Friends accuse me of mock-modesty when I say that any success I have had has little to do with my abilities but is almost entirely due to the sloth of many if not most people in the marketing game.
But I am absolutely serious and bring in evidence three instructive examples.
First, the advertisement shown here, which is about 90 years old. It is the work of Claude Hopkins, and a simple demonstration of what marketing is all about – besides illustrating one or two tricks that repay study.
Second, a relatively new online publication called Social Media Examiner which caters to fools in thrall to the latest silver bullet.
The ad also forces retail distribution in a way most large firms today have never heard of. It sends retailers lots of people interested in Pepsodent.
The story of how Pepsodent became the leading toothpaste all those years ago despite being no better than any of its competitors is told in The Man Who Sold America. Please don’t ask me about that because you should know of it and its subject already. Just read it.
Social Media Examiner is the brainchild of Michael Stelzner and good for him. His aim, I guess, is to enlighten people who a) think social media are the answer to maiden’s prayer and b) don’t realise there is nothing new about how to succeed in these media. They are probably also under the illusion that a slogan is advertising and re-branding will save their witless little arses.
***
I have been studying Ocado, a very good home delivery service, for years. They don’t understand one of the most important things in the process above, with disastrous consequences. I have manfully refrained from comment because I think they should pay me for this, but I can’t keep quiet any longer.
Ocado are very good at finding prospects and making them buy. They do this by offering discounts. New customers go onto the database and they communicate with them regularly.
So far so good. But you know what happens next? They keep offering them discounts. Why? If the service is good (which it is) they don’t need to. They are training their customers not to buy except with a discount.
As my friend the late Professor Andrew Ehrenberg in the PIMS study run with the Ogilvy Centre for Research pointed out well over 25 years ago, this kills profits.
Whoever is responsible for this folly should have their brains surgically replaced with something more useful. Fish oil, maybe.
Nice one, Mr D. I have no idea why people try to make things more complicated than they are. Perhaps it's so they can call it another new-fangled name and sell it as something new.
Over here in the Emerald Isle, you can sell anything with “social media” slapped on it at a premium. Predictably, the only people actually making money from this are the shovel-sellers, not the shovel-users.
Warmly,
Jon
RE Ocado, isn't that the DFS (sofas) approach to marketing?
The same is true of Dell. I
don't buy a new machine until I have found a voucher offering hundreds of
pounds off. They've conditioned me to do this, it only takes a few
minutes and costs them a big % of their profit.
Yes; been commenting ion Dells' folly for years now ________________________________
Your Ocado point makes me think of all the businesses that offer Groupons thinking it will save their business. Most people who after Groupons aren't loyal and are only looking for a deal. The business struggles to get any value or long term customers out of the Groupon and they wonder why!
Just discovered your blog tonight thanks to some recommendations from the fine people over at warriorforum.com and I look forward to reading your thoughts Drayton!
What goes around comes around. In the '60's they had Pink Stamps in the US and Green Shield Stamps in the UK – just ways to bribe customers. Now they all have loyalty programmes on the usual unthinking grounds – “They've got one, so we should”. It is a substitute for attending to the ONLY question that matters: how can we do better? What comes with bribery goes with bigger bribery. Then one day someone wakes up and says, “Hey, what if we offered a better service?” All the other marketing muppets say, “Wow, what a genius”.I somehow doubt that Mercedes or Harrods will start offering endless discounts. Not if they want to preserve their brands. ________________________________