Atlantic Business Technologies, Inc.

Category: ABT Culture

  • ABT Entrepreneurial Award Winner!

    In our first ever entrepreneurial award contest, ABT set out to honor a local entrepreneur who embodies the values we share:

    • Dedicated to serving the community
    • Hard-working
    • Compassionate
    • Respected
    • Optimistic
    • Creative
    Jess Kahut from Headbands of Hope

    We are proud to announce Jess Kahut is our winner. Jess is the founder of Headbands of Hope, an organization that makes headbands for young girls fighting cancer. She embodies both someone who guides her company based on her principles, while also being a consummate entrepreneur and inspiring entrepreneurship in others. Congratulations Jess!

    Here are our other finalists for the ABT Entrepreneurial Award:

    Abe Crystal, Ruzuku

    • As a co-founder of the online learning platform Ruzuku, Abe has provided support, optimism, and commitment to staff and consumers alike. Devoted to education and communication, Abe is a dedicated leader and mentor who takes time to give back to the entrepreneurial community.

    Matt Kane, Precision Biosciences

    • Matt is the CEO and co-founder Precision Biosciences, the company behind the next generation of genome editing. Matt’s company now has the technology to cure cancer with ground-breaking gene therapies (while balancing a great culture and employing over 100 people in Durham).

    Rich Brancaccio, Fokus Labs

    • Rich, a trained child psychologist, created a product that helps kids with attention issues called Re-vibe. Rich works tirelessly to help give back to students in Wake County and across the country by helping them improve their focus and concentration. He is also a proud father of two.

    Nick Palmisciano, Ranger Up

    • Nick has always been the entrepreneur of the family—taking on huge projects like the movie “Range 15” and the documentary “Not Another War Story.” Nick’s probably best known as the founder of Ranger Up, an American apparel company that gives back to our veterans in so many ways. He is always willing to help those in need and go the extra mile to do what is right.

     

     

  • 3 Ways to Get The Most Value from Sales and Marketing

    Customer experience is everything. It’s that first impression or interaction, that first phone call, that first piece of content we put in front of them. From the work we showcase to our messaging, our customer experience is the most important part of our brand and identity.

    As CMO for ABT, facilitating growth and establishing a vision for our marketing strategy are my priorities. What I love about being CMO is how what I do powers the company, and how I can apply my creativity to make it all happen. I am accountable for the entire customer experience, including the moments before they even become a customer. In addition to making this experience exceptional, I also need to make it consistent—from the second they call us, encounter us in a conference, or visit our website, every interaction and every impression matters!

    “What I love about being CMO is how what I do powers the company, and how I can apply my creativity to make it all happen.”

    How do you do that? Content, content, and more content. But more importantly, you have to produce the right content, in the right channel, at the right moment, in the right way. Sounds super easy, right? In case you didn’t catch that sarcasm, inbound content marketing is actually one of the toughest challenges we CMOs face in our work to build our company brand and generate leads. The following are three key points that I hope you find helpful as you work to fuel your company’s success with lead and demand generation.

    1) Align Sales and Marketing

    You can generate all the leads in the universe, but they aren’t worth anything if you never close. You cannot be an effective marketer without syncing up with an effective sales team. Sales groups are the ones fielding the calls, so they have a first-hand understanding of your customers’ pain points. An effective marketer listens to the sales team to learn how to reverse engineer the solutions or strategies their customers are aching for.

    An easy way to find relevant content topics that matter to your target customers is by meeting with your sales team on a weekly basis. You can use these meetings to plan future content or campaigns based on the latest findings from the sales team. It’s also helpful to get feedback from sales on how your content, events, and other marketing efforts are performing with their leads. If there is any content or messaging the sales team needs to close a lead, the marketing team should be able to deliver it ASAP. This could be as simple as drafting a blog post they can share with the lead, or putting together a slidedeck of related case studies that show off your relevant experience.

