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Posts Tagged ‘ Alternative Marketing ’

Are Your Marketing Efforts an Ant Trail?

Marketing effort or ant trail

Ever watched an ant trail? After a close examination, most people would probably agree that it is one of the most efficient systems in the world. Despite its efficiency, the slightest disruption will paralyze all efforts. Think of what happens when an ant trail approaches an unexpected crack on the sidewalk or if a leaf falls in the middle of it. Efficiency immediately evolves into chaos and all efforts made will yield no results.

Marketing effort or ant trail

Ever wondered why some of your best marketing efforts did not achieve desired results? Basically, what you thought was the best marketing initiative was just an ant trail that got disrupted by a leaf or a crack on the sidewalk. There was an objective, a plan and an investment of sufficient resources, but there was propably no effort made to anticipate disruptions and a reaction plan. This is why we marketers should value the importance of a follow up plan and make it a part of every marketing initiative.

If the content appears to be too abstract, here is an example to better illustrate my point. With a newly purchased car, I was in the market for modification parts or anything that will put an extra shine on it. About two months ago, while going through my messages in my Outlook inbox, I received an email from Acura promoting OEM parts in my gmail account. At the point of contact I was excited to see what Acura has to offer, but I also had to finish replying to several important messages in Outlook. I saved the message and intended to return to it later that day. As I was finishing up replying to the never ending list of messages, I was summoned to a meeting by my boss, received a couple of phone calls, and got several RSS alerts. I forgot about the offer message from Acura after a series of distractions. I did not recall the message until just now, as I am writing this blog post.

Acura had a plan of targeting all new car owners and the message was appealing to their target, but there was no follow up plan. It has been over two months now and I, as a consumer, am not as excited or motivated to install modification parts on my car. As consumers, we occasionally experience sudden urges to make a purchase that we later realize we can live without. Acura did not anticipate the disruption, a series of distractions, as a barrier to their initiative. If I had received a follow up email shortly after receiving the first offer message, I would probably have some new rims on my new car by now.

Disruptions can be costly to marketing efforts and cannot always be anticipated. Fortunately, unlike ants, we marketers can learn from mistakes and past experiences. We may be startled by a leaf in our path the first time, but we should have a plan of going around it the next time we encounter it. Until we make an effort to anticipate disruptions and have a follow up plan in place. we will not be able to prevent our efforts from falling into cracks it may come upon.

Disruptions will and can occur in any part of your marketing cycle. Check out these links for more insights on follow up marketing initiatives:

Customer service, Customer Relations, & Networking

Just something to think about…

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Planning Saves Time

When marketers take the time to make effective plans before heading to design and execution, they save both time and resources.

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What’s next in advertising?

B.L Ochman recently wrote in her blog an entry "Innovation in Advertising Won’t Come From Google or Any Big Agency" which talks about the next big thing in advertising. Her call for relevancy in ads in the traditional media resonates with what we do at L2.
We recently started working on developing a 3 tips follow-up to [...]

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Pretend To Be Working Week!

Perhaps for your company next week is ‘pretend to be working week’ but I’m taking vacation, so this is my week to ‘get organized’, ‘develop the strategic plan’ and ‘clean out my inbox’.

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Newsletter Examples

Poor Newsletter Design

More people are reading emails in their preview pane. Designing for that can be tricky.

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A Truly Awful Idea

One of the great things about the new technologies being used for marketing is that they are often low-cost, allowing for a greater scope of creativity and testing. Good taste, however, remains in the purview of the marketer and is still, sadly, optional.
BL Ochman alerts us to an advertising scheme that has, at best, very [...]

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Still Doubt the Usefulness of Blogs and RSS?

Jon poined me at an article at MarketingVox reporting on a study coming out of KnowledgeStorm and Universal McCann that indicates that more than 53% of professionals’ purchasing decisions are impacted by content they read on blogs.
A different study by PQ Media shows that ad spending in blogs, podcasts, and RSS feeds has more than [...]

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Woolly Friday

There’s a lovely little recycled paper company in Wales with a slightly different approach to paper making and with tongue firmly planted in cheek. Their showcase product is Sheep Poo Paper! By allowing the sheep to pre-process cellulose, they can then easily separate it out into pulp suitable for papermaking and fertilizer to grow more [...]

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