Sunday, August 7, 2016

Smile While You're Making It


Fiction's where I go when I've OD'ed on reality.

"Fiction reveals truth that reality obscures," Emerson said.

And it's often "the best way to capture reality," Jack Grebski says in Entrepreneur

Grebski lists his must-see films for entrepreneurs, and the lesson each one teaches:
  • Catch Me If You Can (a lesson in "the good ol’ hustle to reach success")
  • Lord of War (a lesson in "ambition, tenacity, and ability to tolerate risk)
  • Wall Street (a lesson in "how easy it is to get carried away with the glamorous lifestyle that accompanies wealth")
  • Rogue Trader (a lesson in "how money drives all sorts of maniacal behavior")
  • Twelve Angry Men (a lesson in "the psychology of group behavior")
  • Office Space (a lesson in "leadership, team-building techniques, and career development")
  • The Godfather (a lesson in "why understanding competition is non-negotiable")
  • The Usual Suspects (a lesson in "leadership consolidation, power and influence, and long-term business strategy")
  • How To Get Ahead In Advertising (a lesson in "creative problem solving")
  • The Devil Wears Prada (a lesson in "how to work your way up the corporate ladder")
  • Thank You For Smoking (a lesson in "how to sell just about any product")
  • Glengarry Glen Ross (a lesson in "competition and manipulation")
  • The Merchant of Venice (a lesson in "business partnerships, risk assessment and mercantile law")
  • Dr. Strangelove (a lesson in "leadership and loyalty")
  • Erin Brockovich (a lesson in "the importance of sticking to one’s scruples even in the face of obstacles")
  • The Rainmaker (a lesson in "the power of determination and social responsibility")
I'm sure you can add to Grebski's list, if you think about it.

My must-watch film for entrepreneurs is Oh, Lucky Man!, a rompish retelling of Voltaire's Candide set in the UK in 1973, and a lesson in the vagaries and hypocrisies of the climb to riches.

Oh, Lucky Man! is worth the watch just to spot a 28-year-old Dame Helen Mirren.

What's your fav?


Saturday, August 6, 2016

Events: Working in a Coal Mine



This week I asked a savvy agency head, Cary Hatch, if B2B marketers were really as deep down into F2F as many event-industry people claim.

Her response: "Yes, they're into events, for the sales. Events are the currency of business today."

B2B agency head Gary Slack has told me that, with the exception of digital, his own clients devote more dollars to events than any other channel.

That exuberance is confirmed by Outsells' research analyst Michael Balsam: “Digital is still king, but events play a large role when you need to touch and feel things as part of the sales process."

And according to content agency Brafton's Molly Buccini, three of four B2B marketers boosted their event spend this year.

"When it comes to bridging the gap between digital and traditional marketing activities, events are an easy way to combine forces," she says.

Something's amiss, however—despite the spend-fest. As B2B marketers continue to sink more into events, they plan and execute them without objectives, strategy, or cognizance of corporate goals.

They've done so forever, as B2B marketing research analyst Julian Archer notes: "We at SiriusDecisions currently see a familiar pattern of too much emphasis being placed upon the activity of an event and not enough on outcome."

I ask, as the lyric to "Working in a Coal Mine" does, how long can this go on?


Friday, August 5, 2016

The Dirty Job You'll Have to Do, If You Want Your Marketing to Work. OMG, It's Disgusting!


Five percent of the people think; 10% of the people think they think; and the other 85% would rather die than think.”
―Thomas A. Edison

Copywriters are needed in this world for the same reason pig farmers are: thinking is a dirty job.

"Everyone wants to just cut and paste, not think," says copywriter Gary Bencivenga.

But thinking separates the first-rate writer from the herd.

In fact, Bencivenga calls learning to think one of "three greatest copywriting lessons" he's ever learned.

