Marketing, Death and Taxes
So Marketing may not be as unavoidable as death and taxes, but lately it is becoming harder and harder to escape. As a marketing professional, I am not proud of our reputation as SPAM-ers. It seems as if the lower our outbound marketing response rates get, the greater the number of emails, phone calls, pop-up ads and other interruptions we throw at our weary populace.
As a consumer, I’m fed up. I refuse to answer cold calls at work or home. I can only watch TV shows on my DVR. If I’m forced to watch live TV like the news or sports, I pause it for 20 minutes so I can fast forward through the commercials or I multi-task and catch up on email or surf the web during commercials.
Holy Cow! That Is A Lot Of Time Spent Online Using Social Media
Yes, that was my reaction to this online consumption study by the good folks at Nielsen. (Disclosure: I am a former employee of the Nielsen Company). To me this was the biggest news of the week. Bigger than Lindsay Lohan. Bigger than “The Bachelorette” finale. And bigger than the Bristol Palin and Levi Johnston breakup (I know, crazy right?).
Americans spend a ton of time on social networks and the growth is a bit startling. What we do online is changing. But what does this mean for the B2B Marketer?
Lead Generation Programs That Work
On July 13th, 2010 I presented on a webinar sponsored by Focus entitled “True Lead Generation Stories” moderated by Craig Rosenberg and co-presented by an esteemed colleague Chris Waldo who runs Demand Generation for Ingersoll Rand.
During my presentation titled Lead Generation Programs That Work I walked through the 5 Steps to Achieve Lead Generation ROI. I defined the top tactics for driving leads in today’s environment and listed those that aren’t working as well as they used to. I concluded with a discussion of the tactics to consider in future demand generation efforts.
67 Innovations To Help You Get Inspired
Every once in a while it’s important to step away from our everday responsibilities and ponder creative new ideas, new solutions, and innovations. Inspiration often comes from considering things outside our normal realm. One place I often turn for mental “fresh air” is the Business-to-Consumer space where there is certainly no lack of bright, creative minds dreaming up the next big thing.
Today I’m writing about a post I just re-read called “Innovation Insanity” produced by the excellent team at trendwatching.com. Here is how they describe the call to action: “the amount of talent, of creativity, of innovations, is staggering…Invent, improve, copy… or perish.”







