Marketing knowledge and industry news are all over the Net. Our team went out
and scoured hundreds and hundreds of web sites. Then we went through them and tried to sift
out the most informative and influential authors and thought leaders, thus saving you time
and giving you the latest in marketing.
Read on or subscribe to the RSS feed here.
|
| |
Subscribe to RSS Feed |
| |
| |
| Archive |
| January 2009 |
| December 2008 |
| November 2008 |
| October 2008 |
| September 2008 |
| July 2008 |
| January 1970 |
| |
| |
|
|
|
What will be different in ‘09?
Mon, 05 Jan 2009 17:35:53 -0800
Ready or not, 2009 is here. By now, you should have your marketing plan for the year completed so you can hit the ground running. But…the percentages say you haven’t even started.
Would you like to know how you can significantly improve your business right out of the shoot?
If you’ve got it in you, here’s a [...] |
|
It’s My Birthday & We’re Gonna Party!
Mon, 05 Jan 2009 08:07:53 -0800
Ok so maybe we won’t throw a huge bash or anything and I wasn’t even going to share about my Birthday today because of other pressing issues, but here we are. It’s January 5th and it’s my Birthday. I dub myself officially “older.” It also marks 14 years in business.
I still have insecurities about my [...] |
|
Women Are Making Huge Strides In The Business World
Sat, 03 Jan 2009 17:32:16 -0800
As a woman entrepreneur I love reading and looking at other women who are successful in business. Thanks in part to the troubled economy, entrepreneurship has been on the rise over the past few years. Small businesses have helped replace the jobs lost due to large manufacturers moving operations overseas, and they have helped boost [...] |
|
A New Year 2009 - Woke Up To My Own Holiday Gift
Thu, 01 Jan 2009 12:56:04 -0800
I hope you had the most wonderful New Years Eve! I sure did, we got together with friends, ate dinner together, played the Wii and really enjoyed our time together. Then as I opened up my laptop with coffee in hand I woke up to my own Holiday Gift.
First let me tell you I LOVE [...] |
|
Drew McLellan: How Long Will It Take?
Mon, 05 Jan 2009 05:41:12 -0800
Here's one of my worries as we continue to trudge through the murky waters of the recession. Business owners have always been an impatient lot, when it comes to marketing efforts. They plant the seed and then two days later, when nothing has sprouted, they dig up the seeds before they've had a chance to take root. Tactics that would have worked, given enough time, are aborted before they've had a chance. Lots of wasted time. Lots of wasted money. But with the pressures of tougher times, I worry that the impatience factor will get even worse. And there are a lot of businesses who can't afford too many missteps. So before you invest in a marketing effort, be sure you are willing to hang in there and take into account these factors: How often do people need/want it? If you run a restaurant or sell ice cream – you’re in luck. Mail a coupon on Tuesday and you might see the family, coupon in hand, by Saturday. But on average, someone buys a car every 3-5 years. Own a car dealership and you might wait 18+ months after your first ad to see that person in your door. Who the heck are you? Does the prospect recognize your brand? Do they know what you are all about? What makes you different from your competitors? Who else is talking? Just like at a party, if you are the only voice talking, it’s a lot easier to be heard. But, if you are one of many and others are talking louder and faster – you can easily get lost in the din. Where are you talking? What would happen if you stood up right in the middle of a church service and started talking? You’d get noticed, wouldn’t you? That’s because you are doing something unexpected in an unexpected place. What are you saying? The most important factor of all. Are you talking about what the consumer cares about or are you talking about you? If you're on the agency side, how do you help clients have the patience to let a campaign take root? If you're a business owner/marketer -- how do manage expectations within your organization so that your efforts are given enough time to have impact?
|
|
Get Closer to Your Customers Now
Mon, 05 Jan 2009 08:21:35 -0800
This content from: Duct Tape Marketing
Get Closer to Your Customers Now
What the heck, the phone’s not ringing like it was this time last year, something must be up. In good times it’s easy to get lazy and one of the first things to go is that genuine, I really appreciate your business and want to [...] |
|
Adding a Chief Conversation Officer
Fri, 02 Jan 2009 06:07:20 -0800
This content from: Duct Tape Marketing
Adding a Chief Conversation Officer
“Markets are conversations - talk is cheap, silence is fatal” - from the cluetrain manifesto - Levine, Locke, Searls & Weinberger
The statement above embodies for many the changed landscape of marketing. Bigco started to embrace this over the course of the last few years and now [...] |
|
Automate Copyright Updates on Web Pages
Thu, 01 Jan 2009 07:54:04 -0800
This content from: Duct Tape Marketing
Automate Copyright Updates on Web Pages
Nothing earth shattering today, but a nice little new year item for your web site.
