Company: Softrax Corp.
Contact: Stephen Foster, Director of Marketing Programs
Location: Canton, MA
Industry: Business Software (B2B)
Annual revenue: $27,000,000
Number of employees: 125

Quick Read:

Softrax Corp. is the developer of enterprise revenue management and billing software designed to automate a company's entire revenue cycle, including revenue recognition, reporting, and forecasting, as well as complex billing and contract renewals. Effective as these solutions may be, they also tend to be pricey, and therefore not an easy sell.

Softrax realized that its pitch would be more effective if potential customers better understood the many complexities—and opportunities—associated with revenue reporting and so recognized for themselves the advantages of automating such functions. Accordingly, the company embarked on a new marketing strategy based almost entirely on educating the marketplace.

At the core of this strategy was a series of informative monthly webcasts presented by government and industry authorities. The "Executive Webcast Series" served as a broadcast medium to educate viewers on topics that related directly or indirectly to Softrax products, but did not specifically market those products.

The webcasts were initially an expensive undertaking, but Softrax has worked relentlessly over time to refine the program by accessing more suitable technology and improving the brand experience without compromising its soft-sell approach. By trying different vendors until it found a good fit, Softrax was able to dramatically lower the costs of the webcasts and turn them into one of its most cost-effective marketing mediums. Webcast attendance—and the resulting sales—skyrocketed after Softrax was able to develop a simpler, more economical method of webcasts offered via personalized email.

The Challenge:

Enterprise revenue management is a crowded space. Many of Softrax's competitors used expensive classic advertising or sometimes suspect guerrilla marketing techniques to promote their products, so Softrax sought a different approach. It decided to educate the market on the issues its products addressed—without directly promoting the products—allowing potential customers to realize the value themselves.

Monthly webcasts were the cornerstone of this soft-sell strategy, offering prospective and existing customers expert information and real-life solutions to their everyday revenue-recognition and government-compliance issues.

The company considered that approach very effective for "getting our brand and message either directly or indirectly in front of an audience of high-level executives...the people we know we need to be talking to," said Stephen Foster, Softrax's marketing programs director.

But at an average cost of $5,000 to $6,000 per event, these webcasts were fairly costly. Softrax aspired to both lower cost and increase brand awareness, which could offset costs in the long run.

The Campaign:

Besides the obvious need for reliability, Softrax also wanted webcast-hosting technology that let attendees effortlessly view the events while speakers easily managed their presentations. Many of the technologies that Softrax had used offered more features than necessary and added confusion to the process, both for viewers and the event speakers.

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Case Study: How a Software Firm's Soft-Sell, Educational Webcasts Helped Double Sales

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Kimberly Smith is a freelance writer. Reach her via dtkgsmith@gmail.com.

LinkedIn: Kim Smith