There is just so much stuff around on the net, everything and anything you ever wanted to know, or could think of to ask, is there somewhere.
The availability is removing the necessity to think, to capture the essence of a problem, and then develop creative solutions and the means to communicate.
Too often the list driven, by the digital book solution, is the only strategy considered.
This blog is no different, when I do a list post with an attractive hook in the headline, views spike. It is a seductive outcome to write a post and double the average number of views.
Marketing has always been about people, with all the vagaries that apply when you deal with people and their idiosyncrasies.
The people who did marketing well were those able to connect the dots in some way that added value to others. It is essentially a creative skill. Not in the sense of being able to create a drawing, but much broader than that, being able to see things that others cannot.
Then along came the web, and the ‘quick fix’ world we live in, a world of instant gratification, where lists rate very highly, because they meet the need.
But what about the thought process, the creativity??
What about strategy that connects people with unique solutions to their problems?
What about the stories that make things memorable and repeatable?
As I get older, it becomes increasingly obvious that the foundations of marketing, the delivery of value to someone who is prepared to pay for it more than it costs for you to deliver it, are unchanged.
I suspect they are unchanged since Babylon was being built.
How do we come back at this?
How do we ensure that marketing has the depth of thought necessary to truly make a difference?
These days I joke that to get a marketing degree you just need to have a pulse. This is proving to be unfortunately true the more I see the quality of those degree qualified automatons around now, inhabiting businesses and being supposedly in charge of a businesses greatest asset, its brand.
Why was Mad Men was a great TV series?
Not just because it was entertaining, and told stories, but because it was able, for some of us, to tweak a nerve so deep in our psyches that almost hurts. Don Drapers pitch to Kodak, the throwing out of a brief that spoke about the technology, and replacing it with one that spoke to peoples hearts is a classic.
Would that have been possible if Don was following a list?? Beware the siren song of marketing by lists, they can lead you onto the rocks.
Col, It seems to me that thinking often both hurts and is frowned upon.I’m pretty sure you would see the same thing.
Totally agree. Quick access to solutions avoids engaging with thought.