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Seth Godin on Effective (and Ineffective) Marketing Tactics for Small Businesses

Seth Godin on Effective (and Ineffective) Marketing Tactics for Small Businesses

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Startup pioneer and marking guru Seth Godin shares his tips for good marketing—and it’s not about social shares.
Bruna Martinuzzi American Express Business Class Freelance Contributor
August 11, 2016

      Are you happy with your marketing strategy? Has it been successful in promoting your company and raising awareness of who you are? Have the effort and expense you've put into it attracted the customers you were hoping to attract? If the answer to any of these questions is no, you might want to listen to Seth Godin.

      Seth Godin may be one of the most influential figures in marketing today. An inductee into the Direct Marketing Hall of Fame, Godin has authored some 19 international bestselling books that have been translated into more than 30 languages, including Linchpin, Permission Marketing, Purple Cow and his latest, What To Do When It's Your Turn. His daily blog is popular worldwide.

      Godin has also launched successful entrepreneurial ventures such as Yoyodyne, one of the world's earliest online marketing companies, which he sold to Yahoo! in 1998 for $30 million, and Squidoo, a platform acquired by HubPages.

      The marketer’s job, then, is to tell a true story, one that resonates, one that matters to people, and to repeat it often enough that it creates value. —Seth Godin, author, What To Do When It's Your Turn

      I spoke with Godin about marketing for small-business owners and found out why old-school marketing tactics may no longer work, what the Pavlov Effect has to do with marketing and what it really takes to be an effective marketer today.

      What are some of the key changes in the current state of marketing that a small-business owner should be aware of?

      If you own a small business, you’ve made a commitment of time and money that few ever do. It’s tempting, but a near-fatal error, to believe that the world you built your business in is going to stay stable.

      Not only is the way we produce things changing, but the way that messages spread has shifted forever. Facebook and YouTube are not effective ways to market average goods to average people. Garnering likes, counting Twitter followers, playing endless social media games is a distraction.

      Your market demands two things:

      1. Remarkable goods and services. Stories worth sharing. Things worth talking about. Something they would miss if you were gone. Because they have options, more than ever before.

      2. That you earn permission to talk to them. No spam, but the privilege of delivering anticipated, personal and relevant messages.

      You say the network effect is essential to marketing today, that you must be "making a product or service that works better if my friends and colleagues are also using it." Can you elaborate on this?

      Here are things that work better when others use them, too: Airbnb, Facebook, Uber, Nike shoes, Starbucks, etc.

      The insight is to start designing products and services that people like to talk about, because talking about them benefits them.

      In your Skillshare course, The Modern Marketing Workshop, you provide more than 60 concepts or big ideas to help people work on developing their marketing strategy. One of these is the idea of the Pavlov Effect. Can you explain the importance of the Pavlov Effect in marketing?

      A brand is nothing but a story. You can’t eat a brand or put money in a brand or drive a brand. But the story the brand tells can remind you of something. It can create an association, just as the bell did for Pavlov’s dogs.

      The marketer’s job, then, is to tell a true story, one that resonates, one that matters to people, and to repeat it often enough that it creates value.

      sethgodin_bruna_open_embed

      Seth Godin suggests small-business owners should be less like "shopkeepers" and more like "artists."

      You talk about the importance of emotions in marketing, and primarily two emotions: fear and delight. This is probably one of the most challenging concepts to put into practice. Can you give an example of how a small-business owner can use these emotions in marketing?

      Stop being a shopkeeper! We have plenty of shops. We need artists.

      In your book We Are All Weird, you advise companies not to pursue the mass market but to focus their marketing efforts on the "weird" buyers, the niche markets. Are there any potential pitfalls for a small business in pursuing this marketing strategy?

      The biggest pitfall is that you will be on the hook, that choosing to focus on a niche means you can no longer treat the market as an indifferent mass of mass.

      There seems to be a consensus that cold calling is an old-school marketing idea. Should a small-business owner abandon this practice altogether? How about email marketing?

      You mean spam? Should small-business people spam by phone or by email?

      Next question!

      What are the biggest challenges marketers face today, and what can they do to address them?

      I think the biggest challenge is to stop acting like a marketer and start acting like a human.

      Read more articles about marketing.

      A version of this article was originally published on August 7, 2015.

      Photos: Brian Bloom; Cuidad de Ideas
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      Published: August 12, 2016


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