Many web pages carry copyright notice that reflects the creation date of some or all of the content - Copyright 2003-2009 for example.
This is great until the year changes and you [...] |
|
Teaching people a lesson
Sun, 04 Jan 2009 23:04:00 -0800
David writes in to point out that banks are losing a fortune on foreclosures because many frustrated homeowners are trashing the houses before they leave. This dramatically diminishes the value of the home and leaves scars all around. Why not, he wonders, offer the homeowners $1000 in cash if they leave the house in great condition? I can hear the objections already. "What! Why should we pay people not to break the law!" After all, if you do it this time, if you bribe people to behave, then you'll have to do it every time... Every time? How often, exactly, do you expect to evict a person? It's very easy to set up policies and procedures designed to give people what they deserve, to set a standard, to teach a lesson, to make sure they understand who's boss. And I think that for parents, this is an excellent idea. Bribing your kid leads to spoiled kids who don't get it. But businesses aren't parents and customers aren't kids. "I can't let you in, because you didn't follow the procedure, and even though you're never coming back here again, if I let you in now, without having followed the procedure, you'll think that you can ignore the procedure the next time you do business with someone else..." It sounds stupid when you say it that way because it is stupid. You can extend this all the way to how you hire people. Is penalizing a 40 year old by not giving her a job a way to teach her a lesson about studying harder for the SAT when she was 17? Instead of worrying so much about establishing good habits among transient customers, perhaps it's worth figuring out what works best for both sides and doing that instead.  |
|
Is everything okay?
Sat, 03 Jan 2009 23:19:00 -0800
Unless you work in a nuclear power plant, the answer is certainly no (and if you work there, I hope the answer is yes.) No, everything is not okay. Not in a growing organization. Not if your company is making change happen, or dealing with customers. How could it be? And yet, that's what so many managers focus on. How to make everything okay. We spend so much time smoothing things out, we lose the opportunity for change, or for texture or creativity. Instead of working so hard to make everything okay, perhaps it is more helpful to work hard at living with a world that rarely is.  |
|
When marketing goes nuclear
Sat, 03 Jan 2009 05:10:31 -0800
Scarcity plus Christmas plus social pressure plus greed plus kids = critical mass. The most poignant moment comes just after 3:00 when a young boy totally loses it. This is the most disturbing video I've seen today.  |
|
Do ads work?
