10 things marketers should STOP doing

Many revolutions took place over the last years, leading to new attitudes by consumers (more proactive, sophisticated, and powerful), the fastest emergence ever of a new media (social media), and resulting to major shifts across all consumer industries. It’s no wonder that so many marketers are still left with the old reflexes. Very few have figured out how to really take advantages of those revolutions, and I won’t pretend I have.

But there is something that looks fairly simple to do, away from the great buzz around ‘social media strategy’ or our framework of ‘end to end engagement’: things that marketers should really STOP doing.  It’s very simple, there is no need to hire a guru or go out in a desert for a Web 2.0 seminar: please marketing people, just stop. Those are behaviors of the past. Remember, it only takes one smart consumer to share it with quite a lot of people, and the abundance of choice in today’s over saturated world will not save you. Simply stop.

I just thought I would compile a list of 10, but I guess the list could be 100. Think about it like a manifesto to the attention of marketers. Hope some of them will read it.

Disguised price increases

It is too easy to reduce the volume of an item and leave the price unchanged. Or worse, have an actually higher price  per kilo/liter for high volume ‘super-saver’ packaging. Yes, we see many of those even today – cereals brands are best at that, but it’s all over the place. Both are wrong. Loyal consumers will notice, and the others…well, they don’t care buying your product anyway so will even care less. The loyal will feel trapped. Indeed, there will be some revenue uplift short term but it won’t last. Stop it.

Advertising for a product not available yet

As we often put, innovations will need to convince pioneers and early adopters, first, which account for 30% of the population. They are critical since everyone else will only adopt a product after they have seen those people use it, and because those groups are more vocal, both face to face and on the web, and more proactive than the others.  Those people are looking out for ads about new products. If they decided, full of excitement, to go and try one of your novelties and don’t find it in the shops, they’ll be disappointed or even upset. And most of them won’t go a second time. Yes, it’s not always easy to get extra shelf space from retailers, and you can’t align them all from the beginning. But then put in your media where to find that great new product. The first retailers to follow you will appreciate it, and the others will notice. And early adopters ? They’ll be happy.

No info on products no longer available

Same story at the other end of the spectrum – retiring products. Every day, products disappear from the shelves. RIP. They did not make their targets or the strategy changed, or the retailers’ buyer  did not like the sales guy’s after shave. Whatever. Most of the times they go unnoticed as they did not make much sales in the first place. However, most of those got some (or many) regular buyers. Next time they won’t find the products, they’ll think first it is an ‘out of shelf’ problem and go back, only to realize long after it has been discontinued. They’ll be pissed off (who wouldnt’ be?). Isn’t it that difficult to put a small information sheet in the shop that says something like ‘Sorry, this product won’t be found here anymore…but look at this great other one.’ ?

Boring ads

As they saying goes: ‘An ad (or ad break) is a piece of event made to interrupt someone doing something else’. By default, consider it as not welcome.  In addition, since 2.5% of consumers are accounting for 80% of a typical product volume (study by Catalina marketing in the US), your mass media ad is simply on the wrong target probably 97.5% of the time, or slightly better if you avoid the truly mass hours. Those are two reasons to do everything you can NOT to make them boring, dull, or plain stupid. If you find it match one of those attributes, drop it. If you are too in love with your products to even notice, ask your mother (or test is with your target group). You’ll save money and everyone else some time and patience.

Overinvasive ads

Well, you see what I mean. You browse through a site, trying to read an article, and something comes on top of it. Or it is flashing so much you can’t really focus on reading.  What’s the point ? Catch the attention, ok. So, you got a very strong attention on the red cross ‘close’ button, what is really that you were trying to sell ?

