Categories
Uncategorized

After some introspection and wise words

I’ve had the chance to share my opinion and thoughts about marketing with fellow classmates in the marketing program. After some good conversation, I realized that maybe I’ve been too harsh on the field of marketing. As they accurately pointed out, my actual problem lies more with advertising and not marketing, two words I previously thought of as interchangeable. Indeed marketing is more than just advertising: it’s the 4 P’s (advertising being a subset of promotion), and the big “marketing strategy.”

Let’s analyze these 4 P’s through a hypothetical scenario of a young startup firm. An aspiring engineer develops a revolutionary new technology that allows gas-burning vehicles to run on gaseous fuels (such as natural gas). He starts up his firm with the help of a few lawyers, starts up operations with the help of logistics, and finances his operations with the help of banker. Now all thats left is communicating the product to the consumer.

Product: Marketers like to put “product” under their umbrella and say “we created this product to fill this need.” This is one of my biggest pet peeves of the field. Marketers do not come up with the product. The hardworking engineer who took on the time, education, risk and energy to explore this new technology created the product. The marketer doesn’t decide whether this product has a “need” to fill or not, the entrepreneurial spirit of the engineer and his in-depth knowledge uncovered that need. I could go as far as to say basic logic and foresight could uncover a “need,” and then a little hard-work and education can take the rest. You don’t need a marketing department suggest new products.

I’m sure people will shout “But marketers are there to evolve and adapt to changing consumer preferences and thus recommend new products, therefore they are a part of the product development team!” That’s a weak argument in my opinion as anyone in a stakeholder position of a firm (or anyone with basic logic) can realize when their product needs to change, evolve, or expand. They are essentially trying to be a part of a process that is already being done – by people who learned it naturally to begin with. For example, its like saying “Winters coming in 6 months, lets expand our coats line!” Great job genious, but anyone who tries can do that. Take Mark Zuckerberg for example – expert programmer, impeccable intelligence, but no marketing background. Early in the day, Zuckerberg evolved and adapted Facebook to be the success it is today without using marketing principles or majors. Evolving, adapting, and expanding a company is just intuitive to a guy like Zuckerberg.

Price: Marketers believe that they are in charge of pricing a product, or at least determining how it is to be price; “Value-based,” “competition-based,” “cost-based,” etc. They’ll perform a menial calculation known as “break even” and maybe do a little more research, and then BAM! – $3000/engine. They’ll proudly announce it’ll take 3000 units to break even, and 5000 to earn an IRR of 12% on initial investment – pretty impressive analysis and proof.

Now what could go wrong with assigning a department to price your golden eggs that has no idea of the accounting implications, finance implications, or constraint maximization know-how of accountants, financiers, or logisticians? What if costing the engine at $3000 may be in line with demand elasticity and break even analysis, but theirs glaring oversights in linear-constraints, estimates, growth potential, effects on stock price, etc. Their NPV analysis of the firm or project could miss glaring implications that determine whether to take on the project with current infrastructure, or to adopt new infrastructure. All this really translates into lost profits – all based on a simple break even analysis (which is more accounting anyways).

Now some people would be quick to shout “Break-even is not all they do, they probably do more in-depth analysis, much like a financing and logistics department.” Well thats not a saving grace for marketing – its the equivalent of saying “My kinetics degree helped me fix my car,” when you actually learned how to fix a car from a different discipline. If marketers use more finance oriented or logistics oriented models to price their product, then it is actually finance and T-log that should get the credit.

Place: This is similar to product – it should just be intuitive and logical to anyone in the business. Determining distributional efficiency takes logic, and little bit of number crunching on the logistics side – not marketing. What can a marketer possibly add to the distribution chain? “We are going to go through a wholesaler, contractor, and retailer for maximum efficiency – job done, can I get paid?” Anyone can pull out prices, and find the line of least costs and assess the strengths and risks of it. Next.

