March 1, 2007

Biznology Blog by Mike Moran

« Valuing Your Customers | Main | Is Search Marketing Too Much Work for Publishers? »



Is Your Marketing a Conversation?

I've spoken before about how the Internet turns marketing into a conversation. Lots of people have. But it's not a new idea. In fact, I was lucky enough to work with one of the people that figured it out first, although I frankly didn't grasp the significance of what he was saying at the time.

Back in the mid-90s, I worked with Chris Locke, later one of the authors of the seminal book, The Cluetrain Manifesto. All Chris could talk about back then was how the Internet enabled communities to form around almost any subject—communities that would become more powerful than the hackneyed marketing messages that pervaded our public discourse. I could see his logic, but I wasn’t smart enough to see what we should be doing about it at the time.

Later, Chris and his co-authors made “Markets are conversations” the first point of their 95-point manifesto. So why are we still talking about it now? Because it is finally happening.

The Cluetrain folks were visionaries. Back then, this conversational markets phenomenon affected only a few industries. Today, average people are participating in communities in many markets. Soon, rating a product or commenting on a blog will be as common as e-mail. And many more methods of customer participation will arise too.

Chris was absolutely right, of course. He warned you this was coming years ago. Luckily, you still have a chance to do something about it before the vision is totally realized.

Posted by MikeMoran at March 1, 2007 10:49 AM

Comments

It's been a while since you posted this but I'm glad you did. I have been doing research on this whole "conversation" idea and communicating it to my employees and customers. I want my company to be know for giving our clients the tools to create and extend the conversation not do it for them. This will be a big topic at our upcoming staff meeting.

Posted by: Patrick at July 28, 2007 12:06 PM

Post a comment




Remember Me?

Human detector: Please enter the letter "v" in the field below to help fight automated spam comments:

(you may use HTML tags for style)