Category: Marketing Basics

8 Great Content Marketing Takeaways from 2009 Custom Content Conference

By Newt Barrett | On April 2, 2009

divine caroline home page Marketing experts shared invaluable insights about how to market in turbulent times through the effective use of content online, in print, and in person.

Custom publishing has gone from being an ancillary, add on component of marketing strategies to becoming a vital ingredient.  Why?  Because content marketing is so important to an increasing number of marketers and companies of all sizes.  Therefore, creating custom content is no longer a nice to-do, if you have the money.  Rather, it has become an absolute must-do as part of an integrated content marketing strategy.

The strategic importance of content marketing, and of its first cousin, social media, was front and center at this year's Custom Content Conference

Here are 8 great takeaways that I brought home with me from the conference:

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The Secrets to Driving Dollars to Your Company Online

By Newt Barrett | On March 20, 2009

world wide rave book cover Great New Book from David Meerman Scott Delivers All the Tools You’ll Need

David is a content marketing pioneer who realized early on how important it was to create relevant and compelling content for your customers.  And, in his earlier book, The New Rules of Marketing and PR, he explained clearly why both marketing and public relations professionals needed to change the way they operate based on new Internet realities.

His newest book, World Wide Rave, as the subtitle explains, is all about, "creating triggers that get millions of people to spread your ideas and share your stories." Although you may have a stack of books waiting for you to pick them up, I recommend that you get this one and start reading it immediately.

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Does a Brand Really Matter If You’re a Small Business?

By Newt Barrett | On March 18, 2009

man holding paper mask Yes. Absolutely, yes!

I was reminded of the importance of small business branding when I read a recent post on Duct Tape Marketing which asked the question in preparation for a March 18 webinar. (Click here to get the archived webinar)

Your brand is a vital part of your business even if you are a one-person shop. Your brand is the sum total of what you and your company represent to the world.  Thus, when we hear Coca Cola or see the NIKE swoosh, all of our experience with those brands flood into our brains.  So, it is with you and your company.

You need a brand. To build your brand, you must understand the most important problems you can solve for your customers—and how to position your company as the ideal solution provider.  You can’t do everything to help your customers, but you can do one thing—or a few things—brilliantly. That’s the essence of your brand promise: “What problems can our customers expect to solve by working with our company?”

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The Huge Marketing Reality That EMBARQ Forgot

By Newt Barrett | On March 12, 2009

If you really show the love to your current customers, you won't have to beg shamelessly to try to get them back.

Embarq Corporation

Image via Wikipedia

Just like the Swiffer, "Baby, come back" TV ads, once you've lost your long-time customers, you may have to forget about getting them back--even if you send them flowers or sing under their window.

EMBARQ basically failed the in person content marketing test. They completely forgot the vital importance of your people to people relationships.

For many years in our part of the world, Southwest Florida, EMBARQ offered solid reliable phone service that originally ran under the Sprint banner.  But, over the past six months or so, we ran into lots of annoying problems. 

When we called them, rather than taking a proactive approach to figuring out what was wrong and fixing it, they suggested that we must be doing something wrong.  They insisted that we go through all kinds of gyrations to test it out and warned us that--although they could send out a service person--they would have to charge us if it turned out that the fault was ours.

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6 Key Content Marketing Lessons to Learn from Great Presenters

By Newt Barrett | On March 12, 2009

publicwords nick morgan home page Nick Morgan's great book, Give Your Speech, Change the World, not only teaches what it takes to become a great speaker. His lessons apply equally to effective content marketing.

Poor presenters and mediocre marketers share certain traits.

  • They cannot explain concisely why their audience should care about the information and services they provide.
  • They lack focus.
  • They do not understand their audience.
  • They are more focused on themselves then on their audience.
  • They fail to engage in dialogue with their audience.
  • They don't urge their audience at the end of their presentation to take specific next-step actions.

It might seem obvious that speakers who exhibit the traits above would do poorly and probably bore their listeners to tears.  But, as marketers, we too often exhibit the same bad behaviors.

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Here’s a Content Marketing Conference You Shouldn’t Miss

By Newt Barrett | On March 12, 2009

custom content conference 2009 Content marketing is now a strategic imperative for companies of all sizes.  Doing it well is challenging because it requires a new mindset for most marketers.  When you add in rapidly evolving digital technology and a plethora of social media choices, keeping up is very hard to do. 

That's why the March 22-24, 2009 Custom Content Conference in Miami is especially relevant to marketers.  Because content marketing will be playing an ever more important role within your company, effective execution becomes paramount. 

