Go-To-Market Shenanigans (#003)
Thanks for tuning in; if youâre catching us on Linkedin and want this newsletter to tastefully bombard your inbox, please subscribe below. I will offer future goodies & nicknacks to our loyal email subscribers as life continues its blessings. đÂ
PS – Readers are beginning to DM me to review commercials, discuss specific topics, answer questions, etc⌠I welcome this wholeheartedly. Please comment on anything you find thought-provoking; I look forward to having a conversation!
Today, we are going to discuss the following:
Marketing đł: Why Marketing Is Selfish. (But it doesnât have to be!)
Advertising đĽ: Our favorite ad from the Super Bowl. (*hint: it didnât even air!)
Product âď¸: Itâs so hard to make shoes different. (But these are just built differently, literally.)
Health & Wellness đŞ: Iâm Becoming Obsessed With Laird Hamilton Inspired Fitness Things. (This is going to be a rabbit holeâŚ)
Links For The Week đ: This app changed my life. (My GPA couldâve used this.)
Tunes đś: Flow State Enhancing Track. (Give it a go for your following flow)
Wisdom đ: âMeglio Soli che male accompagnati.â (Some wise words to live by.)
Marketing đ
Why Is Marketing So Selfish?
First off, this giph is hilarious.
Now that weâve taken a second to appreciate the humor of the internet letâs jump into this weekâs topic, SELFLESS MARKETING.
This will be a topic I go rather deep on for the foreseeable future; why, you ask? Marketing is supposed to be for the people, to give them what they want, feel something theyâve been longing for, educate, entertain, and provide a desired escape from modern-day reality where we can live to be the best version of ourselves in our mind.
So whatâs the primary issue? To cut straight to the point, the majority of brands are selfish.
In college, we always talked about âproviding value.â A buzzword quickly followed by âalgorithmâ and âROAS,â which were often used out of context but buzzed the word hard enough to encompass a confident head nod from a few slightly engaged classmates hiding behind their laptops from across the room. I digress⌠that statement provided no value; see what I did there?
Although I didnât provide any value with the paragraph above, I told a story you could hopefully follow along with and visualize to some degree. Imagine if I offered some value while telling a story; thatâd be pretty engaging, wouldnât it? Well, if youâre still here, Iâm hopefully about to take this whole value-backed escapade thing for a freaking ride.
Think about going on a date with a significant someone you are interested in. Theyâre way out of your league, but theyâve got something youâre willing to shoot your shot at: looks & a personality. Did I mention this special someone is way out of your league? So you take them on a date, ask them a few questions, then BOOM! The greatest thing that could ever happen happens. That significant someone starts talking about THEIR favorite movie series of all time, The Batman Trilogy, obviously, which is also YOUR favorite trilogy of all time. Congratulations, you have found common ground. Your likelihood of scoring a second date has just become a reality.
So imagine what would happen if you went on this date and never asked this person questions. Would you have gotten anywhere if you werenât the slightest bit vulnerable and shared some interests? Would you have found common ground if you hadnât asked the right questions or, more importantly, listened to what that special someone had to say? Probably not.
Whatâs interesting about modern-day marketing tactics is we think itâs valuable to talk about ourselves, our products, and our brand without anybody asking⌠itâs selfish.
So what if we flipped the script? What if we made it a point to understand how our product or service changes people’s lives? Have we sought to understand customer perspectives/interests? Actively search for common ground amongst our buyers so we can relate with one another? Teach skills that make our product experience better? Wow, that was a lot of thought in one paragraph đ .
In simple terms, weâd have a strategy. Now, humor me one step further: what if this strategy was delivered as a story?
Marketing is a conversation, and the future of marketing is interactive. Consumers want to be marketed âwithâ not âto.â
Focus your marketing efforts on creating an interactive experience. This experience can be digital, face-to-face, or in a retail store; I mean, it can be a bloody chatbot or a survey for all I care. Just do something to add a personal touchpoint and make it a priority to learn about your customers. While youâre at it, make this experience as entertaining as possible. If you turn it into a story and position sponsors, customers, and other forms of inspiration as your focal point, congratulations, youâve started telling a brand story.
And the funny thing about a brand story is it never ends. The best brands have a consistent theme, provide a reliable level of value from a utility and an emotional standpoint, and tell the same story for generations.
