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Marketing Series
Forget Everything You
Ever Knew About Marketing
It's All About To Change
By Michele Pariza Wacek
Remember that romantic image of the writer? The one where the writer spends
his days writing, never worrying about marketing or promoting himself
because that was his publisher's job?
Well, those days are long gone. Now for a writer to succeed, he needs to
know how to market both himself and his work.
But, there is good news. Writers and other small business owners will
actually have an edge over bigger companies thanks to the emerging marketing
model.
Yes, you heard right. Emerging marketing model. The old ways of marketing
are dying. And a new regime is coming of age.
To understand how marketing is changing, it's important to start with a bit
of history. The image most of us have of marketing is based on an old
communications model, one that was popular in, say, the 1970s. That was when
we had three broadcast networks (ABC, CBS and NBC — no FOX either) a public
station, one newspaper and a handful of magazines and radio stations. Trade
magazines and newsletters were few and far between, we had no Internet and
no e-mail.
Because consumers had so few choices, it was fairly easy to market to them.
Chances were pretty good they were watching, reading or listening to one of
a handful of mass media sources.
In fact, to be successful in this marketing model, all you really needed was
money.
Here's how it worked. A business created a good product. The business hired
an advertising agency. The advertising agency spent thousands of dollars
placing ads on the three network television stations and national magazines.
Perhaps it also bought a few spots on local radio stations and newspapers.
And if the ad budget was big enough, success was practically guaranteed.
There was no mystery to marketing. Mostly it was a numbers game. Spend the
money and get a return. Businesses were selling products. Mass media
businesses were selling advertising space. Advertising agencies were buying
space. Everyone was making money. And everyone was happy.
Fast forward to 2004. Now, instead of three television channels we have
hundreds. Instead of a handful of magazines we have dozens, including about
a million trade publications. On top of that, we have the Internet and
e-mail just begging for a piece of our time.
Never before in the history of communications have audiences been so
fragmented. Just finding your customers has turned into that old adage of
finding a needle in a haystack. But that's not the only challenge — even
if
you do locate your customers that's no guarantee they'll listen to you.
Wherever we go, we are confronted by marketing message after marketing
message. It's been estimated that we're bombarded with over 3,000 messages
a
day...and that number keeps going up. How have we responded? By learning to
shut most of those messages out (which of course makes it even harder for
marketers to get us to act upon their message).
But the woes of the traditional marketing model don't end there. The
Internet has also introduced a little thing called accountability
When you market online, you can track what people are looking at and, even
more importantly, where you lost them in selling process. For instance, you
can check your Web site stats and see which pages people entered your site
and which pages made them leave. You can track what people clicked on in
your e-mail campaign or if they clicked at all.
With traditional or offline marketing, you only know if it worked (a
customer bought something) or didn't (a customer didn't buy something).
You
don't know if they saw the ad, read the ad or what happened.
All of this is bad news for those who have built their business on the
traditional marketing model. But, it's good news for you. How? Find out in
my next article. •
Copyright 2004 Michele Pariza Wacek.
About
the Author | More
by Michele Pariza Wacek
Michele Pariza Wacek owns Creative Concepts and Copywriting,
a writing, marketing and creativity agency. She offers two free e-newsletters
that help subscribers
combine their creativity with hard-hitting marketing and copywriting principles
to become more successful at attracting new clients, selling products and
services and boosting business. She can be reached at www.writingusa.com.
10/28/04
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