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August 6, 2009

The New Rules of Marketing & P.R. – Book Review

Filed under: Advertising,Book Reviews,Marketing,Public Relations,Sales — Tags: Advertising, Book Reviews, Marketing, Public Relations, Roy, Sales, Technology — Roy @ 9:42 am
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I found this review on www.blogcritics.org – it seems like a very intriguing read… especially for those of you in the P.R. world. It’s almost been a year since its publication into paperback and it would be neat to do a ‘reality check’ into if this book actually has tapped into the changing face of marketing… so, if you’ve checked this book out or will – let us know your thoughts on what is going on in your world.

Here’s what blogcritic.org thought of The New Rules of Marketing & PR: How to Use News Releases, Blogs, Podcasting, Viral Marketing & Online Media to Reach Buyers Directly by David Meerman Scott (Oct. 2008)

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This book is definitely a must-read for those involved in the promotion and marketing of products and services. Scott does a wonderful job of covering the soup to nuts process of understanding your story, telling your story and then getting others to tell your story for you. His point is clear and hammered home, the old way of pushing your story via a general broadcast is not only expensive, but ineffective. In today’s world, where pitching a good story to the right people — focusing on the targeted few instead of the masses — is more likely to get many others talking about your story.
Focus on your buyers, not your product. How do customers relate to your product? What problem do you solve? What does Starbucks really sell?
Write in plain language, in the language of your customers. Invite them to engage in a dialogue instead of broadcasting your monologue.
I always preach similar techniques in my marketing practice. It’s not about the features of your product/service. In fact, it’s not about the product or service at all — it’s the relationship that customers have with your wares. What emotional connection — what need — does it satisfy?

If you are a fan of novels/movies then think about Cyrano de Bergerac and Roxanne. Basically, they have the same template: ugly, romantic guy vies against handsome, dumb guy for heart of beautiful girl. In the former, the hero duels with swords and in the latter he duels with tennis racquets. The point is that the template defines the emotional connection — the duel for love — and the nouns, namely the sword or the racquet are irrelevant because they are interchangeable. If we apply the principles from Meerman’s book, we’d see that it is paramount to focus on the template, not the instrument, i.e., the buyer and not the product.

The New Rules also talks about dialogue instead of monologue, engagement instead of broadcast. The Internet has made the world smaller. If I wanted to, right now, I could find someone online in another country and engage them in conversation. Even better, if I knew that they might have some interest in my product or service, by engaging them in conversation I’ve revealed that I’m a real person — I exist in the world — and that comfort can easily be translated to a stronger pitch for my wares to a potential customer or a journalist.

While reading The New Rules of Marketing and PR, think about the verbs that your customers use and the emotions that you can tap into to strengthen that connection… then get out there and do it.

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July 20, 2009

A Facebook Tale: Founder Unfriends Pals On Way Up (NPR)

Filed under: General Business,History and Biographies — Tags: Biographies, Book Reviews, General Business, Roy — Roy @ 9:28 am
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I found this on NPR.org this morning and thought I’d share this on here:

A Facebook Tale: Founder Un-friends Pals On Way Up by All Things Considered, July 19th 2009

Facebook reached another milestone Tuesday: the social-networking site said it signed up its 250 millionth user.

Just five and a half years ago, Mark Zuckerberg invented the site in his Harvard University dorm room. Within months, he became the youngest self-made billionaire in history.

AccidentalZuckerberg’s rise to Internet royalty is dramatized in Ben Mezrich’s new book, The Accidental Billionaires. Mezrich charts Zuckerberg’s transition from Harvard miscreant to Silicon Valley playboy — all while callously shedding himself of the “little people” who helped him on his way up.

“Mark Zuckerberg, after a particularly bad date, was home in his dorm room,” Mezrich tells Guy Raz. “He was a sophomore, he was drinking some beers, and he hacked into all of the computer systems at Harvard, and he pulled pictures of all the girls on campus and he created a hot-or-not Web site where you could vote on who the hottest girl at Harvard was.”

The malicious prank — aptly named facemash — ended up crashing Harvard’s servers, and Zuckerberg was nearly expelled. But with the help of a friend, Zuckerberg turned the prank into the social networking giant it would become.

Mezrich never interviewed Zuckerberg (who in the end “opted out of talking to” the author). But he pieces together the story of Facebook through court documents, articles and interviews with his main source, Eduardo Saverin — Zuckerberg’s spurned friend and original investor.

Mezrich dramatizes whole scenes where he details what “probably happened.” He fends off criticism, denying Business Week’s claim that the book is a “fictionalized account.”