Promotion: Aha! Now we are talking. My finance degree, my friends accounting degree and my other friends logistic degree can’t promote our product. Promoting a product needs artsy and creative person who can communicate our value proposition in a way that makes people feel warm and fuzzy; enter marketing. They know how to design ads, how to make it funny, how to add sex, how to make it shocking, how to push buttons, etc. Basically, they know how to elicit a response (AIDA if you will). So in our hypothetical example, all that marketing would be good for would be to determine how to communicate our product to our consumers.

This is why I use marketing and advertising interchangeably, and why I always will.

Categories
John Stewart/Stephen Colbert Marketing TV Commercials

The Rally to Restore Sanity And/Or Fear: Part III of III

This rally was held on October 30, 2010 and had an attendance of almost 215,000 people. Much like Stewart and Colbert’s usual style, the rally was a parody of two different rallies held on August 28th, 2010 (Glen Beck’s “Rally to Restore Honor,” and Al Sharptons “Reclaim the Dream”). The rally was held for those who do not share the extreme views that were dominating American newscape; the people who are reasonable, sane, and want America to stop being represented by the “crazies.”

Advertising

In an episode back in September, Stewart hinted towards an announcement he plans on making in the future. This was quickly countered by Colbert following Stewart’s show with an even bigger announcement pending. Stewart and Colbert left the suspense to build up for a week before officially announcing the rally. Once announced, Stewart and Colbert ran a minimal TV campaign and focused more on advertising their rally on their own show. When asked, Stewart commented that those who would come to his rally were only those that watch his show anyways, so why waste the money (he parodies his Jewish heritage quite a bit).

The rally got many endorsements from celebrities and politicians (trying to cash in on the Stewart/Colbert mania in my opinion). Oprah Winfrey appeared on Stewart’s show live via video feed, and announced to the audience that she has left airplane tickets for the rally under their seats (something Oprah does quite a bit apparently). Colbert and Stewart took advantage of this attention by fundraising for DonorsChoose, raising approximatley $250,000 in the span of 3 days. This only worked to draw more attention to the rally.

Success

The rally drew some heavy hitters out of the crowed; Sheryl Crow, the hosts of Mythbusters, and R2D2 to name a few. The event was lauded by all those who the Daily Show normally pokes fun at; Fox, MSNBC, CNN, etcetera (no word from Glen Beck). The programs commended the rally and had “nothing but nice things to say about [it].”

Overall, the rally achieved its purpose. Americans rejoiced at being reasonable and politically sane, all while mocking the right/left-wing extremists that brought the rally in the first place. It was like a week long episode of the Daily Show, but on a much grander scale. In an amazing way, Stewart and Colbert made 250,000 people essentially act out their show. Here are some pictures from the event;

I hope you enjoyed this series analyzing the success of Stewart, Colbert, and everything they seemingly touch. Now heres a video of Michael Jordon donning a hitler ‘stache for no apparent reason (Movember meets Hitler?)

YouTube Preview Image
Categories
John Stewart/Stephen Colbert Marketing

The Stewart and Colbert Team: Part II

Chances are that you recognize Stephen Colbert, he rarely needs an introduction. Once a correspondent on the Daily Show with John Stewart, Colbert is host of “The Colbert Report” (silent T’s in both words), a show that has been nominated for 4 emmys and 2 satellite awards. Colbert himself has been on the “Time’s 100 most influential people” list, and has hosted for various awards and ceremonies (including the infamous White House Correspondents’ Association — noted further below).

If John Stewart seemed like a popular feller in my previous post, then Colbert eclipses him by a mile. He is adored by mainstream population for his on screen characters eccentricies, satirical perspectives and extremist right-wing behavior. Colbert arguably has more of a hold among his fans than John Stewart, because whenever Colbert calls for an action, which he often does (and it’s usually something ridiculous, like  nominating him for a president, naming a bridge after him, or attending some rally), his fans get the job done. They nearly had a bridge named after him (deemed illegal because he was still living), nearly put him in the presidential race (overruled by supreme court), and have produced a well documented phenomenon known as the Colbert Bump (a noticeable spike in public interest/earnings due to recommendation or condemnation by Colbert).

