The New Rules of Marketing and PR. David Meerman Scott

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the art of finding a new job. Several times per month, I receive email or phone calls from people who are searching for work. They usually send their resume (CV) to me and want to network with me to find a job. What these people are doing is advertising a product (their labor) by sending me an unsolicited email message. Like the auto companies and the universities, the typical job seeker is advertising a product. Yet the vast majority of these people are not positioning themselves to be found on the web, because they don’t have a personal website, they aren’t blogging or creating online videos, and, except for maybe a Facebook or LinkedIn profile, they aren’t active in social networking. They are not creating the content that will help an employer to find them when a company needs new staff.

      If you aren’t present and engaged in the places and at the times that your buyers are, then you’re losing out on potential business—no matter whether you’re looking for a job or marketing your company’s product or your organization’s service. Worse, if you are trying to apply the game plan that works in your mainstream-media-based advertising and public relations (PR) programs to your online efforts, you will not be successful.

      So take a minute to ask yourself this simple question: How are my existing advertising and media relations programs working?

      Advertising: A Money Pit of Wasted Resources

      However, for millions of other organizations—for those of us who are professionals, musicians, artists, nonprofit organizations, churches, and niche product companies—traditional advertising is generally so wide and broad that it is ineffective. A great strategy for Procter & Gamble, Disney, and a U.S. presidential candidate—reaching large numbers of people with a message of broad national appeal—just doesn’t work for niche products, local services, and specialized nonprofit organizations.

      The web has opened a tremendous opportunity to reach niche buyers directly with targeted information that costs a fraction of what big-budget advertising costs.

      One-Way Interruption Marketing Is Yesterday’s Message

      A primary technique of what Seth Godin calls the TV-industrial complex4 is interruption. Under this system, advertising agency creative people sit in hip offices dreaming up ways to interrupt people so that they pay attention to a one-way message. Think about it: You’re watching your favorite TV show, so the advertiser’s job is to craft a commercial to get you to pay attention, when you’d really rather be doing something else, like quickly grabbing some ice cream before the show resumes. You’re reading an interesting article in a magazine, so the ads need to jolt you into reading an ad instead of the article. Or you’re flying on American Airlines (which I do frequently), and during the flight, the airline deems it important to interrupt your nap with a loud advertisement announcing its credit card offer. The goal in each of these examples is to get people to stop what they are doing and pay attention to a message.

      Moreover, the messages in advertising are product-focused, one-way spin. Advertisers can no longer break through with dumbed-down broadcasts about their wonderful products. The average person now sees hundreds of seller-spun commercial messages per day. People just don’t trust them. We turn them off in our minds, if we notice them at all.

      Before the web, good advertising people were well versed in the tools and techniques of reaching broad markets with lowest-common-denominator messages via interruption techniques. Advertising was about great “creative work.” Unfortunately, many companies rooted in these old ways desperately want the web to be like TV, because they understand how TV advertising works. Advertising agencies that excel in creative TV ads simply believe they can transfer their skills to the web.

      They are wrong. They are following outdated rules.

      The Old Rules of Marketing

       Marketing simply meant advertising (and branding).

       Advertising needed to appeal to the masses.

       Advertising relied on interrupting people to get them to pay attention to a message.

       Advertising was one-way: company to consumer.

       Advertising was exclusively about selling products.

       Advertising was based on campaigns that had a limited life.

       Creativity was deemed the most important component of advertising.

       It was more important for the ad agency to win advertising awards than for the client to win new customers.

       Advertising and PR were separate disciplines run by different people with separate goals, strategies, and measurement criteria.

      None of this is true anymore. The web has transformed the rules, and you must transform your marketing to make the most of the web-enabled marketplace of ideas.

      Public Relations Used to Be Exclusively about the Media

      Discussions I’ve had with journalists in other industries confirm that I’m not the only one who doesn’t use unsolicited press releases. Instead, I think about a subject that I want to write about, and I check out what I can find on blogs, on Twitter, and through search engines. If I find a press release on the subject through Google or a company’s online media room, great! But I don’t wait for press releases to come to me. Rather, I go looking for interesting topics, products, people, and companies. And when I do feel ready to write a story, I might try out a concept on my blog first, to see how it flies. Does anyone comment on it? Do any PR people jump in and email me?

      Here’s another amazing

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