Posts Tagged ‘Creative Development’

18th November
2009
written by Rena Bernstein

Online marketing, just like all traditional B2B and consumer advertising, should be focused on the customer. While we’re all psyched about the ability to calculate and compare statistics down to the smallest detail, the true measure of marketing success is still in the minds of the customer.

Many online marketers have lost sight of marketing basics. With technology moving so fast, many of us have gotten caught up in the latest and greatest digital gizmo or gadget. Having the abilitPhotoxpress_2172398SMy to track and target people more precisely or better understand their buying habits is certainly an asset to the marketing process, but it still can’t replace or even become the strategy.

I was with a client yesterday discussing the cause of their slumping conversion rates on their B2B web site. Despite having a excellent product, a terrific sales team and outstanding customer service, they didn’t understand why their inbound marketing efforts were sagging.

One look at their ads, web site, and landing pages told the entire story. Since they are a technology company, I can understand how these guys view their business through an analytical prism. The problem is that their customers don’t. Their marketing sounds like it’s talking to their management team, not to their customers. And while they’re doing a great job measuring the results, the adjustments they’re making to the creative make the numbers may move slightly, but don’t get to the root of the problem, and that shows in the bottom line. These guys have lost the forest and are stuck in the technical trees.

The focus now seems to be on who can be the first to leverage the newest mobile platform or how fast you can utilize a certain new software. Digital marketing, whether your using social media marketing, pre-roll ads or just PPC is still about the end user and what is important to them. The metrics will come. Marketing must still be about the value of the message and the content first — and less about how it’s delivered.

Ask yourself this: in a year from now when the technology you are using today becomes common place, will your message your sending still resonate? Channel selection is and must always be a result of where your customers are, not just what happens to be the hottest technology today.

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2nd October
2009
written by Rena Bernstein

Rubicks creative solutionWith markets being so fragmented these days, and media always changing, why do some folks want to stick to the same old solutions?

As marketers, we sometimes make simple assumptions about how something should be done, where we should advertise, tactics that should be used, or targets that should be targeted simply because it was done that way before. Not only does this usually end up with an uninspired result, but it frustrates the people working on the project and the outcome is often less than predicted. This overly structured method eliminates any possibility of doing something better. Something unexpected. Or something that might be off the beaten path and could make a big impact just by being a little different.

I recently read an article on a blog called Leading Creatives written by Nigel Collin where he made a very interesting point that when you tell a creative person HOW to do something, the thinking and creativity stops and all your likely to end up with is an execution. And not a bit more than that. No passion, no dedication, no enthusiasm, and no creative solutions. Just execution.

Guidance, direction and suggestions are always great, just leave the door open to new possible solutions. Nigel suggested that the next time you have a marketing goal, don’t tell your team or agency HOW TO DO it, tell them WHAT YOU NEED TO ACCOMPLISH and you’ll get back more than you expected.

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