So, please stop saying posting a product hype reel on social media is a strategy. Yes, Iâm calling out that marketing expert telling you you will fail if you donât adopt âxâ. We get it: your brand is sick, but what the customer is really thinking is, âWhatâs in it for me?â if they even made it past 8 seconds, which, by the way, is the average attention span. And I think that stat is generous.
In the effort to leave everything on a high note because lifeâs too short for sorrow, everybody has a story. Telling a story is hard, but donât be afraid to try new things. Failing at a strategy is an investment, an investment in learning that that strategy doesnât work. Some great questions to ask yourself are:
What are my customers going to be curious about after this campaign?
What are my customers going to learn after this campaign?
How are my customers going to take action on this campaign?
How do I leave my customers wanting more? (cliffhanger)
So this leads me to my next tangent, âHow do we market âwithâ not âtoâ consumers?â
But youâll have to subscribe and tune in next week for that. đ
Advertising đ°
Liquid Death Always Breaks The Rules, And Quite Frankly, I Love It.
Super Bowl Sunday is infamous for Football, Advertisements, and, at this rate, Taylor Swift, who is trending harder on social media than any NFL account keyword. With the new pop star skyrocketing viewership by a whopping 20%, a 7-million-dollar 30-second ad spot was too good to be true for the big ad players in the market.
That goes for everyone besides Liquid Death, who released a commercial claiming to get other brands more views than a Super Bowl commercial by purchasing ad space on their cases of water.
Easily summed up by the campaignâs headline: âThis year, weâre not buying an ad in Sundayâs Big Game. Weâre selling one thatâs even bigger.âÂ
Hereâs why Iâm a massive fan of this move:
Liquid Death is no stranger to the spotlight and knows its audience lives for absurdity. This speaks straight to them.
The future of marketing is interactive campaigns. This is about as interactive as it gets.
This campaign is going to fund itself.
I made a video breaking down this brand play here to see how you can apply a campaign like this to your lifestyle brand.
In summary, the future of marketing is integration. A campaign that airs once is only scratching the surface. Strategize on how you can create a customer journey through your campaign & capitalize on the social media & PR game we have standing before us.
We saw great examples of digital marketing integration with Verizon, CerAve Skincare, and Doordash.
Product âď¸
I Hope Merrel Patented This Design.
Instagram post by @_archive89
The video thumbnail here doesnât give this product value or justice.
Iâm not a shoehead; I rock vans and, quite frankly, try to wear shoes as little as possible. That said, Iâm a sucker for functional design, and this shoe tech is just flat-out cool.
I immediately pictured myself packing these shoes for a road trip. If Iâm away from a gym, I typically tie running shoes to the outside of his backpack and let them swing free. If the airline asks, theyâre technically attached to my bag, right?
I get it; these arenât running shoesâŚ, but if thereâs any room to protect this product with a design and utility patent, the opportunities are limitless with this product offering.
Good on you if youâre the guy or girl who created this.
Health & Wellness đŞ
Underwater Fitness Is Becoming An Obsession & I Havenât Done It Yet.
Instagram post by @deependfitness
This form of exercising combines two of my favorite things:
1.) Water
2.) & Not Sitting Still
I’m just throwing it out there: If anyone in upstate South Carolina has access to a deep-end pool and wants to get funky with fitness, hit me up.
I notably volunteer Sean Russel Herman and the Musou Movement team to join.
Consider this my best shot at manifesting underwater weight training. Whereâs Laird Hamilton when we need him!?
Links For The Week đ
This Chrome Extension Changed My Life.
Iâm not typically one to hard plug a software or service, but the Speechify app and Google Chrome extension changed my life.
As someone who has ADHD and was misdiagnosed as dyslexic as a kid, I finally feel like I can read. I have always learned visually and have grown as an auditory learner. Now, I can combine all three to my workflow, which has significantly increased my ability to retain information.
By far, one of my favorite features is the dyslexic font. I had no idea a font type leveraged so much utility.
Anyway, if you are a slow reader, I couldnât recommend this app more.
Tunes đś
Hereâs our go-to track for the week.
If youâre working out, practicing breathwork, on a bike ride, running, in deep thought, or meditating, this song helps me find a flow state.
If I had to summarize the track in two words:
Relaxed Intensity.
Wisdom đ
Choose Your Friends Wisely.
Instagram post by @growingupitalian
You are a sum of the five people you surround yourself with.
If you donât have five good people to surround yourself with, donât surround yourself with anybody.
Remember, you are also a product of what you consume.
Choose wisely.