Momentum. Shama Hyder

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Название Momentum
Автор произведения Shama Hyder
Жанр Маркетинг, PR, реклама
Серия
Издательство Маркетинг, PR, реклама
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781942952268



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href="#u7eb1a2a4-859c-5c94-9db4-aa31a61836f8">4th Principle of Momentum: Content Curation Chapter 6 5th Principle of Momentum: Cross-Pollination Chapter 7 Measuring Marketing ROI in the Digital Age Acknowledgments Index About the Author

      chapter 1

      The New Ecosystem:

      Building Momentum

      MOMENTUM.

      It’s the thrill of a roller coaster gaining speed.

      It’s an unstoppable train barreling down the tracks.

      And it’s what every marketer wants in a campaign.

      Whether it’s a video going viral or a blog post going from one share to thousands in just a few days, when a marketing initiative has real momentum, it is nothing short of pure magic.

      And just like magic, it seems impossible to re-create, impossible to develop using a strategic, systematic approach.

      But I’m here to let you in on the magician’s secret: You can achieve that momentum yourself by following five simple principles—principles that will allow you to consistently deliver great results with your marketing.

      Today, the digital landscape is constantly changing, and news travels at the speed of a tweet. But there is a way to cut through the noise and build that momentum for your own campaigns.

      Want to know the secret?

      First, let me ask you this.

      What does digital marketing mean to you?

      Posting on Facebook and Twitter a few times a week? Emailing a list of subscribers? Cranking out blog posts every few days? Tweaking your website to make it mobile responsive? Trying out the latest new social media platforms to find the trendiest ways of connecting with your audience?

      Has digital marketing just added more items to your to-do list?

      It doesn’t have to be this way. Effective digital marketing isn’t about embracing every new tool available to today’s marketer— it’s about turning your entire approach to marketing on its head.

      » The Future Has Arrived

      Imagine you’re going for a jog. You’ve got your trusty fitness band on, to help you keep track of all the miles you’re running and all the calories you’re burning. Maybe it’ll automatically post your route to Facebook in case your friends want to join you. Or maybe you can even tap it to your friends’ bands to compare data and start a little friendly competition.

      Now imagine that you’re almost at the end of your jogging route, when suddenly, your fitness band shows you an offer for a free sports drink at a store nearby. All you have to do to redeem it is tap the link on your band at checkout. You’re hot, tired, and thirsty, and the drink is right there. It’s a no-brainer, right?

      

      Next, another offer might pop up, encouraging you to share that same link—along with a picture of yourself, post-jog, sweaty and smiling with that sports drink—to your Facebook page; the link would provide a free drink to any of your Facebook friends who clicked on it. You’re not one to keep a good deal to yourself, or to miss out on a great opportunity to share, so of course you post the link and pic. “So happy my little 5-mile morning jog can help get my friends a free drink, too!” Score!

      If you’re a jogger, you might think of this as an incredibly convenient way to rehydrate on the cheap right when you need it most and feel some serious appreciation toward the sports drink company for being so thoughtful and generous.

      If you’re a marketer, you see this as the exciting new reality of building marketing momentum in the digital age.

      Instead of blindly sticking millions of identical coupons in newspapers and mailers, hoping that a small percentage of them might land in the right hands and evoke a response, marketers can now target customers individually, at the time, in the place, and through the medium that will make them most likely to respond.

      This is nothing less than a seismic shift.

      The ability to tailor marketing not just to a certain region or a specific demographic, but to an individual—and not just to an individual, but to that individual in the optimal place, time, and way—has revolutionized the nature of marketing.

      It’s not just the medium that’s changed here. It’s not even just the ability to customize marketing messages to individual customers. It’s the entire mindset behind marketing. The entire approach.

      

      And this new approach is centered around the creation of real momentum in your marketing: meaningful momentum that helps you reach your goals.

      Let’s take a closer look at how we got here.

      » A History of Push Marketing

      Marketing is not a new concept. If you’ve got something to sell, you’ve got to tell people about it, or no one will ever buy. And since competition isn’t new, either, you’ve also got to explain why customers should choose your product or service over everyone else’s.

      Ancient marketplaces teemed with merchants crying their wares, each trying to outdo the others. Latin graffiti has even been found scrawled on a wall in Pompeii, advertising the fish sauce the doomed town was famous for: “Scaurus’s best garum, mackerel-based, from Scaurus’s manufacturers.”

      When the printing press came onto the scene, print marketing was suddenly possible. Ads like the following from 1771 appeared in early American newspapers: “James Gardner, Carpenter and Joiner, begs Leave to inform the Publick that he has opened Shop behind the Church. All Gentlemen who please to favour him with their Orders may depend upon his Punctuality, and their Business being well executed. N.B. He makes Window Sashes, on reasonable Terms.”

      As time went on, the advent of radio, and later TV, meant that marketing took on new layers of sophistication. Still, the approach remained the same: a business pushing its message out to people, hoping that message was appealing enough to compel them to buy.

      There were definitely benefits to marketing as it existed by the late twentieth century. Businesses had complete control over their messaging—over the way they and their product were presented. Thanks to mass media’s mass audiences, they could reach large groups of people with a single ad. Marketing collateral could be put together quickly, because looking for customer input wasn’t a step in its development. And because of this freedom to create elaborate marketing campaigns without customer feedback affecting their direction, creative marketing really could—and often did—ascend to the status of art.

      But when the internet went mainstream in the 1990s, all that began to change.

      Suddenly, people had choices as to the marketing material they consumed. The information they had access to