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Sold anything yet?
Identity/biometrics/technology marketing and writing services
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Sold anything yet?
In a recent Instagram post, Maxwell Finn wrote:
“People don’t buy solutions…they buy escape routes.”
If you apply the “people buy escape routes” thinking, what does Bredemarket offer?
I guess in Bredemarket’s case, I sell an escape from nothingness.

My current clients realize the importance of a consistent presence, even without my help. They’re always reminding prospects of the benefits of their solutions.
Some of my former clients and non-clients never grasped that importance.

That’s why they are former clients and non-clients; they didn’t need me, or anyone else. One last blogged in February…February 2024. Wonder how many new prospects found THAT company today?
If you don’t want to escape the fate of anonymity, save time and stop reading here. If you want to escape this, read here…and better still, act by booking a meeting at https://bredemarket.com/cpa/

(Imagen 4)
The thing about uncertainty is that it also makes timelines uncertain.
If you ask me how long Bredemarket will exist, I can’t tell you.
Maybe it will be going strong 15 years from now.
Or maybe it will end today.
But however long it lasts, I hope Bredemarket retains its focus on helping you serve yours.
(Imagen 3)
(Imagen 4)
Posted on my free Substack account: https://open.substack.com/pub/johnebredehoft/p/friction-ridge-isnt-a-western-movie
While Bredemarket as an entity has only officially worked one trade show, my personal trade show, conference, and exhibition experience extends back years.
For example:
In a past life I was tasked with session and speaker coordination for an annual conference. Dozens of sessions, dozens of speakers, probably about a dozen rooms, a myriad of microphone and table and cable setups, a little under a week…plus a dozen planners and dozens of employees and third-party conference staff.
There were many ways in which things could go wrong:
Some of these things didn’t happen, but they could have…and if they did, it meant disruption of my “three chairs and 2 mics on the main stage on Tuesday at 8:45” meticulously made plans.
Yes, plans. I had them.
This was one of the times in which I fell back to Excel as my go-to project management tool, capturing all the necessary data, making it filterable and sortable.
The years have faded my memories of the details I tracked, but I needed to know session titles, dates and times, rooms, speakers, panelists, presentations, videos, live demos, on-stage chairs and tables, handouts, and other things besides.

And that was just for DURING the conference. BEFORE the conference I needed to ensure that session abstracts and speaker biographies were written and found their way to the printed conference program, the registration website, and the conference app.
This was also one of the times that I heavily relied on the color printer that was hidden away in the conference organizers’ area. And it had to be color, because some schedule items were green, some yellow…and some red.
The schedule was constantly revised. And as the week wore on and the days dwindled down to a precious few, I would hide the older rows on my schedule and literally lighten my workload.
I would grip the latest iteration of my private master schedule and race around the conference hotel—sometimes the Hilton Orange County/Costa Mesa, sometimes another—checking things off my checklist. (All names are fictional.)
By mid afternoon Thursday the last large sessions were done, the last workshops were wrapping up, the last raffle prizes were given away, and all that was left was the final banquet. Plenty could go wrong there, also, but that’s not part of this story.
And Ringo’s real name was Sharon.
The reason that I redirected the purpose of my Substack posts is because much of my audience there isn’t familiar with the…um…minutiae of biometrics and identity. (For example, my reference to minutiae would probably go right past all but two of my Substack subscribers.)
My Substack audience is best served with awareness content.
But awareness content is not only informative and educational.
It also makes prospects aware of your company…which is critically important.
Last month I said the following about awareness:
“Technology marketers, do your prospects know who you are?
“If they don’t, then your competitors are taking your rightful revenue.
“Don’t let your competitors steal your money.”
Perhaps steal is a harsh word, but it’s accurate.
Or perhaps a better word is indifference: your actions indicate that you don’t care whether customers buy from you or not. If you cared, you’d actually market your products.
“Nonsense, John! We have a sales staff. Who needs marketers?”
Especially when content marketing may take up to 17 months to convert. That doesn’t help the current quarter.
But your sales staff cannot be everywhere. If your prospects don’t know about you and aren’t reaching out to you, then you have to reach out to them.
And the calls? “Hi, I’m Tom with WidgetCorp.” “With who?”
So how is that current quarter looking now?
Your current quarter and future quarters would look better if your secret salesperson were working for you. As Rhonda Salvestrini said:
“Content for your business is one of the best ways to drive organic traffic. It’s your secret salesperson because it’s out there working for you 24/7.”
But the secret salesperson won’t engage your prospects until you act to create that content.
Talk to Bredemarket about your content, proposal, and analysis needs: https://bredemarket.com/cpa/
Before your competitors steal more from you.
You know the razor and blades business model, where you can buy the razor very cheaply, and then you spend a lot of money over the years buying the blades.
Of course, this business model also applies to other complementary products, such as game consoles and video games, and printers and ink.
And companies can extend the business model. Rather than buying individual razor blades, video games, and ink cartridges, you can obtain the complementary products “as a Service.”
For example, HP Instant Ink:
“HP Instant Ink is the hassle-free, money-saving ink subscription service that automatically delivers ink only when you’re running low. Plans start at $1.79 a month.”
Of course that price assumes you only print 10 pages a month, but whatever.
I won’t dwell on the specifics on the plan (charging by the page rather than the ink used, reducing your privacy by letting HP and whoever else know when you print 900 pages, etc.).
But I will note that HP instant Ink has the same vendor advantage as any other “as a Service” offering:
Increased customer lock-in.
I will speak from my own experience.
HP Instant Ink isn’t a perfect parallel, since it doesn’t include obsolete printer replacement. (But it could.) But the Ink as a Service (IaaS) offering certainly helps lock you in to HP…and to using HP ink rather than third-party ink.
And it’s yet another move from people owning things to people licensing things.
But if it provides a benefit (HP Instant Ink claims “up to” 50% cost savings), then it may be worthwhile.
(Imagen 3)
You could have spent significant time reading my Biometric Update guest post.
You could have spent significant time reading my 7 Bredemarket posts on my 7 vendor suggestions.
Or you could spend 12 seconds watching this video.
Repurposed from my recent guest post.
This has been a weird week.
Productivity-wise, I started off on the wrong foot because of pre-scheduled personal appointments on Monday and Tuesday afternoon.
No sweat, I thought, I will make up the time on Wednesday.
Until I fell ill mid-morning Wednesday and spent most of the rest of the day doing nothing.
With limited work yesterday and today.
Which reminded me that the best-laid plans can derail quickly.
But I still completed some critically important tasks…so that’s good.
This is the last of seven vendor suggestions I made in my Biometric Update guest post.
“Consider the ethical ramifications. Sometimes we as an industry are so intent on getting things done that we don’t pause to consider the ramifications of our actions. Those companies that address the ethical ramifications of biometrics, artificial intelligence, machine learning, and other technologies are well-positioned for future challenges.”
Ideally ethical considerations should happen in the executive suite, not in some superfluous subcommittee that could get axed any day. As a positive example, Tony Porter OBE QPM LLB has served as Chief Privacy Officer of Corsight AI since January 2021.
(Imagen 3)