40 Inspirational Speeches in 2 Minutes

I was going to try to somehow show what important lessons this video has for marketers. It wouldn’t have been all that difficult. We could talk about powerful writing, the importance of brevity, the need to be inspiring in everything we do.

But honestly, I just wanted an excuse to share this video with you. So forget the pretense. Here it is. Enjoy!

Bookmark and Share This Post
[Bloglines] [del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [Google] [LinkedIn] [MySpace] [Reddit] [StumbleUpon] [Technorati] [Twitter] [Windows Live] [Yahoo!] [Email]
 

Why are Canadian politicians slow to adopt Social Media?

If you read this blog with any degree of frequency, you’re no doubt aware that I have strong reservations about the usefulness of social media for most businesses.

For evidence of my prejudice on this, see:

That said, I actually love social media. I love blogs (I’m a blogger, as evidenced by the fact that this is a blog). I like Twitter (here I am @marioparise). I don’t want to imagine a world without YouTube.

I think social media is extremely effective for some purposes.

Denis Bertrand, my colleague and french-language blogger at Développez votre auditoire, can attest to the power of social media for arts groups.

People participate in the arts. When you go to a play, you’re not there to passively watch a show. You’re participating.

You participate by:

  • Clapping wildly when the curtain goes down;
  • Laughing at the great jokes;
  • Gasping at the shocking plot twists;
  • Offering silent reverence at the really important, emotionally moving parts;
  • Talking about the play before, during, and after the performance;
  • Thinking about the play before, during, and after the performance;
  • …and so forth.

Similar facts hold true when you go to a concert, see a comic live, or visit a museum.

The arts are inherently social. Even if you enjoy art all by yourself, you’re connecting with the artist through their work. Art is entirely about connecting as people in various ways.

It only makes sense, then, that social media is a perfect fit for arts groups. Social media is the most efficient medium ever developed by man for helping us connect to one another.

Politics is about connecting to people.

In almost every way, politics is simply a form of high-stakes performance art. The politician that connects with people the best wins.

That’s why they go from town to town, holding rallies, to see people face-to-face. Nothing is more powerful than that.

But you can only shake so many people’s hands. And once you do, you have to move on.

Advertising is useful at reaching anyone and everyone. It’s effective at getting a message out. But it doesn’t help you connect with voters. It’s shallow. (I think this is why ads tend to be negative. It’s easier to slander your opponent using mass media than it is to make people like you.)

Enter social media.

Social media fills the gap between one-on-one in-person connecting, and mass media message dissemination. (Say that 10 times fast!)

When Obama won the U.S. presidency, his use of social media was a clearly important factor. It wasn’t the only one, but it was important. I predicted at the time that his campaign would become the new standard, and all politicians would use social media in the same or similar way.

Much to my surprise, this hasn’t really panned out. Sure, they’re all on Facebook and Twitter, but they’re not really using social media. They’re mostly just pasting press releases and using it as an advertising channel.

This is an opportunity loss, and I’m very disappointed.

What every politician should be doing with social media:

  1. Recognize that anyone who willingly follows/friends you on Twitter/Facebook is a potential volunteer. Not a hardcore door-to-door volunteer, but the passive kind. The kind that would be happy to plaster your logo on their Facebook page and retweet your posts – IF you’re inspiring. Which brings me to…
  2. Learn how to inspire people. People want to participate. They want to like you. They wouldn’t be following/friending you if that wasn’t the case. So make it easy for them. Hire copywriters or poets if you need to, but learn to say things in inspiring ways. Be quotable, damn it.
  3. Pay attention to the people. One of the great things about social media is it makes it easy to know what people are thinking. We’ll tell you exactly what’s important to us, if only you’ll listen.
  4. Make it easy for people to support you. (More on this below.)
  5. Be present. Yes, you’re busy. Yes, your team is managing your social media presence. But show up every now and then. Rally the online troops. Make it clear just how important they are to you and how much you appreciate their support.
  6. Send a personal thank you (or make a personal phone call) to your most active supporters. Pick one person a day whose going above and beyond to support you, and take the time to say THANK YOU.