The Colbert Report

Colbert Report is a spin-off show from the Daily Show, created just to retain Stephan Colbert (previously, the Daily Show lost correspondent Steve Carrell for his acting gig). The correspondent known as Stephen Colbert got his own half-hour slot after John Stewart to give his own take on current news, events, and politics (often the same news already delivered by the Daily Show). The actual structure of the show was designed to mock the O’Reilly Factor, a popular right-wing program hosted by a lunatic named Bill O’Reilly. In a way, the Colbert Report and Daily Show are based upon the exact same premise: a parody/satire of established news programs, but still delivering quality content. The show appeals to the same targets, and yet they both have an extremely loyal fan base of their own.

Marketing and Success

Colbert Report differentiates itself from the Daily Show by doing the opposite of what John Stewart does. Whereas John Stewart has a pragmatic and realistic view of the world with a knack for cutting through the BS, Colbert Report has an extreme conservative and right-wing take on news, and often obfuscates and piles on more BS to already complex events. Whereas John Stewart will flat out say “George Bush is lying about WMD’s to invade Iraq,” Colbert will say “George Bush isn’t lying enough to the American population, and this is stopping him from conquering the world.” It’s obvious when watching that Colbert is being sarcastic in his delivery. There is a segment on his show called “The Wørd,” where he chooses a specific word (often made up by himself), and then he spews an extremist rant surrounding the word, all meanwhile on-screen text is juxtaposed to his left showing the satirical context of his rant. Maybe George Bush should have realized this, because he had Colbert host his White House Correspondents’ Association dinner, only to have Colbert mock his government with his deliberate right-wing extremist commentary. The event garnered massive attention for Colbert, and was one of the many embarrassments of Bush’s presidency. By being over-the top and politically incorrect,  Colbert has differentiated his show from the Daily Show. This feat is the reason both shows can deliver the same content in completely different ways, and thus attract different fan bases while still appealing to each others.

Advertising for Colbert Report is wrought with egoism, and narcissism. I noted in my previous post that the marketing for John Stewart worked because of its humbleness and truthfulness to reflect his pragmatic and realistic nature; the marketing reflected the personality. The same principle applies to Colbert. His image and advertisements come across as arrogant and over the top, and yet somehow that is the appeal of the show. His is so transparent in his (fake) intentions, that it suits the show and his style of comedy.

next week: Part III – The Rally to Restore Sanity and the March to Keep Fear Alive

Categories
Marketing Rant

The Marketing Virus: Immune to the Technology Antidote

(Delay in Stewart/Colbert story – will resume next week so stay tuned)

I was reading some other students marketing blogs, and I ran into Norbert Ma’s post about Pepsi trying to use Facebook to promote its brand. This got me remembering some articles I came across a few weeks ago about how corporations and businesses are trying to come up with more, more and more ways to use Facebook to promote their products. Forget Facebook, businesses are working hard at increasing their presence even in the mobile front by making apps for consumers smartphones.

What I see coming is a revolution in marketing. In the old days, marketers used to segment, target, and position their product based on the old rules. They would broadly divide their segments, decide who and how to target them, and then position themselves in the center. They’d resort to tried and tested channels of communication, such as TV commercials, radio, and magazines. But gone are the days when that would have been enough. With the advent of the internet and the ensuing exponential progression of technology, consumers these days fast forward commercials with TiVo, download their favorite songs into their car/iPod, and read all their news over the internet. The average consumer today can watch their favorite shows, hear their favorite songs, and get all the news they could ever want without ever turning to their television, radio, or newspaper/magazine.

