spacer
Aug 23
2012

spacer

Marketing is Dead?

Gini Dietrich | Email | 86 Comments

spacer We live in really interesting times.

Technology is coming at us more quickly than ever before.

It took the following technologies to reach 50 million users: Radio – 38 years; TV – 13 years; The Internet – four years; iPod – three years; Facebook added 100 million users in just nine months; and iPod app downloads hit one billion in nine months.

Last year we had two big social networks introduced – Google+ and Pinterest – and the latter is the fastest growing social network…ever.

It’s no wonder “experts” continue to claim certain things are dead. SEO is Dead! Public Relations is Dead! Advertising is Dead!

Marketing is Dead?

The most recent?

In a Harvard Business Review blog post, Bill Lee claims Marketing is Dead and he’s not being cynical; he’s really serious.

He makes a good case. He says buyers are no longer paying attention (half true) and CEOs are losing patience. In fact, he quotes a study of 600 CEOs who are frustrated with their chief marketing officers.

In a devastating 2011 study of 600 CEOs and decision makers by the London-based Fournaise Marketing Group, 73% of them said that CMOs lack business credibility and the ability to generate sufficient business growth, 72% are tired of being asked for money without explaining how it will generate increased business, and 77% have had it with all the talk about brand equity that can’t be linked to actual firm equity or any other recognized financial metric.

This complements some of what we hear from clients and prospects, as well. But it certainly doesn’t mean marketing is dead. It just means marketers are under even more pressure to measure return-on-investment instead of brand awareness and credibility.

What Should We Be Measuring?

I have for-profit experience so the efforts we’re accustomed to measuring at my integrated marketing communications firm are: Increased revenues, shortened sales cycles, and/or improved margins.

In order to do that, we integrate social media, the web, and traditional marketing disciplines – media relations, advertising, direct marketing, and more.

Take Catalytic Products International as an example. They make oxidizers, which are not something you a) buy online or b) use the social networks to connect with the business leaders. If marketing truly were dead, they wouldn’t be doing anything to support their sales.

We used a combination of online advertising, trade shows, email marketing, content (white papers, case studies, educational newsletters), search engine optimization, media relations, and search engine marketing to market their business.

Notice the traditional and new marketing tactics in that list?

Last year, the marketing program generated $2.2 million in new revenue or an 8:1 return-on-investment. As it compared to margins, the return-on-investment was 3:1.

Marketing is long from dead. Don’t let the shiny, new penny distract you. Learn about it, figure out how it can be implemented, find ways to measure the results around the efforts of using it, but always integrate it into what is already working really well for you.

This first appeared in my weekly Crain’s column.

Digg Digg
Do you like this post? Subscribe to Spin Sucks
Sign in
spacer
  • Comment help
  • Get Livefyre
Post comment as
spacer spacer
Sort: Newest | Oldest
spacer
Rodriguez247 7 pts

And that is why I'm so against the term "unmarketing" While engaging with your customers is the ideal way to carry out your business, it requires planning, strategies and most importantly an understanding of the various ways to possibly market an 'unconventional' business like your example. The way that people are used to marketing is definitely dead, but I believe that it is evolving into a new form... 

share
  • spam
  • offensive
  • disagree
  • off topic
Like
spacer
ginidietrich 9386 pts moderator

 Rodriguez247 It's definitely evolving...all of it is. But none of it is dead. It kills me that people forget about email marketing, but it's still one of the most effective ways to do direct marketing (if done well). And, because no one is mailing anything anymore, it turns out to be pretty darn effective. 

My latest conversation: #FollowFriday: Jennifer Windrum

share
  • spam
  • offensive
  • disagree
  • off topic
Like
spacer
Rodriguez247 7 pts

 ginidietrich I think it was Gary who said that email was the original social network. I think that is the reason that I was so drawn to your book, you explain all the different tools from a different perspective. Part of our strategy is to build and maintain an email database in case any of those networks in which we currently have a community decide to close shop (I'm sure it's not going to happen, but email will be around for a long time...) 

share
  • spam
  • offensive
  • disagree
  • off topic
Like
spacer
ginidietrich 9386 pts moderator

 Rodriguez247 Why, thank you!

My latest conversation: Gin and Topics: Dog Shaming and Sexy Guy on Rollerblades

share
  • spam
  • offensive
  • disagree
  • off topic
Like
spacer
barrettrossie 679 pts

It would be helpful if the author offered a definition of marketing. I like Leon 's definition:  "marketing isn't everything but everything is marketing."  So if marketing is dead, the Mayans are right. Let's just drop everything and party till the end. 

share
  • spam
  • offensive
  • disagree
  • off topic
Like
spacer
ginidietrich 9386 pts moderator

 barrettrossie  Well, they could be right...we'll find out in a few months.

My latest conversation: #FollowFriday: Jennifer Windrum

share
  • spam
  • offensive
  • disagree
  • off topic
Like
spacer
largento 6 pts

Someone ought to tell the CEOs how frustrated we are with them!

share
  • spam
  • offensive
  • disagree
  • off topic
Like spacer
spacer
ginidietrich 9386 pts moderator

 largento Ha! Maybe you could commission a study.

My latest conversation: #FollowFriday: Jennifer Windrum

share
  • spam
  • offensive
  • disagree
  • off topic
Like
spacer
JayDolan 204 pts

Perhaps the better argument is that "Marketing is Undead." It has changed into a form that is recognizable, yet wholly different. It still functions in many of the same ways, but we need to approach it differently.

 

Otherwise it might take a bite out of our arm.

My latest conversation: Twitter, developers, and the future of social media

share
  • spam
  • offensive
  • disagree
  • off topic
Like spacer
spacer
ginidietrich 9386 pts moderator

 JayDolan Do you think it could make me a sammich?

My latest conversation: Online Reputation Management: A How-to Guide

share
  • spam
  • offensive
  • disagree
  • off topic
Like
spacer
mdbarber 172 pts

I am so tired of the ____ is dead posts from people who really don't understand but instead want to promote their latest shiny penny. There are so many more important things in our world to be concerned about that which communications discipline is dead this week. But, as long as these folks continue to get business this way, and keep the rest of us frustrated, it will continue. I really appreciate your wr

gipoco.com is neither affiliated with the authors of this page nor responsible for its contents. This is a safe-cache copy of the original web site.