Overpromising ads

Branding is about creating and sustaining the product’s promise. To fullfil something. But in today’s saturated world, it is easy to overpromise in order to attract eyeballs. The promise doesn’t have to be explicitly wrong or oversold – most of the time it is implicitely so. We have seen it recently with a very nice campaign asking people to become ‘official chocolate taster’. There was not much else on the ad, so everyone started daydreaming. Well, the implicit promise was off course to get samples of free chocolate. Off course, not. You could fill in an online feedback form about the chocolate you had bought in the shop. Fullstop, at least apparently. People were disappointed.  It’s not that difficult to avoid overpromise, as it is a sure way to create disappointement. Just ask your mother how she interprets your ad (or once more, test it first with your target group).

No reply to customer feedback

And you thought that customer service was about helping customers. Some of them, how dare, use it to give you feedback on you products and services.  Yes, they do. And yes, most customer service departments, puzzled with so weird messages (feedback?), don’t know how to react to it  – at least in Europe. So they don’t reply. Yes, it’s like putting your head in the sand, but those guys are under much pressure to answer calls, not to process ‘interesting thoughts’.  Here is the spin. The customers that take the time to give feedback are probably those lead users (early adopters, pionneers, influencers) that are most critical to you. Will they really welcome your silence ?  It’s a pity, as usually a ‘Thanks for your suggestion’ is sufficient.  Those people are aware that not every feedback can be implemented, they just want to feel listened to, some sort of basic human need. So, yes, customer service is as well about marketing. Ignore it at you own risk.

52 incredible deals per year, or more

So many great deals going on all the time, it is hard to keep up. Some e-commerce specialists (especially photo printing sites) are doing so much to capture eyeballs on their newsletter, their imagination is admirable. Yes, newsletters’ click rate are falling, but is it a reason to keep raising the stakes with the ‘absolutely amazing deal’, ‘Alex, you won’t believe it’, or  ‘fantastic party it’s like we are PAYING YOU to take our stuff’, every single week ?  If there are fantastic deals every week, it means: there are no deals. So, just stop it.

“Personalized” marketing

But some e-commerce sites got more sophisticated. They do ‘personalization’. They will send you a personalized email based on your purchase history (or even better, like Amazon, your browsing history). Fantastic. I feel so special, now. Then, why, just after I bought my laptop from a very famous direct manufacturer, I kept receiving week after week emails around their next great laptop on offer. Isn’t the time straight after I bought my laptop the period when I am the least likely to buy another one ?  What about accessories, printers, scanners, you name it  ? That could have captured my attention. I know the IT department is so proud about this email marketing software they bought, but that does not mean they should control it entirely. Take it back, and make it relevant for me.

Make me feel I am captive

Actually, I am a bit unfair. 6 months after I bought that laptop from Dell (oops, I put the name), I had to buy another one. I was not loyal, sorry Dell, and went for a top brand name in electronic consumer goods. Great Sony laptop (oops one more), I have no regrets. Since it was for professional usage, I thought about buying a second electrical cable: one for home, one for work, so natural.  I went to the Sony shop.  I got a big ‘ouch’ feeling when the sales rep gave me the price: EUR 150. EUR 150 for some electrical cable and a power converter, that probably costs EUR 5 or 10, ok maybe 20 ? No, they must be kidding. Off course, there are no standards in this. I felt really captive. Yes, I know it’s the old recipe, from printer supplies to razor blades: make the main thing ultra price competitive and sell the accessories at a super premium. But there are limits. I will accommodate with one cable, thank you. If you make your customers feel captive, what will they do ? What every prisoner does: look for an exit.  That’s not the direction you want them to look to, right ? Keep it reasonable.

Those were the 10, from my point of view. But I am sure there are many more. So, what would you add?

PS: if you liked that article, please share it (I guess it could reach some more marketers…)

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2 Responses to 10 things marketers should STOP doing

  1. …and in Spain… TV advert breaks that last for 25 minutes and you have forgotten what is happening in the film by the time it comes back on.

  2. Many social places has adopted the no smoking rule which makes life hard for smokers

    Youre so cool! I dont suppose Ive read something like this before. So nice to seek out any individual with some original ideas on this subject. realy thank you for starting this up. this website is something that’s wanted on the internet, someone with a little originality. useful job for bringing one thing new to the internet!

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