One Question Marketers Don't Want To Ask Themselves

Posted on 10/22/2008

I have said before that the average American is targeted with an average of 4,000 advertising messages everyday. We can't remember even ten of the 4,000 ads from yesterday because we have great filters in place to keep them out but that doesn't seem to stop advertisers from putting all those ads out there.

Now, despite what you may think, advertisers and marketers are people too. The problem is when a marketer is in his/her job it's easy to forget about the things they know don't even work on them. So while a marketer for a local car dealership knows he changes the channel when commercials come on TV, he keeps pushing those ads for his own company. It doesn't make any sense but it's happening today in virtually every industry.

A Marketer's Toughest Question
The hardest question for a marketer (or advertiser or public relations person) to ask is this: is it better to say and do nothing than to create another one of those 4,000 messages that get filtered out everyday? The short answer is, yes, but that's a tough pill to swallow. The fact of the matter is that marketers are paid to do stuff, even things that don't work. In many organizations it's better to do the same old marketing that doesn't work than to try something new.

The Necessary Shift for Marketers
It's necessary that traditional marketers shift their thinking. Rather than talking about yourself, your company, your product, or something else we probably don't care about, try adding value to the people you want to reach. When you add value to someone's life they may decide to give you the opportunity to talk with them again. The more value you add, the more opportunities you earn. That's what social media can do and why it works. It gives anyone the chance to add value to people you want to reach. It's the reason a guy in his garage with no marketing budget can compete with a multi-million dollar company. It's exactly the opposite of the 4,000 ads that get filtered out. Instead of being blocked, valuable content is grabbed. There's no worry about filters. The filters are down and the content is willingly taken and even passed along to other people who will find it valuable.

Though I've said this many times (so this is my apology to longtime readers) the best way to position yourself mentally for creating valuable content is to remember five things:

  • Be entertaining
  • Be inspiring
  • Be educational
  • Be informative
  • Be outrageous

When you speak to these ideas rather than telling people why you're so great, you'll see they can figure that out for themselves...and then they'll tell some people for you. Or, just keep doing things the way you've been doing them...we don't want all those good filters going to waste.

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