    It’s also important to train your sales team to provide details about how a lead learned about your company. This gives you valuable insight into the all-important customer experience. Ideally, you want your sales team to answer the following questions:

    1. How did they hear about us?
    2. What about this lead’s experience made them decide to reach out?
    3. What are the lead’s pain points?
    4. How urgent is their need, and when will they be ready to make a decision?

    Once you equip your sales team with the right questions to ask, make sure they capture that data in a central repository like your company’s CRM.

    2) Inbound Sales Is the Only Way

    Cold calling is dead! Voicemails are the only thing you will hear if you try to target companies and sell to them when they have no idea who you are. The customer of today has become super savvy about screening communications and researching their technical solution options.

    With inbound sales facing these challenges, it’s important for the marketing team to arm the sales team with the assets they need to close deals. This means your team has to get creative and devise ways to stand out. One way to do so is by producing content in niche topics that are sought after by your ideal customers. There’s this great book, “They Ask, You Answer” written by Marcus Sheridan, in which he says your goal should be to become the Wikipedia for whatever services you offer. Build that knowledge base for your target market so when they have a need they will educate themselves and find you. Getting the right audience to your site is the hardest part, so let’s talk about how to build your audience and draw them in.

    3) Build Your Audience

    Because it relies on regular updates, your blog is the most current area of your site and the best opportunity you have for building your audience. You might call it something different than your blog, such as insights, articles, knowledge base, etc. Regardless of what you call it, this section’s purpose is to educate and engage an audience whom you eventually want to convert to a customer.

    Because you took my advice and aligned your sales and marketing team, you should have plenty of insight into what topics you should write about in your blog. The idea is that whenever a potential customer sees your company in his or her newsfeed, it’s in connection to a post related to one of their business goals or challenges. For example, if you know your customers will need help updating their websites to meet 508 compliance, make sure you have a blog or two guiding them in how to do that. You give this high-level information away on your site so the reader knows what he or she needs to do, but will want to contact you for help with the design, implementation, or other steps.

    Beyond the content of each post, you need to think about threading your blog posts into a unified experience. For example, consider the layout of this post they’ve landed on. Does it provide an easy way to share the post? Do you link to related pages or posts? Would a reader want to subscribe for more? You want to treat each blog as a great opportunity to engage your audience and make it even larger. Below are some quick tips for improving your posts to help build your audience:

    1. Make it easy to subscribe to your newsletter. A simple CTA will do, but don’t send them away from the page they are on.
    2. Include easy to find related posts. Publishing a series is a great way to promote other posts within the same subject matter.
    3. Cross-sell your services and products by linking them within your post.
    4. Add social share links in as many places as possible, at the beginning and end of the post at minimum. You can also use pull quotes in conjunction with social links to make it easy for them to publish the pull quote.

    Treat Marketing as Your Customer Experience

    From the moment someone learns about your company, their experience of your brand has begun. By gathering customer insight from your sales team, equipping your team with the right content to reach these customers, and building a rich knowledge base for your ideal audience, you can make your marketing into a powerful experience that draws customers in and wins their loyalty for a long time.

  • ABT Launches Award-Winning Site for Training Industry

    We are proud to announce the launch of the new TrainingIndustry.com. As a trusted source of information on the business of learning, Training Industry, Inc. provides in-depth articles, videos, blogs, and other rich content on the latest business trends and technology for corporate training professionals.

    When Training Industry developed the requirements for its new site, its leaders focused on ensuring the website would deliver the highest-quality user experience on all devices and create an environment that would make its original editorial content and resources easily navigated and useful to its audience. The new TrainingIndustry.com has already received a Gold Medal by the International Marcom Awards. 