“4. Make it easy for people to support you.” - Expanded

Think of it in levels. Some people want to help you just a little bit. Some people want to lay their lives on the line for you. And there’s a whole lot of in between:

  1. People Friend/Follow you.
  2. People Like/ReTweet your posts.
  3. People Share your videos and articles.
  4. People plaster your party logo on their own profiles.
  5. People send emails or Facebook messages or Wall Posts to all of their friends, encouraging them to Friend/Follow you.
  6. People buy political swag (t-shirts, buttons, hats, iPhone apps…). You can charge a premium because people are also buying them as donations.
  7. People opt to make phone calls on your behalf. (Obama’s volunteers could log into the My Obama site at any time and get a name and phone number to call to encourage people to vote for him. I believe they had sample scripts to read. Think of it as crowd-sourced telemarketing. )
  8. People opt to go door to door on your behalf. (Same as #6 above, but in person.)
  9. People donate to the party.
  10. People join the party.
  11. People become part-time or full-time volunteers at candidate or party headquarters.

You can probably think of a number of other things that could be done. But by and large, politicians right now seem to be doing points 1-3 and 8-10. They’re skipping items 4-8, which is where I think the real potential is.

Bookmark and Share This Post
[Bloglines] [del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [Google] [LinkedIn] [MySpace] [Reddit] [StumbleUpon] [Technorati] [Twitter] [Windows Live] [Yahoo!] [Email]
 

8 Tips for Slashing Your Marketing Costs, Decreasing Your Risks, and Boosting Your Sales

If there’s one lesson I’ve learned more than any other, it’s that when it comes to marketing, every business owner has 3 primary concerns: It’s expensive, it’s risky, and it better damn well make the cash register sing.

Thankfully, there’s never been a better time to do all of those things.

The principles behind low-cost, low-risk, high-return marketing are simple:

  1. It’s not expensive if it pays. When marketing works, it pays for itself several times over. You’ve heard it before, but it bears repeating: “Marketing is an investment.”
  2. You can lower your exposure to risk by starting small and seeing what works. The goal is to spread your risk over a large number of thoughtful experiments, in the hopes of discovering an approach that will work. Once you find the right approach, you invest more heavily in it.

It’s like poker: You wouldn’t go all-in on your first bet, would you? Sure, it might pay off. But the odds are not in your favor. Winners place smart bets and limit their risk on any given hand.

The Safe Way to Market:

Here are 8 tips I’ve learned over the years to minimize risk and maximize results:

  1. Don’t rely on genius. Yes, your odds of success improve dramatically if you work with geniuses, but they are still fallible. Don’t rely on intuition. Use creativity, inspiration, and genius to develop ideas, but don’t assume those ideas are going to be winners.
  2. Test headlines with AdWords. Before you invest in the development of an entire campaign, and the commit to all the  media costs associated to it, test the ideas out first. By creating an AdWords campaign, you can test different headlines, subheads, offers, and URLs to see what gets clicked the most. Don’t worry about where the ads go to when clicked; it can go to an error page for all I care. All we’re looking for is clicks. If a headline/subhead/offer combo pulls in drastically more clicks than all the rest, there’s a pretty good chance that’s a winning concept.*
  3. Test headline/visual combos with an online display campaign. Again, don’t expect this to generate sales. We’re simply extending step #2 above to including visuals. It’s a bit more expensive, but not as expensive as committing to a TV campaign only to realize the concept doesn’t sell.
  4. Test different email campaigns. Once you’ve settled on a rough concept and offer, you can run A/B tests on your email marketing. The bigger your list, the more chances you have to test different ideas, and the more info you can get from this process. Again, the idea is to try variations on a theme so you can see what works and what doesn’t. You’d be surprised how often minor variations of headlines or graphics provide drastically different results. By using a site like Campaign Monitor, you can see which versions resulted in the highest open-rates and click-through rates.
  5. Test different landing pages. Setup your AdWords, display ads, and emails to link to a landing page address, and use Google’s Website Optimizer to run A/B tests on the landing page. Again, this is your opportunity to test even more variables, more ideas, more offers. By running Google Analytics, you can compare the results to see which versions resulted in the highest average time spent, highest clicks, and so forth. (If you sell products online, you can take this a step further and see which approach actually leads to the highest sales conversion rates.)
  6. Grow your media buy slowly. It’s better to commit to a year-long campaign in just one newspaper than to go big and buy up media everywhere you can. You’re in business for the long-haul right? Do the same with your marketing. When you’re confident the campaign is working, add another newspaper or a magazine or a radio station. Slow and steady wins the race.
  7. Reinvest your new revenue back into your marketing. By this point, your advertising should be paying for itself, and then some. Just put it right back into the marketing. In this way, your marketing will grow all on its own, your sales will continue to increase, and you won’t be investing any new money into that process. Congratulations, you have a money making machine.
  8. Always measure your results! Even when you’re confident in an approach and decide to invest in print, TV, radio, or direct mail, make sure you have some way of knowing what works. Common methods include using different 1-800 numbers, different landing pages, coupons with trackable codes, or just plain comparing sales before, during, and after a campaign.