In today's, you will learn from some of the best content marketing thinkers in the business.  Best-selling otter, David Meerman Scott, kicks it off discussing how to create a worldwide rave.  You'll also hear from marketing gurus with Lego, Kraft, Nielsen, Leo Burnett, the Miami Dolphins, just to mention a few. Click here to see the awesome speaker lineup of and what they will be discussing.

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Twitter for Business Made Easy

By Newt Barrett | On February 27, 2009

Great MindMap from the Mindjet Folks Simplifies Twitter and Proves Power of Mindmapping

twitter for business mindmap On the most basic level, it's easy to explain Twitter in a few bullet points:
  • Twitter is a micro-blogging service that you can use from anywhere you can get an Internet connection.
  • You sign up and give yourself an identity that lives on Twitter, such as mine--Twitter.com/newtbarrett.
  • You can then post 140 character text messages which may include hyperlinks.
  • You can choose to follow fellow members whose ' tweets ' will show up automatically on your Twitter page.
  • Other members can choose to follow you to see what you have to say.
  • The heavy hitters on Twitter may have thousands of followers and may post dozens of tweets per day.
  • Every Twitter member can pass on or ' retweet' other messages so that the reach of what you have to say is potentially huge and global.
  • All of this happens in real time
At this point, you may be thinking, "Okay, I understand that, but what's the point?  Why would I want to do any of that stuff?  That's where this great mindmap created by Mindjet's Michael Deutch comes into play. It illustrates why you need to care about Twitter for your business--and how to get smart about using it. Read More

Will Starbucks Instant Coffee Be Their ‘New Coke’ Debacle?

By Newt Barrett | On February 20, 2009

starbucks via ready brew Are they tossing authenticity right out the window just like Coca Cola tried to do to its much loved 'classic' version?

I may be all wrong.  After all, the folks at Starbucks have undoubtedly spent a bazillion dollars in research to show that there is a need for a new kind of instant coffee. I simply have a gut reaction that their new Via Ready Brew, misses on three counts:

  1. Starbucks is all about freshly brewed, freshly ground coffee served up in an authentic Starbucks environment.  Instant coffee, by any other name, is a throwback to a time when we needed a very low-cost solution to having a single cup at home or in the office.
  2. Starbucks has a hard won image as an environmentally sensitive company that understands issues of sustainability and conservation.  How do individually plastic wrapped portions of instant coffee square with that company image? How many of those plastic wrappers will wind up in landfills around the US?
  3. Starbucks is already bucking a new cost-conscious trend among American consumers.  Now are they are asking us to shell out 80 cents for a cup of instant coffee(if you buy the 12 pack).  Of course, that's cheaper than what we would pay for a small cup in a Starbucks retail store. But it's 10 times more expensive than if we brew Starbucks coffee at home from a bag we can buy at the supermarket.
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Small Business Survival: Your Customers Must Trust You Completely

By Newt Barrett | On February 20, 2009

apple store people testing stuff Essential content marketing advice from the Red VW Bus blog

Blogger, Tim Moore, wrote recently about the need to give up old school marketing and replace it with a new approach is based on understanding buyers as "prosumers."

A prosumer is actively involved in researching and interacting with the companies from whom they will buy.  They expect to find accurate, objective, and trustworthy information from every vendor.  If they don't find it, they will head off to evaluate someone else. Worse, they will probably never return.

Old-school marketers are uncomfortable with this concept.  They are used to one-way marketing communication and a sales approach that talks at the customer rather than with the customer. That just doesn't work anymore.

According to Tim, the Apple store is a perfect example of an environment in which prosumers are welcomed with open arms.  This matches my own experience in which I was able to get honest and earnest answers to every question I had about a new iPhone. I had absolute trust in Apple and its people throughout the buying transaction. We probably all wish that the Apple store experience was replicated throughout the retail industry.

I think Tim is right on the money with his emphasis on the need to establish trust.

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How To Create the All-Important Elevator Speech For Your Presentations and for Your Content Marketing

By Newt Barrett | On February 13, 2009
elevator with people It is so hard, but so important to explain what it is that you do and how it will benefit the person to whom you are communicating. Not at length.  But so concisely that it can be communicated in less time than it takes an elevator to go up a few floors. And, so compellingly that your listener will remember and repeat it to others. Actually, Nick Morgan is even more precise than this.  He says your elevator speech must be a single sentence. I have just begun to read his wonderful book, Give Your Speech, Change the World. It is absolutely must reading, even if the only speeches you give are internal presentations within your organization. Nick is the founder of Public Words, a communications coaching company. So he gives speeches--and teaches people how to give speeches--for a living. It's obvious from reading his book that he is a very, very good at it. Listen to what he has to say about that all-important elevator speech. Read More