Internet marketers focus on the wrong things – again..!

Marketers always seem to be reinventing the wheel; no sooner do they come up with a “great new concept” than they ditch it in favour of some “good old fashioned” marketing. Perhaps it’s just me – but I reckon marketing is pretty simple and straightforward stuff; it’s marketers who appear to make it complex.

For instance, take the latest research from Anderson Analytics. This shows that marketers want to concentrate on things like customer satisfaction, customer retention, segmentation, brand loyalty and return on marketing investments. Don’t they all sound grand? But when you buy something do you ever find yourself saying to your friends, “Oh, I only bought it because I am loyal to the brand and after all, I’m in the right segment which is why I am such a satisfied customer who is retained by the business.”

Or do you say, “I bought this because I really liked it”. People buy things because they like them or because they need them. Marketing is merely about making people aware of things they might like or they might need and then convincing them to buy them; simple. And when you ask people what influences them most to make that decision to buy, they always say “word of mouth”.

So, why does this new research of 600 marketing “experts” show that “word of mouth” is one of the least important areas for marketing in 2008? Do these expert marketers know something we don’t? Is the world going to change next year and we will all suddenly stop buying things because we no longer like word of mouth? No, once again it is marketers focusing on the wrong things, trying to make life much more complex than it need be.

The result is that anyone running an Internet business is infected by the “complex” which takes them away from the “straightforward”. But take a look at the world’s best marketing success stories – they all did it by being straightforward, having a focused concept and providing something people wanted or needed. Easy really.

Social networking has “made it”

You know when you have “made it” when you are front page news – particularly if that front page belongs to the Wall Street Journal. Facebook is the subject of a major article on the front of the Wall Street Journal, arguing that perhaps we can let other social networkers know too much.

The article is based on a new application for Facebook called “Beacon”. This can be linked to various shops and other online facilities. When you buy or download something from those other sites, a news item is added to your profile and distribute to your “friends” telling them about what you have just purchased.

The WSJ argues that this could be taking social networking too far. “Just how much do we want to share on social networks?” asks the article’s headline.

However, what Beacon is doing is very little different to what we do at dinner parties or shopping in the High Street. As you walk down the street after a Saturday morning’s shopping you carry bags telling people who have never met you which shops you have been in. Just by watching people walk past you can see who has been buying books, or CDs or jewellery, by looking at the logos on their shopping bags.

When you get home from your shopping trips and you have friends round for dinner, you may well play that CD you bought, or show them that new dress, or talk about the new gadget you bought the day before. In other words, we constantly “show off” our purchases. Beacon is merely the online equivalent of what High Street shoppers have been doing for decades.

CNN, YouTube and the American People

I am sitting in my hotel room in the USA watching a fascinating CNN program which is a “debate” between the Republican leadership hopefuls. What is interesting is not what they are saying – usual political flim-flam that doesn’t really answer the questions.

Rather, the interesting bit is what is going on with the way the program is being produced. The questions being asked of the Republican candidates by members of the public. Their questions were all submitted via YouTube. These videos are then being broadcast on CNN itself. Meanwhile, at CNN.com, the whole debate is being discussed online in a blog, as well as a rolling “ticker”.

So “user generated content” has hit mainstream broadcast TV; and it is being used again to help produce a blog and further web pages. It is also creating a community of people whose questions have been chosen for broadcast, whose videos could attract more comment and answers than the CNN program can manage in just an hour.

The debate is likely to continue online in a multimedia way. Yet, will any of the old, grey-haired, wrinkled men (who are the candidates) get involved online? I doubt it – and that in itself probably tells us enough about their value as a president.

Create an “Internet Marketing Kit”

Most people don’t use Internet technology well. Fewer than 2% of people who access the web, for instance, actually subscribe to RSS feeds. In spite of environmental concerns, millions of emails and web pages are actually printed out, rather than read on screen. As for using social networking tools, or “widgets”, well, they are so niche that almost no-one is using them.

The people buying products and services online still behave in rather traditional, offline, ways. They like to have things in their hands, to “feel” your service or products in some way. They want to “weigh by the pound” your company’s abilities.

That means you need to let them have marketing materials that they can feel, weigh and read offline. The best way of doing this is with an “Internet Marketing Kit”. This can be in the form of a PDF they download and print – or they can order one (free of charge) that you mail in the post.

The kit that you provide should contain a host of information (much of which will alerady be on your web site) that shows them you can do what you claim to do. For instance, try including the following items in your Internet Marketing Kit:

    Annual Report
    Latest Newsletter
    FAQs
    A presentation about your services/products
    Articles you have written
    White papers or reports you have produced
    Copies of testimonial letters
    Cuttings from media coverage of your business
    Recent press releases you have issued
    A list of your professional affiliations/memberships
    Images of your products or your services in use

You can probably think of more. Your prospective customers will not read all this material; they will skim through it and literally weigh-up your potential. The more you have in this kit, the better since people believe that the more you have the better you are – strange but true.

Your web site may have all this, but people cannot see it all at once, as they can with a printed kit. As a result, your web site can be less impressive than you would like.

Internet marketing gets even more mobile

A lucky 500 Londoners have started taking part in a trial using Nokia phones to pay for tube journeys. Essentially, the phones use similar technology to the widespread “Oyster card” that many people in London use to pay their underground fares.

Barclaycard is launching a similar card that will pay for tube fares as well as other small cash items, such as newspapers and confectionery. However, the new Nokia phones go one further. They will instantly recognise the location of the person using the payment system.

This will mean they will be able to receive a range of location-based marketing initiatives, such as money-off “vouchers” for a local restaurant. And even though it is a trial, it shows that newer ways of delivering marketing messages are being found on a regular basis, it seems. Location-based marketing has significant potential because you are tapping into a ready market who are on your doorstep.

So, for many businesses, the challenge is to how to turn their existing products and services into something that could be provided via a mobile phone in restricted geographical locations. If you don’t start thinking about this now for your business and planning for the inevitable arrival of such a possibility, then someone else will and your business could lose out.


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