November 26, 2009
Login | Register Now

Advertising Age: Your Online Source for Marketing and Media News


More from Ad Age:
Creativity
Ad Age China
Bookstore
Jobs
Ad Age On Campus
Sign up for E-mail Newsletters

Stay on top of the news, sign up for our free newsletters


Unconventional Times Call for Unconventional Marketing

And That Requires New Processes, Lessons From a Blog

Share on Twitter Share on Facebook Submit to Digg Add to Google Share on StumbleUpon Submit to LinkedIn Add to Newsvine Bookmark on Del.icio.us Submit to Reddit

Conventional and Unconventional Marketing chart
Enlarge

As an individual, my blog is one of the most effective manifestations of "marketing" I could have produced for myself. I have a respectable audience that comes back as opposed to visiting it once, never to return again. People participate through comments and the content is distributable. But imagine if I started it the same way many large organizations launch conventional marketing initiatives. What would that have looked like?

If I were a corporate campaign
First I would have had to do several hundred pages of strategy documentation, including target audiences, marketing segments, competitive analysis -- you name it. Then I would put some concepts together and test them in focus groups to see if representatives in a lab like A, B or C better. Next, I would take that feedback, make a few adjustments and plan a multichannel campaign, launching the blog with all sorts of advertising pointing to it. And since I painstakingly outlined the ROI in the in-depth strategy, I'd go about measuring the effectiveness against the ROI that was outlined prior to launch.

Of course, my blog, like millions of other forms of "social media," followed a path that looked nothing like that. In fact, it looked less linear and more cyclical. Sure, I put some initial thought into it before ever touching a pixel, but once I launched the blog it became a never-ending cycle of content development, template design tweaks and learning curves based off of what was going on each time I did something.

A learn-as-you-go process
For example, when I started posting visuals, I would check my stats and could see that people from all sorts of other sites and blogs began referencing them and linking back -- so I realized the visuals were providing something people wanted and that if I wanted to continue to build an audience, this was a good way to do it. Secondly, I thought that my primary audience would be designers, when in fact the blog started attracting an eclectic audience of planners, marketers, librarians -- even evangelists. After each cycle of launching content or functionality in the sidebars, I was learning about my audience and why they were coming. This required me to periodically have more frequent checkpoints of "little strategy" where I would plan the direction of where I wanted to go and make the appropriate adjustments to get there. And it felt less like a straight path and more like a meandering one, because the "focus group" was happening in real time after the initial launch.

I've been thinking about this for a while because after having some exposure to large organizations, it occurred to me that there is a desire to do more "unconventional marketing" but the machine that's in place is actually "conventional" -- all the things that have been done in the past. For example, it's common and understandable for the "What's the ROI?" question to be raised during an unconventional marketing initiative, but that question could derail the entire effort before it has a chance to ever get off the ground. Sometimes the ROI is simply insights and lessons that are gleaned from actually doing the initiative. Other times, the direction of the initiative changes midway through in unexpected ways that could not have been predicted. Many times for the better -- let's not forget that Twitter was never meant to be what it ended up being today.

Unconventional times call for unconventional paths
Speaking from personal experience, I could not have predicted many of the outcomes I have had since launching a blog, but I believe following a much more "unconventional" path is a core reason behind everything that I've learned from it. For a couple of hundred dollars a year and a whole lot of dedication and effort it's priceless to me. So as I think about how times are becoming more unconventional -- with unpredictable financial markets and political change in the air -- I can't help but think that it's more important than ever to get serious about what it takes to do these types of initiatives right. It just doesn't look like conventional marketing -- it's different. And unconventional times call for unconventional tactics.
14 Comments
Subscribe to comments on: Unconventional Times Call for Unconventional Marketing
  By seodesignsolutions | Chicago, IL October 13, 2008 11:30:29 pm:
Ironically, I wrote a post this morning called Uncommon SEO Tips and Techniques on our blog at http://www.seodesignsolutions.com/blog

The ubiquity of the sentiment is captured, except our take was more specific to SEO and building authority sites and yours encapsulates a brilliant blogging strategy from the enterprise level.

Outstanding post David, thank you.
  By David | Chicago, IL October 14, 2008 08:17:37 am:
Jeffrey,

This way of thinking is not specific to marketing advertising or brand building, I had a commenter tell me recently that the approach captures the spirit of design thinking. The main point of it is that it's more agile, and adaptive and less "front loaded" compared to more traditional ways things have been done in the past.