“There are a lot of journalists out there who don’t quite get what I do or are frustrated by the way that I write. I write narrative nonfiction stories,” he says. “It’s an exciting way of taking a true story and opening it up for the readers … It’s certainly not fiction.”

For the complete article to here: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=106742510&ft=1&f=1032

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July 16, 2009

International Best Sellers for June

Filed under: Book Reviews,Global Business,International Bestsellers — Tags: Book Reviews, Global Business, International Best Sellers, Roy — Roy @ 10:01 am
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Yes, Spring has come and gone and now the lazy days of summer lie ahead. For some anyway. While many go on vacation (perhaps to a Six Flags for a new coaster ride or two) others are still reading away during the hot months of the year. Here’s what some people outside of the United States are taking to their air conditioned offices or to beach…

Germany – tops the listing in June with the book, Collaboration: How Leaders Avoid the Traps, Create Unity and Reap Big Results. It was published earlier this year and available in hardcover right now. It tells the reader why some leaders can lead while others fail. It’s written by Morten Hansen and published by Harvard Business School Press

Switzerland – is next with the book Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die. This is quite a popular book and if you haven’t checked this book out yet, what are you waiting for? This title delves into marketing campaigns that have worked for companies and is a must for anyone in the marketing/sales area. Actually it’s good for anyone trying to get inspiration. And if you don’t want to take this to the water’s edge – it’s on CD format too! Oh, it’s written by Chip Heath and Dan Heath and published by Random House.

United Kingdom – comes in third with No Man’s Land: A Survival Manual for Growing Midsize Companies. The paperback edition was just released in January of this year and gives advice to companies that are in limbo (not too big or not too small). It’s written by Doug Tatum and published by Portfolio.

China – is next up with the book Inside the Mind of the Shopper: The Science of Retailing. And, you may have guessed it, but it deals with the retail experience and how to understand the customer in various business transactions (What they’re thinking, how they behave and how they can impact how business is conducted, etc). This is written by Herb Sorenson and Wharton School published it this May.

China is also responsible for our last entry in June’s international best sellers with the book A Sense of Urgency. Global author John P. Kotter penned this little gem of how to take the first step in transforming your organization. He creates this ‘sense of urgency’ by getting the reader able to envision the need to shake things up. Put out by Harvard Business School Press in 2008 – it still is a much needed tool in these turbulent times.

There you have it, just a little sampling of what different individuals are stuffing into their briefcases or beach bags this summer. Maybe it’s given you an idea of what you would like to read or learn more about. Maybe this has you realizing that you haven’t done any reading this summer (shhh I won’t tell).

Happy reading!

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July 1, 2009

The Heart of Marketing: Book Review

Filed under: Book Reviews,General Business,Marketing,Sales — Tags: Roy — Roy @ 10:46 am
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coverartI just finished reading the book The Heart of Marketing: Love Your Customers and They Will Love You Back by Judith Sherven, PhD & Jim Sniechowski, PhD. and I just thought it was what marketing books have needed for a long time…. a breath of fresh air.

Many companies in today’s business world have lost sight of what is most important to their customers and for their company internally and that is feeling the pulse of a heart beat. Actually caring about people, yes, people and not ideas, not money, not computers, etc.

People.

It’s a simple task but one that has been eroding from today’s speedy, cold world. The author’s remind the reader that behind the web site there is a company that cares and that company needs to let people know that they do. Judith and Jim target what they term soft marketing as their audience. These are companies in the service industry that typically view service before making money (therapists, counselors, etc.). They explain their need to address these companies is that most business people dealing in sales know of one way: the hard way.

The hard sell is business to business, an impersonal machine set up to make money regardless of product, service or feeling. It’s what everyone knows and what everyone feels they need to do to make the sale.

It’s not. In fact it’s far from it. Judith and Jim answer 45 great questions asked in a recent survey about putting the heart back in sales. And here’s a little secret: it’s really not just about soft marketers being able to do this. There’s cross over. I realized that even our company uses (and can use more of) their techniques to put soul into a company.

The informal way they cross the murky marketing boundaries and connect feelings to work is just a part of the book. it goes on almost like you’re listening in on a conversation between friends. They talk about their life, their passions, their work, and even down to why they picked Morgan James as their publisher. They also have free offers and web sites in the book for more information to refer to further explain their processes.

The Heart of Marketing is not an unattainable feature in sales, it’s actually a must for most businesses.

(P.S. – My favorite part of the book is what they say about ego in business – check it out!)

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