To write clearly and convincingly, you have to mull. To mull, you have to understand the job requirements:
  • Mulling demands quiet. "To discover what will work, and then be able to write clearly and persuasively about it, you must be able to think clearly," Bencivenga says. "And to think clearly, you first have to be able to relax, so that all the monkey chatter inside your head quiets down and you can have an ongoing dialogue with yourself—a series of pleasant, quiet conversations about what makes sense for this market at this time with this product."
  • Mulling needs the subconscious. Generating workable options works; sleeping on them works charms. "After you’ve had an ongoing conversation with yourself, sleep on it and then, each morning, let your subconscious speak its mind," Bencivenga says. He also suggests writing early in the day and keeping a notepad, pen and flashlight on your nightstand.
  • Mulling wants to be fed. "Food for thought" is more than a metaphor. Persuasive copy requires the writer to be an insatiable sponge for information. "View the abundant knowledge you lack not as a threat but as an infinite supply of new abundance for yourself—rocket fuel for your rise in our profession," Bencivenga says.

Thursday, August 4, 2016

15 Ways to Write Headlines When You Can't Write to Save Your Life



If the headline doesn’t stop people, the copy might as well be written in Greek.
—John Caples

Q. Where, besides the copywriter's over-caffeinated brain, do eye-stopping headlines come from?

A. The copywriter's under-rated bag of tricks. 

In Content Marketer, copywriter Josue Valles opens his bag of tricks—15 in all—for inspection. Here they are:
  1. Steal ideas from clickbait sites like BuzzFeed
  2. Lean on "psychological triggers"—specific numbers or razor-sharp benefits ("Reduce payroll 23% by automating absence management")
  3. Promise super-fast results
  4. Enter keywords into Google and steal ideas from the organic search results 
  5. Use proven words (here's a list)
  6. Use Portent’s Content Idea Generator
  7. Steal words and phrases people frequently use to ask questions on Quora
  8. Enter keywords into BuzzSumo and steal ideas from the search results
  9. Include the name of a big brand in your headline ("Richard Branson's 15 Hacks for Punctuality")
  10. Test the emotive power of your headline with Advanced Marketing Institute's EMVHA
  11. Test the responsiveness of your headline with Twitter and Facebook (use an A/B test)
  12. Leverage the power of an image
  13. Steal ideas from newsletters 
  14. Evoke curiosity (hint: use Linkbait Generator)
  15. Steal ideas from HARO searches
Bob James' Bonus Hack: Steal this book.

Wednesday, August 3, 2016

Do Your Customers Feel the Love?



Do your customers feel the love?

Not the majority, finds a new study by Gallup.

Gallup finds that only 3 in 10 B2B customers are emotionally and psychologically attached to their suppliers.


The rest—70%—could care less, and are ready to take their business elsewhere, according to analysts Craig Kamins and Anson Vuong.

But wait! Is it your fault customers don't feel the love?

"A big part of the problem is that when customers make their purchasing decisions, they really care more about the product or service they're buying than the company that provides that service," Kamins and Vuong write. 


"Put another way, they're buying the function, not the brand. This makes them a flight risk."

Company leaders are often the last to know customers feels unloved, Gallup finds. Leaders don't:
  • Hold meaningful conversations with customers
  • Try to empathize with customers
  • Pay attention to burning issues brought to their attention by account reps
Not only is lost business at stake.

Account growth is, too.

Gallup's analysis of more than 200,000 relationships shows that indifferent customers are less likely to want to increase their business with current suppliers, or be an early adopter of new products those companies might offer.

To fix the problem, Kamins and Vuong recommend B2B companies work hard to engage customers with their brands.

"If the brand promise is distinct enough, if the company effectively communicates its promise to the customer and if the company consistently delivers on its promise, then it can fully engage more of its indifferent customers," they write.

To engage customers, a B2B company's brand must promise "impact," according to the two analysts.

"Impact can be the catalyst that transforms indifferent customers into fully engaged ones," they write.

To create impact, a company must:
  • Understand customers' businesses
  • Bring them a steady stream of relevant new ideas
  • Put those ideas to work by tailoring them to specific markets and workplaces
"B2B companies must convince customers that they are buying the brandnot just the function. Each customer will define impact differently, but every B2B company can find a way to improve its customers' business."
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