I'm really glad you see an application specific to SEO. With technogies allowing us to gain insights more rapidly, I think the ""unconventional" flow is something we need to do more of. That's how we'll learn and improve. Thanks for the comment.
  By ADMAVEN | Chicago, IL October 14, 2008 09:46:29 am:
David,

Although I agree with your premise that unconventional development processes are required for web 2.0 implementations, I disagree with your generalization that big companies are going through a rigorous process of, "target audiences, marketing segments, competitive analysis -- you name it."

Many of my clients are growing their blogs organically - and in fact the majority of major corporations I have had experience with have taken on blog and microblog strategies through the efforts of internal staff developing their own personal sites. These companies are no longer measuring ROI of marketing efforts in the traditional dollars spent to dollars earned approach - many marketing groups are rated on performance based on clickthroughs and conversions.

I agree with your analysis of how you grew your personal blog. When I started my blog (http://admaven.blogspot.com) I had no idea what I was doing in terms of a target audience, (I had ideas - but they were all wrong) content distribution, and stat tracking.

Now I have a clear idea of who my audience is, the type of content that will get them engaged, and the general direction I will be heading in the future.

http://admaven.blogspot.com
  By bjcook | SAN DIEGO, CA October 15, 2008 03:34:13 am:
Hey David,

What I like about the topic is that in this day in age and you sort of reference this, your audience has their own flavors and ingredients. We're all becoming hybrids. We're not just designers, marketers, developers, teachers; we're a mashup of these based on our experiences and the content we consume each day. Our experiential makeup is changing on a daily basis and the marketing campaigns of companies need to reflect this.

The agile, adaptive approach is very similar to the book written by the team at 37Signals. They believed that the idea of rapid development allowed your team to stay agile and continually release new features into products.

Tech and marketing are one now. You don't have one without the other and that's why I appreciate your approach to visualizing the data that you pull together because it appeals to both sides of my brain.

I recently recounted some unconventional, quick startup marketing tactics that anyone can do - http://www.gooruze.com/articles/897/Startup-Marketing-Strategies-and-Tactics/

Enjoy! Great post -

@BJ
  By michaelgass | ALABASTER, AL October 15, 2008 09:44:37 am:
David,

I can totally identify with you. I started my blog back in January. I've built my new business consultancy to small-to mid-size advertising agencies primarily through my FUEL LINES blog. The blog helped me to be focused and differentiating that has been appealing to my target audience. I've steadily built traffic through SEO, good content, email newsletters, Twitter, PRWeb, Surveys, Polls, Facebook, LinkedIn, article marketing, white papers, etc. It has been a tremendous learning experience for me and has helped both personally and professionally. I've been able to assist clients in developing their online footprint. To experience new media for themselves.

This is an exciting, revolutionary time to be in advertising. We're riding a wave of new communications tools that are extremely effective. Once you experience them for yourself, your marketing mind kicks in and you see how they can be used to promote your agency as well as promoting client services and products.

I've found that helping my agency clients create their own blogs, forces them to differentiate themselves, focus on a target audience, category or discipline or a combination of these. It forces them to always lead with benefits to their clients rather than boast and brag about agency capabilities. It helps them to build trust and relationships. Clients like to work with people that they know and trust. It can position the agency as being experts and a keen understanding of the challenges and obstacles of their target group. It also allows for new business beyond an agency's location, networks and referrals. Agencies can create a strong appeal to their target audience and the prospective clients will actually initiate the call, when they are ready and that conversation will be much further down the road than a cold call. They will be ready to do business.

Thanks again for providing an excellent post. I intend to share it with my readers.

www.fuelingnewbusiness.com
  By David | Chicago, IL October 15, 2008 11:29:24 am:
"Tech and marketing are one now."

BJ, I couldn't have said it better myself.

" Once you experience them for yourself, your marketing mind kicks in and you see how they can be used to promote your agency as well as promoting client services and products."

Micheal, I think you've nailed it here. Once you experience it for yourself, you see the opportunities clearly, if you don't it all just seems like trends and fads and your understanding will be superficial at best.

Thanks for the comments here.
  By JASON | FLAGSTAFF, AZ October 15, 2008 12:00:50 pm:
Another killer post, DA.

You are spot on, and this dramatic difference in conventional vs. unconventional marketing is also the difference between traditional agencies and digital agencies in many cases. Digital marketers have been raised to work in iterations with plenty of testing and optimization. Traditional marketers have been raised to swing for the fences.

The home run strategy is awesome when it works, but of course it usually doesn't. Which is why brands are increasingly attracted to the comparatively scientific digital philosophy.

Already, we're seeing brands hire digital agencies for more than just digital because they value that type of iterative thinking. It's a trend that will be exacerbated in a down economy when clients want an Excel doc that proves results, not a Gold Lion.