    The new interface of TrainingIndustry.com
    The new interface of TrainingIndustry.com

    What’s New for TrainingIndustry.com

    Here’s how ABT designed the new TrainingIndustry.com with a stronger focus on empowering users both inside and outside the company:

    1. Created a new content platform for the Training Industry team on WordPress,  which provided substantially more control and agility for its content team in the development and publication of new articles and posts.
    2. Improved the site navigation and usability, making it easier for visitors to locate and engage with the content they want to find.
    3. Achieved a dramatic improvement in page load times by integrating the site with Amazon Web Services CloudFront. This CDN helped the new TrainingIndustry.com achieve a AA rating from GT Metrix.Performance Stat Improvements for Training Industry
    4. Optimized mobile performance using CloudFront to deliver faster loading on small screens. This includes “lazy-loading,” which makes the page only load images inside the viewport. Images below the viewport will not load until the user begins to scroll, speeding up load times.
    5. Enhanced user experience with custom code that displays calculated read time for each article (based on word count, images and inline content) and a dynamic progress bar measuring how far the reader has scrolled in a post.
    6. Updated the magazine section adapted from Training Industry Magazine; this section include featured article templates allowing admins to select multiple layouts and typography options to emulate the rich graphic layouts of Training Industry Magazine when articles are presented on the website.
    7. Implemented a more dynamic and flexible ad layout system that allows Training Industry admins to target ad zones based on custom terms, taxonomies and other properties.

    As one of ABT’s longest client relationships, we are excited to help power the future of Training Industry with this new dynamic design for their site. Experience the new TrainingIndustry.com for yourself and let us know what you think.

  • ABT Launches Quick Start Program for Cost-Effective Insight

    Data-driven insight. This phrase shows up so often in B2B content marketing that it’s nearly a clichĂŠ. The phrase inspire images of a massive enterprise having an army of analysts dig into huge masses of data and then present 90-slide powerpoint presentations about the state of the market. In short, data-driven insight seems complex, expensive, and time-consuming. 

    ABT aims to change that. Our new Quick Start programs make deep data-driven insight available to organizations of all sizes. From workshops to detailed reports, these 3-week programs give all our clients trustworthy and cost-effective digital insight at the right price for any company.

    “We designed our Quick Start program to adopt our in-depth discovery process—which we’ve used for large clients like NC.gov, Campbell University, and Global Knowledge—into a condensed and quick-to-execute format. It’s exciting to take our love of data analysis and make it more time- and cost-effective for all our clients.”
    Eileen Allen, ABT Chief Marketing Officer

    Here are previews of our first four Quick Start programs. Click each link for more information about how to begin.

    The First Four ABT Quick Start Programs

    Lean Website Discovery – Rapid insight to kickstart any digital project

    Our Lean Discovery program delivers data-driven answers to strategic technology questions questions. Our experts will deliver quick, cohesive analysis and documentation of the challenges and possibilities you face with any new website project. This helps prevent costly mistakes in implementation and sets up your site to be more successful and reliable over the long term.

    Application Portfolio Diagnostic – Deep report into your utilization of key business apps

    Our Application Portfolio Diagnostic helps you assess the health of your organization’s application portfolio. Using this structured, objective mechanism for collecting user feedback about your application suite, we analyze the effectiveness, criticality, and utilization of each application in your business.

    Digital Marketing Audit – Fast-action plan to analyze, execute, and evaluate digital campaigns

    Our Digital Marketing Audit reveals ways to improve your tactics, reduce waste, and increase your return on investment for customer outreach. Our proprietary, multidisciplinary approach examines your marketing program from the ground up—providing a 180-day action plan to improve your bottom line.

    eCommerce Launch on Shopify – Start your online store on an easy-to-manage platform

    Our eCommerce Launch on Shopify is a streamlined process that gets online stores set up and ready to sell on an easy-to-manage platform. In addition to launching your online store, this program offers a long-term analytics and marketing plan to maximize conversions over time.

    To keep in touch with our ongoing updates to the Quick Start program and other news from ABT, follow us on Twitter or sign up for our newsletter.

  • Thirst for Knowledge Recap: Content Strategy for Large Organizations

    From running content audits to organizing a redirects plan, the latest Thirst for Knowledge showed all the complexity inside a strong Content Strategy. Led by former ABT Marketing Lead Tori Pratt and ABT Head of Project Management Daniel Hooks (filling in for Haven Hottel from Campbell University), this Thirst for Knowledge unpacked some of the most difficult stages of crafting content strategy for large organizations.

