Andy Nulman's "Pow!" blog makes the great point that in snowy cities, companies pretty much throw their money away when they advertise on the sides of buses in winter.
Then he discoved this picture from fellow Montreal entrepreneur Bernie Malinoff. It pretty much nails his argument.
Thursday, January 28, 2010
Friday, January 8, 2010
How NOT to win friends and influence people
I found a link this morning to a good article on “negotiating with difficult people” at the DaleCarnegie.com site.
As a consultant myself in content marketing, I think it imperative that businesses selling their smarts (AKA “thought leaders”) provide free content such as this to attract prospects’ attention and build respect for their expertise.
But that doesn't mean you broadcast what your intentions are. Letting people know they're just "leads" to you makes people feel they're being manipulated, rather than served.
Carnegie’s mistake? Look at the URL they choose for the page that hosts the story:
http://www.dalecarnegie.com/lead_nurturing/tips/tips.jsp?tipid=250
Maybe few people will notice the phrase “lead nurturing tips.” Nonetheless, this takes transparency too far.
Yes, providing relevant content is a marketing tactic. But most businesses use phrases that sound less mercantile. Examples: Free_stuff. Premium_content. Welcoming_wisdom.
Business should make customers and prospects feel they're being valued, and respected. Not hunted.
As a consultant myself in content marketing, I think it imperative that businesses selling their smarts (AKA “thought leaders”) provide free content such as this to attract prospects’ attention and build respect for their expertise.
But that doesn't mean you broadcast what your intentions are. Letting people know they're just "leads" to you makes people feel they're being manipulated, rather than served.
Carnegie’s mistake? Look at the URL they choose for the page that hosts the story:
http://www.dalecarnegie.com/lead_nurturing/tips/tips.jsp?tipid=250
Maybe few people will notice the phrase “lead nurturing tips.” Nonetheless, this takes transparency too far.
Yes, providing relevant content is a marketing tactic. But most businesses use phrases that sound less mercantile. Examples: Free_stuff. Premium_content. Welcoming_wisdom.
Business should make customers and prospects feel they're being valued, and respected. Not hunted.
(Cross-posted from my "Canadian Entrepreneur" blog)
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