We are confronted every day with hundreds, thousands of messages, all competing for our attention. The volume has ramped up exponentially since the net delivered access to anyone with a connection.

The vast majority are tactical thought bubbles, cat photos and brain farts by people vying for attention, but then not knowing what to do with it when they are the winners of the lucky dip.

‘Yesterday’, access was not so available, you needed lots of money, which ensured there was a barrier to entry not hurdled by the figurative cat photo.

The generation of revenue, the process that encompasses both ‘Marketing’ and ‘Sales’ is a continuum. Sales comes in right at the end, at the point of, or near to the transaction. Marketing is the longer-term stuff that provides the opportunity to open and lead the process culminating in a transaction.

Think of it like a race.

Are you running a sprint next month, or a marathon?

If it is the sprint, training can be short sharp explosive sessions. You focus on the detail, short sharp sprints, and many of them.

By contrast, if it is the marathon, training for a sprint will not get you far. You need to have longer sessions, building slowly to the marathon distance.

Building a relationship that leads to making a sale is a marathon, not a sprint.

Most of the marketing I see is designed as if the race was a sprint. Usually this is the wrong training, as in most instances beyond small value commodity items, you need to get set for the marathon.

As a result, you have all this crappy tactical sales stuff thrown at you daily, which is rarely of any interest, so you turn off. Turning off just encourages the tactical digital set to chuck more crap at you in the hope that something sticks.

When you have to churn out new messages daily, weekly, it removes the opportunity for creativity, the building of the relationships that may lead to something meaningful at the end.

Most so called ‘marketers’ brought up on a diet of digital are unfamiliar, and as a result do not deeply understand this more strategic approach. They set out to sprint in a marathon, and end up coming in at the tail, assuming they actually finish.

 

Header photo: Marathon startline 1904 Olympics