    Using Campbell University’s recent redesign as a working example, this presentation showed how to integrate content audits, content analysis, and content governance on a large-scale redesign with multiple organizational stakeholders. Here are the full slides and audio from the presentation:

    The event also included an in-house demo station from Blaze, the cloud-based content audit platform which powered our content strategy for Campbell University. Two lucky attendees from Saint Augustine University and Durham-based ArchiveSocial won a free three-month subscription to Blaze’s content audit service.

    As you plan content for your organization, we don’t want you to have to tackle this complex task on your own. If you have any questions about specific aspects of content strategy and governance, do not hesitate to contact us for help.

     

  • Security and Me: My Takeaways from Thirst for Knowledge

    In just the second quarter of 2017, there were at least 62 million detections of malware on IT systems across the world. This was just the introduction to ABT’s Thirst for Knowledge event last Thursday. Thanks to our Research Manager Randy Earl, I also learned that the first line of defense against these kinds of cyberattacks is teaching employees like me how to be smart about security.

    This was the first time my company has help this kind of informational lesson before one of our Thirsty Thursday networking events, and it was a big success. I got to speak with both new and old friends from outside my company, and there were lots of good points in the presentation and an engaging discussion from the crowd. Here are my main takeaways from the presentation:

    How to Make a Good Password

    Randy Earl referenced this xkcd comic at Thirst for Knowledge.
    Randy alluded to this xkcd cartoon on making stronger passwords.

    Judging by the questions and comments from the presentation, it’s pretty clear that attendees take password security seriously. However, some had gotten bad advice about how often to change passwords and how to design a good one.

    Thankfully, Randy provided some helpful guidelines on how to design passwords that a computer wouldn’t easily guess (and that guys with mediocre memories could actually remember!). Having long (12–15 characters) passwords that used a series of unrelated words were both difficult for a computer to guess while being simpler to recall later. Randy taught us that having this kind of longer password in place was more important than requiring employees to change their passwords every 60 days.

    Randy also spent some time explaining the need for password managers and how helpful they can be in a larger organization. At Atlantic BT, we use Pass as our main tool to generate strong passwords and store them in a safe location. Naturally, it’s important to use a strong password to ACCESS Pass, otherwise your credentials for this password manager could be stolen.

    Mobile Security Takes Some Effort

    When will there be a good password manager for mobile devices? Touch ID has served as a good security measure, but for those with lots of logins and/or multiple devices, an easy-to-use mobile password manager would be helpful. As of now, Randy described mobile password managers as “tedious,” implying that their usability needs improvement.

    In the meantime, it’s good to see password managers are trying to keeping up with mobile OS updates; LastPass announced AutoFill on the same day as Android announced their new Oreo OS. So it looks like we have the tools to secure our mobile devices (as long as we remember to lock our phones!) even if password managers are still working on usability.

    Do Individuals Need Offsite Backups?

    While Randy was explaining the importance of backing up critical data to guard against ransomware, one attendee made a big point of keeping data backed up OFFSITE in addition to offline. Randy agreed, since these offsite backups would protect a company if its office flooded, caught fire, or had some other environmental disaster.

    It might be easy for an individual to think their data is safe enough that they could get by without an offsite backup. I would disagree; offsite backups are as important for individuals as they are for large companies. We never know when disaster can hit us, so it’s vital for anyone with data they value (so, essentially everyone) to have an offsite and offline hard drive or thumb drive to back up important files. 

    That in mind, the point Randy made was clear: having a strong backup solution in place will save a business owner from a lot of anxiety—especially if they work in targeted industries like healthcare or finance.

    Next Thirst for Knowledge on September 21

    All in all, this Thirst for Knowledge event gave everyone a lot to think about and new practices to adopt in matters of security. I’m looking forward to the next Thirst for Knowledge event on September 21. Be sure to follow Atlantic BT via Twitter for updates on the subject and speaker for the next Thirst for Knowledge.