* Not all concepts are going to be AdWords friendly. In the words of the immortal Bill Bernbach, “You can’t storyboard a smile.” You certainly can’t reduce that smile to text. But if your primary goal is to limit risk, maybe you should stick with ideas you can test.

Bookmark and Share This Post
[Bloglines] [del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [Google] [LinkedIn] [MySpace] [Reddit] [StumbleUpon] [Technorati] [Twitter] [Windows Live] [Yahoo!] [Email]
 

A Simple Theory of Marketing

Assumption #1: All businesses are in the business of making money.

Assumption #2: If a business is in the business of making money, then everything it does must serve the goal of making money.

Ergo:

  1. Everything any business invests in must serve the goal of making money.
  2. Marketing -  a business investment - must help a business make more money than it would otherwise.
  3. If marketing (or any other investment) is good at making money, the people responsible for it will preach this fact to the high heavens, because it makes it easier for them to make more money for themselves as well.

Which tells us that:

  1. If something seem to resist attempts to measure its ability to make money, it’s probably not very good at it. (Examples: social media, online display ads, sock puppets.)
  2. If something is really complicated, it’s probably B.S. There’s nothing simpler than the question, “Does it make more money than it costs?”
  3. If something is making you money, keep doing that. Consider doing it more. (Examples: direct response TV, email marketing, simply having a great product, being polite…)
  4. If you don’t know if something will make you money, there’s no shame in giving it a shot. But limit your risk, and make sure to track the results. The only thing worse than failure is not knowing you failed, and not learning anything from it.
Bookmark and Share This Post
[Bloglines] [del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [Google] [LinkedIn] [MySpace] [Reddit] [StumbleUpon] [Technorati] [Twitter] [Windows Live] [Yahoo!] [Email]
 

Is Groupon worth it? No. Here’s why.

Continuing my line of cranky “social media couldn’t sell its way out of a paper bag” blog posts, it seems someone has finally managed to scientifically measure how effective services like Groupon and Foursquare are for businesses.

And by “effective”, I mean their ability to boost revenues.

The answer? About 2%.

So let’s get this straight. Let’s say you offer $100 worth of product for $50 (Groupon deals are typically half-off or more). You then pay Groupon and their ilk an additional $25 for the privilege. (Or so I hear. I haven’t used it myself because I’ve never thought this was a good idea.) If that’s true, you’re now receiving just 25% of the revenue you used to get for the product you’re selling. Odds are, that’s either a losing sale, or you have very high margins on your products.

The hope, of course, is that this is a loss leader. You lose a little money now, but hope to get people to keep buying, thereby making up for it with after sales. The trouble is even the world’s greatest retail companies appear to only be able scratch out an extra 2% of revenue for all that risk and effort.

In other words, what you receive in return for slashing your price by 75% is a 2% boost in revenue in the short-term and irreparable damage to your brand in the long term.

Wake up, folks. Anyone can boost sales with radical discounts. But it’s a dangerous road to take. If I can buy your product for 50% off today, why should I pay full price tomorrow? Deep discounts should be reserved for getting rid of old stock. It’s not a great way to build a business.

If it was, we’d all just give our stuff away for free, because if slashing prices can boost sales, bringing them down to $0 will boost them even more.

Marketing is supposed to increase your perceived value, not erode it. The point of driving up demand is to be able to command better pricing. The only businesses that win in the discounting game are major retailers like Wal-Mart (who have the clout to force their suppliers to slash costs) and discounting services themselves. For your average small business owner, this type of marketing “strategy” is a loser.

Bookmark and Share This Post
[Bloglines] [del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [Google] [LinkedIn] [MySpace] [Reddit] [StumbleUpon] [Technorati] [Twitter] [Windows Live] [Yahoo!] [Email]