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April 9, 2008

Managed by expectations, irked by messages

Francois Gossieaux reports on experiments described in Dan Ariely’s Predictably Irrational that show just how influential our expectations are: People who paid more for an energy drink were more refreshed by it and even solved more puzzles. Francois concludes: (1) “We are doomed,” and (2) “…who said that messaging was dead? The things you say about your product may indeed be more important that the product itself…”

Almost from the day the Cluetrain site went up, I regretted point #74: “We are immune to advertising. Just forget it.” We are so not immune. Branding works. We think of Volvos as safe and the Ford Fiesta as a car for young folks. We think of Coke as the original and Pepsi as the copy. We can characterize someone as a “wearer of Birkenstocks.” Branding and advertising in some important sense work.

Now, we certainly can undo some of the cognitive damage advertising and branding do. Market conversations in fact often are about the ways in which a product’s promises and sloganeering don’t live up to its reality. But that’s a lot different than saying we’re immune to advertising. We’re not.

I’d still urge companies to move their marketing away from messaging, however. Assuming the studies Francois cites are correct, our reactions to products do seem shaped by what we’re told about them. No surprise there, although it’s always depressing to find out what big dopes we humans are through no fault of our own. But, customers (= all of us) are going to increasingly resist and resent marketing that focuses narrowly on messaging — that is, on finding the simple idea they can pound into our heads over and over. Telling us your drink will make us refreshed or more alert may indeed make us more refreshed or alert, but treating us like freaking morons by droning the same words at us over and over will make your product less interesting to us. The real challenge marketers face in a world of online conversations is how to help us find what’s interesting about their products.

(By the way, although Francois an I have been friends and colleagues for many years, I just this morning realized that his last name uses each of the vowels just once.) [Tags: francois_gossieaux marketing branding advertising cluetrain ]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: advertising • branding • business • cluetrain • marketing Date: April 9th, 2008 dw

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April 4, 2008

[topicmaps] Change the name?

During the end session, the moderator asked the panel why topic maps have not been catching on as quickly as they should. I suggested that one reason was that people think they’re graphical representations, when in fact they’re a data representation that can be displayed any way that makes sense.

I hit some resistance among the panelists, however. Some maintained that maps themselves are abstractions. Sure, but when you say you’re going to give someone a subway map, they expect a piece of paper with colored lines on it, not an abstract representation of the relationships among the stations.

If I were in the business of selling software that implements topic maps, I’d come up with another name, and at some point mention that underneath is an ISO standard called “topic maps.” Some people at the conference talk about “subject-centric computing,” which is still pretty techie but I find much less confusing than “topic maps.” [Tags: topic_maps marketing ]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: conference coverage • marketing Date: April 4th, 2008 dw

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March 29, 2008

Paul Gillin’s marketing book up in draft

Paul Gillin has posted draft chapters of his new book, Secrets of Social Marketing, for our enjoyment and, more important, our commentary. I haven’t taken a look at them yet, but I like to see people practicing what they preach, and Paul’s The New Influencers was good.

[Tags: marketing paul_gillin business ]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: business • cluetrain • marketing • paul_gillin Date: March 29th, 2008 dw

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Least neutral Net ever.

I was pretty excited about finding myself on a “BetaBlue” JetBlue plane because they touted it as providing free inflight email and more.

It turns out that above 10,000 feet you can indeed do email and more, so long as your email is a Yahoo email account and the more is Yahoo instant messaging. No browsing, no one else’s email or IM.

I really don’t understand JetBlue’s thinking on this. They’re likely to annoy more passengers than they please, some of whom will be petty enough to write snarky blog posts. without even mentioning that they’re posting their snarkiness via the excellent free wifi JetBlue provides at its Long Beach gates.

[Tags: net_neutrality jetblue marketing ]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: jetblue • marketing • net neutrality • net_neutrality Date: March 29th, 2008 dw

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March 22, 2008

Lisa Stone at Berkman

I am so disappointed that I had to miss Lisa Stone’s Berkman talk. She’s blogged a transcript here, and pretty soon the video will be up here. Sounds like a great talk…

[Tags: lisa_stone ]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: business • culture • digital culture • lisa_stone • marketing • politics Date: March 22nd, 2008 dw

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March 18, 2008

Kentucky considers banning anonymous speech

According to this excellent blog, Kentucky is considering a bill banning anonymous online speech. (The blog is the class blog for “The Web Difference” course I’m co-teaching, with John Palfrey, at Harvard Law.)

* * *

And speaking of courses, I find it heartwarming that today I’m able to open our session on whether the Web has changed marketing by using some slides on “what is marketing” from John Hauser’s Spring 2005 course on marketing at MIT, which is available as open courseware. Gotta love the open courseware.

[Tags: berkman anonymity digital_rights marketing open_courseware mit ]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: anonymity • berkman • digital rights • digital_rights • education • marketing • mit • net neutrality • open_courseware Date: March 18th, 2008 dw

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March 14, 2008

Euroblog

I’ve been at Euroblog 2008 yesterday and today, and will be tomorrow as well. It’s a mix of academics and practitioners talking about marketing and public relations in the age of the Web.

The conference seems to assume that we agree that the Web has changed the marketing landscape, that customers are not mere consumers, that marketing has to change right down to its skivvies. The academics at the conference have generally backed this up with actual research. What marketing can and should be, however, is a matter of more controversy here. As it should be. [Tags: euroblog2008 marketing public_relations]

* * *

Catharine Taylor has a new blog about social media as a marketing platform. Yes, it’s a problematic formulation — which is one of the points of Euroblog — but Catharine is skeptical about the importance of social media, albeit not yet expressing much skepticism about the propriety and effectiveness of using them for marketing.

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: business • marketing Date: March 14th, 2008 dw

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Obama ad contest

MoveOn is sponsoring a “Make your own Obama ad” contest — thirty seconds to explain wnhy you think Obama should be the next president.

I hope they pick something funky and home-made, instead of a superslick Doritos style ad. [Tags: politics obama marketing doritos]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: digital culture • marketing • politics Date: March 14th, 2008 dw

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March 6, 2008

Lakoff reframes the Democrats

I’m on the road and haven’t heard George “Mr. Metaphor” Lakoff’s reframing of the Democrats, in an interview with Dave Winer, but I hear it’s good. [Tags: politics geoerge_lakoff dave_winer democrats ]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: democrats • marketing • politics Date: March 6th, 2008 dw

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March 4, 2008

The opposite of authenticity

authenticity: An industry consortium “sponsored” a course at Hunter in which students were supposed to create a fake blog to discourage people from buying knock-off fashion items. Jeesh!

[Tags: authenticity marketing cluetrain blogs sockpuppetry ]

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Categories: blogs Tagged with: authenticity • cluetrain • marketing • sockpuppetry Date: March 4th, 2008 dw

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