Saturday, March 1, 2008

SXSW Breakout App of 2008: What Will it Be? - ReadWriteWeb

SXSW Breakout App of 2008: What Will it Be? - ReadWriteWeb

The SXSW extravaganza in Austin has been an application king maker for the last two years at least; Google's Dodgeball blew up there in 2006 and Twitter went from elite-chic to massively popular there in 2007.

Who's it going to be in 2008? We look at five possible contenders below, taking into consideration the special magic that is the SXSW experience. Lots of startups are hoping they'll go big next week in Austin, but in all likelihood only one, maybe two, actually will. (story continues on ReadWriteWeb here.)

3 Reasons Fortune 100 Diversity Web Marketing is Missing

We just completed a module where we had to write a discussion of diversity marketing presence on websites of Fortune 100 companies. Of the 18 of us in the class, I would estimate maybe 2 or 3 of us were able to actually find a distinct diversity marketing presence on a Fortune 100 site. Many talked about supplier diversity, employee and executive diversity, community relations, but only a scant few had intentional diversity marketing content. Of those who did have such content, it was because the product was specifically for a particular diversity group (ie black hair care products) or, to be blunt, because they are in a federally regulated industry and they had to.

Why is this? The demographicsre there: growth, disposable income, buying power,etc. So why is diversity marketing MIA? Here are my 3 theories based on this week's module and my own experience.:

  1. Fear of appearing to marginalize a particular group. I suspect some of the Fortune 100 are afraid if they create say an, Asian-American page, they will appear to be "digital segregationists" somehow.
  2. Cultural Ignorance. Despite the strides diversity groups and women have made in corporate america, the fact remains that the C-level suite is still predominately white and male. If someone who "looks like you" to put it in diversity training terms, isn't in the position to make marketing decisions,it may not be at the forefront of their mind to say , 'hey we need to include latinos in our marketing communications'.
  3. Fear of Scaring Off the Good Paying Customers. You arent' gonna like this, but it needs to be said. Some businesses, in 2008, may fear that by proactively courting the business off diversity groups, they will offend and lose their white customer base. Many consumers will still make value judgements about a company if they make a concerted effort to market to a diversity group they don't like.
So giga-readers, what do you think? Let me hear what you think on this.

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

New Media Has Made Product Marketers Lazy



"If the circus is coming to town and you paint a sign saying 'Circus Coming to the Fairground Saturday,' that's advertising.

If you put the sign on the back of an elephant and walk him into town, that's promotion.

If the elephant walks through the mayor's flowerbed, that's publicity.

If you can get the mayor to laugh about it, that's public relations.

And if you planned the elephant's walk, that's marketing."
-- Reader’s Digest

We received the above quote in one of our assignments for my New Media graduate course in IMC at West Virginia. I love it because its a good "made to stick" type quote. It also is a good illustration of what marketing is, versus what some in the ranks think it is.

New media has created a monster. Nothing new, but I think new media has allowed even more marketers to shirk their role at laying out the 4 Ps. Interactive media is now so pervasive, and so seemingly powerful, that it has made the notion of product planning and marketing seem unnecessary. The conventional wisdom seems to be, "hey you web guys get it on the glass and millions of hits will follow." Nevermind who they are, where they come from, where they go afterwards, or most importantly, if they are the right people and they buy something.

In my 20 years of marketing in the PC industry, whether it be direct 800#, catalog, print, and now interactive, I inevitably get asked by at least one product marketing person at some point "How are you planning on marketing the Whatchamajiggim 2.0 on the web/in the catalog/ad/etc?" Seems innocent enough right? (invoke the Charlie Murphy voice) Wrong. Wrong!

My philosphy is a marketer needs to have their elephant walk (marketing plan) planned out and together. Whether it ends up being advertised on a website or on a paper bill tacked on a telephone pole is secondary. As an IMC practitioner, and within that an interactive IMC practitioner, my job then becomes advising on the best tactic to achieve the marketing objectives for the product. Being the nice folks that we are, too often we get suckered into what is clearly the product marketing person's role. Now, being the ego-driven people we are, when product marketing gives us this input, we have to check our egos at the door, and not reject it because "we wouldn't do it like that".

What drives this misplacement of the marketing valence? Or, as I call it, the 'Marlon Perkins' approach to marketing. Remember Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom with Marlon Perkins? (dont act like it's just me) Marlon never did any of the high risk work right? That was Jim's job. "Jim you go and give the rhinocerous an enema and I'll be upstream watching through the binoculars." Same thing with marketing. Product people love to throw their new offering over the wall to marcom, and the responsibility for failure or success of the product with it. I can't tell you how many times I've heard "Well the Whatchamajiggim 2.0 is in the catalog, don't look at me cause it didn't sell." No one questions if it's priced right, if the catalog is going to blue eyed doctors in Bergen County New Jersey, just run it in the catalog and the sales magically roll in like Crazy Eddie.

In fairness, there have been such significant layoffs of people, without commensurate layoffs of workload, that processes break under the weight. Also, techies love well, technology. SWOT diagrams and competitive analyses just don't get us as excited as 45nm Intel Quad Core processors. Because it isn't perceived by some as a quantitative science, (going through this master's program will cure you of that in a hurry) it gets demeaned and discounted as so much foo-foo dust.

All right, Interactive Media Nation, stand up! What do you say? Let me hear from you.

Fast Company.com Becomes a Social Media Tool



Joining the new Fast Company social media community, it felt like my first time in New York City; excited to be there,tons to see, knowing what I'd like to see, but no idea where I'm going and slightly overwhelmed. Rather than the traditional online web presence for a magazine, Fast Company has morphed itself into an online community built on the exchange of ideas.

When you log in, the site starts off with the "Big Idea" of the day for members to comment on, followed by the "official" Fast Company content, Member posts, Blog posts, and the omnipresent Robert Scoble, Tech Geek blogger. (When does this guy sleep?) You are then presented with a list of the day's most active conversations to discuss, rank,favorite,etc.

It comes with a comprehensive list of CGM options for members: your own profile page, favorites, links, RSS, groups, your favorite media, community networks, tagging, and your own blog. (SIDEBAR: The last feature is a new trend I'm seeing in social media - an "internal blog" so to speak, which originates inside the community. Probably a future post topic.)

FastCompany.com is a brand new community launch, which is no easy feat to pull off . I have high hopes for this launch knowing it is in the capable expert hands of Senior Editor Ms. Lynne d. Johnson.Fast Company magazine to me is "business for hipsters"; if you've read or subscribed to it, you know it has its own voice and,well, its just funky. I forward to seeing this publication extend its funky, unique business voice into the social media arena.