side, everybody should research very carefully before investing. And ICOs should be easy towards users to be a good ICO as a whole.
jr. member
Activity: 82
Merit: 1
9 Common Mistakes Companies Make When Marketing Their ICO


1. Not having a clear idea of who their ideal target market is.

Knowing your ideal target customer is the key to a successful business, and an even more successful ICO. Most marketers think marketing personas just internalize the ideal target market, however they can help you clarify your ideal customer profile.

Personas allow you to check how well your assumptions match with existing customers and social followers. Evaluating the fit of your personas and current market can result in a clarified ideal customer profile for your company to work with.

2. Not leveraging your existing assets.

Too often companies preparing to market their ICO overlook the wealth of information and data they are already holding.

Building an audience has been a long-term task, resulting in large amounts of customer files, email databases and social profiles.This presents you with a very valuable data mining and target marketing opportunity. By looking at customer information you can use everything from their characteristics to their interests to build custom audiences. Custom audiences can then be leveraged across different channels to expand your ICO’s overall audience.

Building a brand, on the other hand, has created a great deal of content, much of which has ended up in the archives. With some tweaking and recycling your company can consistently distribute high quality content to engage with your audiences.

3. Not having a clear and strong USP.

USP (unique selling proposition) is a fundamental marketing concept and should form the foundation of any campaign you run. Understanding what differentiates you from other companies and makes you unique will give make your company stand out. Make your elevator pitch and sales presentations memorable by tapping into this. Although you will usually represent 3–4 different marketing personas when marketing an ICO, your USP must act as a common thread. It should be concise, with a strong call to action and show value to everyone in your target market.

4. Lack of understanding how organic and paid media should be leveraged to drive results.

Understanding the different roles organic and paid media play in your ICO marketing campaign is crucial. For example, using organic media for community management and paid media to emphasize a core message means you are effectively using all your assets. Attaching specific KPIs to both organic and paid will not only allow you to make sure they are playing active and important roles in your ICO, but that they are also complementing each other’s efforts.

5. Not leveraging communities, groups, forums and social media effectively.

All too often we hear about multi-channel marketing but don’t implement it. As we continue to grow with the evolution of the digital world, one thing is certain: we must understand how all available and emerging platforms are used and the difference between them. This ability will separate the mediocre ICOs from the rewarding ICOs.

Every platform serves a unique role in your digital marketing strategy, whether it be traffic, awareness, amplification, impressions or engagement. Knowing how to use each platform purposefully and effectively will elevate your marketing plan and build your ICO audience.

6. Relying on just PR to do all the heavy lifting.

Running a successful ICO marketing campaign requires all hands on deck, so don’t leave it to just your PR professional.

Remember marketing seeks to reach potential and current customers, inspires them to think about the company and gets them to take direct, sales-focused actions. PR, on the other hand, focuses on generating positive reputations of, and relationships with, the brand through customers, media, stakeholders and shareholders. While PR releases important statements, marketing is responsible for the dripping of ongoing information to the community — and without that communication dries out.

7. Chasing competitors.

Know your competitors but don’t become like them. Your brand and ICO will be very different to another’s, similar to how your USP is unique to just you. Use that difference and make it your competitive advantage — find your own voice and content to drive meaningful results. ICOs don’t operate in a one size fits all manner.

8. Giving everyone a marketing voice.

Collaboration is key in developing your marketing voice and good teamwork will show. Make it a priority to coordinate efforts between your internal marketing team, PR team and social media team to create one strong and unified voice.

9. Failing to measure and track results.

Measuring everything from conception to execution will give you consistent opportunities to improve. Building metrics and taking time out to understand and analyse them will help you see what works and what doesn’t. This will result in you optimizing channels, creative and creating specific goals for KPIs — driving what will be a successful ICO.

10. Doing the “shotgun” approach.

Have a clear target in every component of your marketing plan with specific and measurable KPIs attached to it. Throwing things at the wall and hoping something sticks doesn’t work. With the growth of digital marketing the most significant and important change is transitioning from mass marketing to highly targeted marketing. This means that the voice, positioning, content and distribution of all ICO-related marketing activities in your company should have a goal.
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