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Sep 20

Written by: Insights Account
9/20/2011 9:40 PM

Since the government announced last year that it would give priority to cloud — or Web-based — computing, contractors have been overloading their Web sites with images of puffy white clouds and blue skies, wrote Marjorie Censer in The Washington Post’s Capital Business.

Censer stated: “They’re hoping to show that they’re on board with the new policy — and ready to be awarded contracts — but some marketing specialists say the images may signal something else.”

Censer’s story continued, in part:

“If everyone is portraying themselves to look like the same thing, then there’s no differentiation in the offering,” said Susan Waldman, a partner at District-based branding firm ZilYen.

Waldman said she’s only seen one company — Apple — get it right.

Apple is busy readying iCloud, which reflects an effort to stamp its own identity on the space, Waldman said.

She and Sherri Green, president of the D.C. Ad Club and director of business development at LM&O Advertising in Arlington, said the key to successful advertising is illustrating how a firm’s version stands out.

For “an IT professional, seeing an image of the cloud — it’s an automatic get [that] this company offers cloud technology,” said Green. “So the ad has got to communicate what [the] benefit is.”

Green said LM&O has seen an increase in the number of companies interested in the agency’s help in marketing their cloud-related products and services.

Lex Crosett, vice president and chief information officer at Germantown-based Earth Networks, is less impressed with the marketing of the cloud than with the model itself.

Cloud computing was previously known as “utility computing, with the concept that you would rent only what you needed,” he said. “This somehow morphed.”

He criticized the proliferation of puffy clouds in advertising as a fad that doesn’t do much to clarify what a company is offering.

Crosett comes from a business that knows its clouds — both of the literal and the figurative variety. Earth Networks operates WeatherBug, an online site whose need for data capacity fluctuates with the weather.

“We’re kind of poster children for the need for cloud or utility computing,” Crosett said.

For the full story, click here.

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