Marketers have tried to adapt to this shift in consumer lifestyle by making their presence known at the root of all changes: the internet. This started with ads on popular sites (such as Google, WallStreetJournal.com), and slowly morphed into much more annoying memory hogs. I remember at one point 2 years ago, my news article would request 200kb of data, while the commercial overlay for Toyota’s Prius would request 10mb (For non-technical people, it just means that the ads became very cumbersome and annoying). Ads were getting much more aggressive with their presence, and were destroying the content of the news site itself. Perhaps they overstepped their grounds, because they invoked Chtulu; Enter Adblock Plus. It started off small, but the snowball grew into an avalanche in short time as everyone slowly blocked all ads from the internet. Adblock worked to block all sorts of ads: Video ads, webpage ads, pop-up ads, etc. It was a corporations (marketers) worst nightmare. Naturally they tried to stifle the app, but its been getting more and more mainstream. It doesn’t help that initiatives like the national Do-Not-Call lists were being created to chain marketers even more.

So now with TV attendance dwindling and an invisible force field around the growing technological world, marketers were scratching their heads trying to do their job; How could shovel their product and commercials down our throat? It’s my opinion that a marketers job is to analyze where the most of their target market conglomerate, and then (if I may) throw their company in the middle like some sort of grenade hoping to hit as many people as possible. But now that people have more options to view their media and block ad content, how can they do this?

Of course, being the clever and ever-evolving virus that they are, marketers are launching their war against our 5 senses by showing up in our networking mediums such as our social networking sites, phones, and the internet in general. This includes plans to spam us with ads on Facebook with the new Facebook Deal, ads on our smartphones on basic games and apps, and of course, by lobbying the government against ad blocking. Of course this all was to be expected, but the real jaw dropper was yet to be unveiled.

Google, MSN, Yahoo, Facebook, all pinnacles of the world wide web, could no longer fend off lobbyist pressure to do something about “freeloaders.” The drank the kool-aid about 2 years ago, and started playing around with the idea of net neutrality. Net neutrality became a hot topic and proved to be the golden road for marketers to open Pandora. The issue of net neutrality itself is simple; anonymity and freedom of users from Internet Service Providers. This means no discrimination based on how much they use the internet, which websites they visit, etc… ISP’s tried to end net neutrality by claiming that 90% of bandwith (downloading; internet capacity) is being used by only 10% of customers, so it is unfair for the average person to have to pay such “exuberant prices” for someone elses content. Net neutrality became even more of a hot topic when the RIAA tried to push it through so that it could isolate heavy-bandwith users (again for non technical people – people who download a lot) so that they would get a good idea of who is probably downloading illegal content such as movies, music, or software. But this road has long since morphed into a marketing battle. Corporations are lobbying against net neutrality, not on morals grounds, but because they would be able to “package” websites into different rates, much like a “pay-per-usage” cell phone plan. For exmaple, for $10/month, you could get access to Facebook, Google, and a list of 20 sites you choose (excluding certain bigger ones like Globe and Mail), but for $15/month, you could get access to Facebook, Google, Globe and Mail, Hotmail, and a list of 100 sites you choose (still excluding certain ones, such as Ebay perhaps). With net neutrality gone, corporations could finally chain the beast that is known as the internet, and get a stranglehold on it once and for all.

And of course, the kicker, ad blocking/illegal video streaming/music streaming content would be banished forever. It’s like a big reset button; send the world back to the simple way it used to be when people watched TV, listened to the radio, and read their newspapers. This change hasn’t come to pass yet, and it may never should free-thinking people have any say in our society.

I’ll end this article off now with a reference to the title. I’ve said this before, and I’ll say it again: marketing is a virus. It has no use, no value, and no contribution to society. And if marketing is the virus, then technology is the cure. But no matter how much technology you make to crumble the marketing disease, it will also evolve, adapt and gain strength, and move to bring down the beast.

Spam prevention powered by Akismet