Brian Clark, CEO of Copyblogger Media and architect of the recent ‘agile’ launch of New Rainmaker (a new inbound/content/automation marketing platform) coined the moniker ‘media not marketing’ to position his latest offering which comprises the suite of software solutions used behind the highly successful Copyblogger platform.
‘Media not marketing’ goes to the crux of how b2b marketers need to rise above the tsunami of ‘noise’ flooding the Internet today, especially if you are in a crowded market. Look at it this way -- in 2010 Eric Schmidt, then CEO of Google, was quoted as saying “Every two days now we create as much information as we did from the dawn of civilization up until 2003”.
While the accuracy of this statement has been challenged in some quarters, it illustrates the extraordinary scale of the problem rather well.And today, this rising tide is unlikely to have dissipated.
In the first place, power has shifted from marketers to consumers as the Internet and new technologies challenge old style interruptive tactics like advertising, direct mail and telesales, and promote instead more conversational channels like blogging, social media and content marketing.
So selling what you do too early during an experience of connecting with you risks losing attention straight away. Content that is focused on you, your services, your products, that reads me, me, me is not going to keep the attention of a time strapped executive in this new media age.
Instead, make sure your copy passes the ‘what’s in in for me’ test as that is all your reader cares about at this early stage.
Today we all look to inform and educate ourselves before we’re ready to speak with anyone in Sales. So a media-first approach that is informative, educative and even entertaining is more likely to gain attention as it creates real value.
If you’re building a growing business without a compass or map to navigate this new landscape it can feel like a trip without direction or a journey without a destination. You will need your own set of coordinates to thrive in this terrain, to build a destination for your audience that they can see and visit, and you need to do it on your own land (your website, not on Facebook, for example) rather than building on rented ground, which is a risky strategy.
The smartest way to do this is to take a media first approach. After all, do you know anyone who actually enjoys being marketed at straight off the bat?
A media first approach is no short cut – that’s for sure! But it will make your marketing mix stand out from your competitors, provide on-going reasons for customers to find and connect with you, build a bank of evergreen resource that will keep on giving, and set you apart as a thought leader in your space.