Author Archives: David Teich

Software and BI, Repeating History

One of the books I’m reading is “The Age of Edison” by Ernest Freeberg. It describes the great technology transition of the late 1800s and early 1900s. I’m only to chapter three but on pages 60-61 there’s something that drives this blog post. The author quotes someone in Electric World (March 31, 1888) humorously describing the typical electric company sales pitch: “There are two kinds of electric lights, namely, our kind and the other fellow’s kind. Our light is much better than the other fellow’s light. The other fellow’s light is surrounded by a cloud of non-luminous verbosity.”

George Santayana said that “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” I’ll modify that. It’s necessary to remember, but not sufficient. You also need to learn from it. It’s one thing to note other people’s mistakes but another to have the self-reflection to notice you making those same mistakes.

The software industry is replete with those who think their new product is completely different than all others. How many times have you asked a founder or early sales person about their firm’s competition and received the answer “we have no competition!” Right…

Firms always have advantages, but every product has disadvantages too. It’s knowing the two and dealing with them appropriately that makes your messages stronger. The task is to minimize your non-luminous verbosity and help your market clearly understand the value you provide to them.

Remember history, minimize the marketspeil.

Software marketing: Understanding business and technology

Welcome to my web site. This first post is to introduce myself a bit more than a short About page can do. As that page mentioned, I’m David Teich and have over thirty years of experience in enterprise software with a focus on marketing. What makes me different from most others who have the same years of work? Breadth. I am a true generalist able to take a broad range of high technology experience to bear on your issues. I see the forest, not the trees.

I began my career as a computer operator, and moved through programming, systems analysis, consulting, and sales engineering and into marketing by the mid-1990s. I can work with people in all areas of business to understand their skills and needs in order to synthesize a solution that incorporates an understanding of your business, technologies and markets to create messages to attract the varied stakeholders in a complex modern sales cycle.

It’s not just the depth and breadth of my work experience that serve as a foundation for supporting your needs. I earned my undergraduate from Texas A&M University in the second year of their business computing degree program. I went to Stanford to earn my MS in computer science because I was interested in expert systems to solve business problems. My MBA from Pepperdine University is in marketing.

Consulting? That experience goes back a long way. Teich Communications is the name my parents had for their public relations firm and in which I was first exposed to proofreading, printers, consulting and more. I’ve decided to keep that name because marketing, whether strategic or tactical, is all about communications. I consulted a few times in Silicon Valley and spent six years consulting in Israel.

Today’s software environment is global. In addition to having worked with international markets at US companies, I have lived and worked abroad. That overseas experience strengthens my ability to understand the needs of different markets and global corporations.

I understand both how enterprises make software decisions and how enterprise software works. I can help small to mid-sized software firms better focus marketing to address solutions. Whether you need help understanding strategic aims and positioning or you need basic collateral that attracts specific stakeholders, I can help you improve your communications.