The BV Blog

Marketing Thoughts From The Creative Team At BusinessVoice

Archive for August, 2008

ALL MARKETERS ARE LIARS

Tuesday, August 26th, 2008

No, this isn’t a rant about ethics. The provocative title is that of a fascinating book by Seth Godin that offers a different approach to success in marketing. Simply stated, Godin thinks that the best marketing tells the right story about a product or service to fit the consumer’s view of life. You’re not being untruthful, just very subjective about how you position yourself. He calls this kind of storytelling “lying,” but he smiles when he says it.

In a companion piece to the 2005 serialization of the book in Fortune Small Business Magazine, Godin says the best marketers use compelling stories that are authentic and original:

Marketers (and all human beings) are well trained to follow the leader. The natural instinct is to figure out what’s working for the competition and then try to outdo it–to be cheaper than your competitor who competes on price, or faster than the competitor who competes on speed. The problem is that once a consumer has bought someone else’s story and believes that lie, persuading the consumer to switch is the same as persuading him to admit he was wrong. And people hate admitting that they’re wrong.

Instead, you must tell a different story and persuade listeners that your story is more important than the story they currently believe. If your competition is faster, you must be cheaper. If they sell the story of health, you must sell the story of convenience. Not just the positioning x/y axis sort of “We are cheaper” claim, but a real story that is completely different from the story that’s already being told.

When it comes to your marketing, are you simply following the lead of others in your field? Could you create a unique story about why customers or clients need and want your product or service? Marketing like this can help you stand out from the competition — and that’s no lie.

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IN THE KNOW

Monday, August 11th, 2008

Reading: it’s something you learned to do a long time ago. (I can barely remember learning the alphabet and how to sound out difficult words.)

When I was a kid, Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys were some of my favorite characters. I would stay up late at night, hiding under my covers with a flashlight just so I could finish one more chapter about them.

That enthusiasm waned a bit as I got older. Magazines replaced books and television replaced newspapers.

But reading is important, and not just for enjoyment. It’s important for success on the job too.

Think about your industry. How do you find out about trends or breaking news? Where do you turn to learn about new technology or applications? Do you have clients? How do you learn about what’s happening in their industries?

In our office, nearly everyone subscribes to several e-newsletters. Some are about marketing, like AdAge and MarketingProfs; others have a telecommunications focus. We also subscribe to client-specific items, such as health and sciences RSS feeds for our healthcare clients, or FMI daily Lead to keep abreast of changes in the supermarket industry.

A quick Internet search can yield a lot of great information, and most of it’s free. And don’t forget about the blogs! Your peers, clients, and even your competitiors are writing content that you should be reading.  

Yes, reading takes time, but the reward is being well-informed, and that puts you and your company in a better position to succeed.

Build some time into your day for reading. Peruse industry blogs while you enjoy your first cup of coffee. Scan newsletters for pertinent headlines before you zip off to lunch. And since you don’t really get anything done after 4:30 anyway, take the last half hour of the day to catch up on industry gossip.

 

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