Fri, 02 Jan 2009 22:19:00 -0800
If the local bank were offering a sale on dollar bills, ninety cents each, how many would you buy? Most rational people would say, "I'll take them all please." Especially if you had thirty days to pay for them. So, why, precisely, do you have an ad budget? If your ads work, if you can measure them and they return more profit than they cost, why not keep buying them until they stop working? And if they don't work, why are you running them? The time-tested response is that you're not sure, that ads are risky, that you can't tell. And for some sorts of products and some sorts of ads, you'll get no argument from me. Digital ads are different (or they should be). You should know cost per click and revenue per click and be able to make a smart guess about lifetime value of a click. And if that's positive, buy, buy, buy. And if you don't know those things, why are you buying digital ads? When Amazon was at its key growth peak, the mantra there was $33. They would buy unlimited ads, of any kind, as long as they generated new customers for $33 or less each. There was a risk that $33 was too high a number for the business to sustain, but the ads were no risk at all. As long as they came in under that number, there was unlimited money to buy them. How often do you hear the marketing person say, "that's a neat idea, but we don't have the budget this year"? Shouldn't she say, "We have an unlimited budget for ads that work"...  |
|
Change your pricing
Thu, 01 Jan 2009 23:00:00 -0800
When a restaurant goes from a la carte to either a buffet or a prix fixe meal, it is able to find a new class of customers. Could a law firm charge by the project? When I incorporated Yoyodyne, a fancy firm charged us a fix rate. Netflix went from charging by the rental to charging by the month. We use tolls to charge people who drive over bridges more than other folks. We don't hesitate to charge people ordering steak more than people ordering pasta in a restaurant. Could the library charge frequent readers more? What about insurance companies charging more to young families (more likely to have a baby). Ski areas have a huge fixed cost base (land, grooming, etc.) so they get greedy, sell too many lift tickets and the lines get long. Fixed pricing encourages people to ski a lot, at peak times. What if only cost $3 to get on the mountain, plus a small charge for each lift ride and a premium price for popular lifts at popular times? The technology is already there, the only reason not to try it is momentum. If you're a copywriter or masseuse or other sort of freelancer, how many retainer clients do you need to relax and spend more time on the work, less on the billing/looking part? What happens when an artist does this? Why don't airlines experiment with auctioning of seats, baseball card style? You could buy the rights to a seat for $200 (speculating, if you like) and then try to sell it off as the flight time get closer--it's not hard to imagine an easy to use website for these transactions. The seat might change hands a dozen times, earning the airline a processing fee each time, and enriching those that want to start trading this expiring commodity. Sports teams are already trying to figure out how to make this work. Changing your pricing changes your story.  |
|
Happy new year
Wed, 31 Dec 2008 16:01:00 -0800
I don't like New Year's. Faux merriment, excessive drinking, ridiculous resolutions and general malaise. Not to mention Dick Clark. There's one great opportunity, though... Brand new expectations are set, expectations just waiting to be shattered. Like an empty Moleskine notebook, the possibilities are exciting. Why not exceed them? The place where expectations are lowest: leadership. Everyone expects you to get in line and follow, not lead. The opportunity this year is bigger than ever: to lead change, to create a movement in a direction you want to go. While the rest of your world huddles and holds back, here's a golden chance to use cheap media, available attention and great talent to make something that matters.  |
|
Corporate vs. Product Advertising in Tech
Fri, 02 Jan 2009 01:52:00 -0800
When talking about allocating a marketing budget, one of the most important questions is the split between corporate and brand spending. In other words, is it better to lift the brand as a whole, or hawk specific products? Peeling the onion another layer, when doing corporate advertising, should a company focus on "hard" attributes--also called "corporate ability" or CA advertising--or on softer "corporate social responsibility" or CSR?
I hadn't really thought about this much in the context of tech until today, when I started running through various ad campaigns and realizing just how bereft most are of CSR advertising in tech. Literally the only company I can come up with that does CSR is Microsoft. Am I missing someone? I guess you could argue that Google does it, but that's not really advertising as much as big PR stunts.
I think the reason for this is simple: most tech companies don't really do anything "bad", or at least they're not accused of it. Have any tech companies recently changed the climate? Cut down a rainforest? Enslaved children to mine silicon? If they have, it doesn't make the news because they're so far down the value chain from these activities. And of course, this is why Microsoft has to run ad campaigns on its CSR.
 Keep in mind, the above table contains estimates I put together in five minutes. They are 100% wrong.
This leads me to wonder, does CSR even work to a technology environment? Does it almost backfire? I mean, I watch these Exxon Mobil / BP greenwashing ads and I literally want to vomit. Maybe Microsoft would be better off ignoring CSR because the audience is so savvy. I think there's probably a big inverse correlation between CSR effective and audience sophistication.
What about product vs. corporate spending? Apple doesn't do any corporate spending. They market their products only, and yet have an incredibly strong brand. This is because their products are (1) linked together through design, creating an "idea" of an Apple brand just by handling, viewing and using their products, and (2) are advertised in very similar ways. So, they're getting the double-whammy of getting product SKUs out the door with product advertising and strengthening their brand.
Could any company do this? Could Microsoft do this? Are they better off just abandoning CSR and CA altogether and advertising products through a unified portfolio approach? I think it's worth a shot. |
|
|