You might appreciate my post on it: "Wake Up Agencies - Digital Shops = Trojan Horse"
http://budurl.com/mxp6

I don't have your gift for info graphics, but I do feature a picture of a trojan horse....

All the best. I always enjoy your very fresh take on the biz.

Jason Baer
Convince & Convert - Internet consulting for agencies
www.convinceandconvert.com
Twitter: @jaybaer
  By tamera | Toronto, ON October 15, 2008 12:08:15 pm:
Hey David,

Solid post! I agree that testing unconventional tactics, going with your gut & learning on the fly are important. Our new digital reality makes this much more cost effective and easier to execute (and sell through) to established brands for sure! A lot of this is, as you mentioned, part of what companies have been trying to do with understanding content paths, interaction and behaviour via analytics.

My one caution is that as a discipline "marketing strategy" (vs. channel tactics) does need to tie back to ROI for a business to be successful in the long term and keep folks employed. It touches on sales distribution, brand dev, product, etc. etc. and in a downturn being able to speak to how everything integrates and informs each other will provide the longest term success.

In the end though having solid, valuable content and experiences online will keep your "audience" engaged and participating!

Cheers,
T
  By curt | Frisco, TX October 15, 2008 12:37:44 pm:
David,
Right on. Having been in the business 20 years, the people and companies with the most success are the naturals. They are the folks who understand human nature first and apply it to business and marketing, testing and tweaking with data. The wannabes are strictly data-driven, because they aren't truly interested in the customer or their audience or in talking to them. They want the process relegated to pie charts and behavioral snapshots, very often killing the goose that lays the golden egg in the process.

Best,
Curt Craighead
  By WildWildEast | Munich October 16, 2008 05:06:20 am:
Super post David. As you may or may not know, I worked for Burnett for eight years in the late 80s and 90s and watched them struggle through this paradox, with myself and a few other you digital pioneers (Hugh Macleod among them) egging them on. Not sure if they've got it yet...

You can see my past and present at http://wildwildeastdailies.blogspot.com
  By David | Chicago, IL October 16, 2008 12:22:15 pm:
Dave, Your perspective is greatly appreciated and Hugh is ahead of his time.

Tamera, I'm not advocating that we stop asking for ROI, but advocating that we don't create such a predictive model that it kills something before we can ever learn from it. I wonder what the ROI model was for You Tube? Look at how disruptive that platform is.

Jason, read your post and it was great! Thanks for including the link.
  By MLTurner | Lawrence, KS December 3, 2008 10:24:21 am:
David-

I find this blog really interesting. I am currently a journalism student the University of Kansas and we are learning about social media, guerilla marketing, and other types of up and coming somewhat unconventional methods. I completely agree that in our current market this unconventional time calls for unconventional measures, but I also see this just as a long standing trend. I think that consumers expect multiple avenues of marketing without even know it, and I think business will have to deliver if they want to stay top-of-mind.

I also agree with the comment above that technology and marketing are now one, and with 2/3 of people in the United States using the internet it opens up an entire new arena of marketing possibilities. I think we are evolving into a world that conventional marketing alone will not sell a product. Companies are going to have to be creative and unconventional to capture audiences attention. They have come to expect information and companies selling the product to them with one on one standards rather than seeking out a product.

Finally, I agree that ROI can cause problems in a marketing plan. Of course it is sensible to know that what you are about to launch will have some return, but monetary is not necessary the best return. A campaign that builds awareness and leaves a lasting impression, but does not have immediate purchase impact could leave the company in the mind of the consumers and when they eventually need the product have a great impact. I don't think it is smart to focus specifically on ROI.

Great post!
  By KetaKeta | Tel Aviv January 26, 2009 12:47:58 pm:
A great article. A propos this topic, see the latest campaign that was released with video and embedded clues inside. Very innovative way to pull in audience:

http://www.lastminutetravel.com/movies.aspx?mid=8

Gil
  By otimizacao | São Paulo March 18, 2009 11:20:29 am:
Great post! Congrats.

I also think that blogging is one of the best digital marketing efforts to a company. You can easily understand what your costumers want, what they talk about you. You earn more credibility giving content and information to your costumers.
I think that a well informed costumer is a buyer costumer! And blogging gives the oportunity of informed our costumers and it´s free!

Thanks.
Marcos
http://www.otimizacao-de-websites.com



Stay on top of the news and stay ahead of the game—sign up for e-mail newsletters now!



Advertising Age: Your Online Source for Marketing and Media News