Written by: Barbara French

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Monday, September 24th, 2007 at 4:41 pm PT

Carter Lusher and the HP Corporate Analyst Relations team have launched a company blog for the worldwide industry analyst community. The new HP Corporate AR blog complements the HP Analyst Relations Portal and other online and offline outreach resources designed expressly for the industry analysts.

The intent is to keep the blog true to the interests and needs of the industry analysts. Other types of opinion and news bloggers — from journos to armchair pundits — continue to be served by the HP media relations group; financial analysts are served by the IR group. Not sure which type of blogger you are — at least in HP’s eyes? See the debut post for some clarification and examples, or contact the team directly.

Part of the intent is to extend a corporate handshake to all analysts, regardless of their “tier” status. That may seem like a small thing, but it is not. Every analyst knows the importance of having responsive, well informed and well placed contacts inside the big tech companies. And, every analyst knows that the big company AR programs often favor “tier 1″ over all others — for private briefings, survey responses, interview requests, informal updates on the state of the business.

Last month, we saw the launch of the Cisco corporate AR blog. This month, it’s the HP Corporate AR blog. Based on the strength of these efforts, blogging is fast becoming a best practice in corporate industry analyst relations.

Written by: Barbara French

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Monday, August 20th, 2007 at 11:32 am PT

Sam Whitmore’s Media Survey this week shines its Tech Editorial spotlight on the Gartner Magic Quadrant. The live teleconference takes place tomorrow at 4:00 pm EST, 1:00 pm PST. I’m on the show, along with Carter Lusher, director of analyst relations at HP, and a Gartner spokesperson TBA, and of course, the outspoken Sam Whitmore and his SWMS clients. As usual, this group has compiled an interesting list of questions and discussion points, including which parts of the MQ get the most readership, how do I get my client onto one, how do I get my client off of one.

I characterize the Magic Quadrant as the most reviled form of industry analyst research being published anywhere on the planet today. One of the main reasons it is so deeply hated is that it is so deeply loved. Much of the intense loathing that the MQ evokes is a direct response to its popularity with IT vendors. Check it out:

  • The term “magic quadrant” was included in more than 400 press releases distributed through Business Wire during the last 12 months
  • Google finds about 757,000 web pages including the words Gartner and “magic quadrant”, and that’s limiting results to web pages first seen within the last 12 months and excluding all results from the gartner.com domain

Everyone’s got an opinion on what to do about Magic Quadrants, especially the analyst relations consultants and those who believe they are AR experts whether or not they have ever actually executed on analyst relations themselves. Gartner analysts are a good case in point. Many Gartner analysts make buckets of cash from the Magic Quadrant long after they leave Gartner employment, by providing MQ training, consulting, project management, insider tips, whitepapers, and related expertise ad nauseum.

We’ll see what opinions pop up tomorrow.

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