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How Marketing Works For You And Your Clients

You know the situation: You’re sitting on the couch, watching television, when on comes a really bad commercial for some product you wouldn’t dream of using. This is a terrible commercial – the acting is bad, the jokes fall flat, and you couldn’t imagine how the company that makes the product didn’t blacklist the advertising firm responsible for it.

But, hey, you remembered that product, didn’t you? Yeah, you did, Marketing works pretty well, for the most part.

What is marketing?

Works of art like the Mona Lisa, or works of literature like The Great Gatsby don’t really need anyone to sing their praises – they have so much name recognition that they market themselves. But not everything in the world is a great work of art or literature. Thus, we have marketing.

Marketing is – to put it mildly – every actual and potential interaction a company ever has with the public. It doesn’t matter whether this is a broad postering campaign, a new website, or the tone in a receptionist’s voice when he or she answers the phone – it’s all marketing, and works to cement your company’s personality in the minds of your potential customers.

So, how does it work?

Marketing works in steps. There’s no “marketing works best here” area of the brain, so there’s no single, simple way to target people in a way that’ll get them to buy your product, visit your store, or read your pamphlet. That’s why the best ad campaigns diversify – when you want to cover a lot of bases, you’ve got to hit a lot of runs.

What’s more, the best marketing works not by simply saying, “Hey! Here I am and I’m the best!” The best marketing works by building relationships and establishing trust. This means generating a surfeit of leads, nurturing friendships with potential prospects, asking for referrals from satisfied customers, and conducting your business in an upbeat and honorable way.

Marketing works by being memorable

OK, so maybe the commercial we mentioned in the beginning of this piece wasn’t the best example of “building relationships” or “establishing trust.” Certainly, a headache-remedy commercial that implores you repeatedly to “APPLY DIRECTLY TO FOREHEAD!!!” is doing very little to earn your trust. But the truth is that both methods work toward the same ends.

The reason the annoying headache-remedy ad works is because it combines repetition with irritation – two things that work really well in concert, as anyone who’s ever had “Who Let The Dogs Out?” stuck in his head can attest. It fulfills one of the primary goals of good marketing, which is to firmly lodge your name in the customer’s head.

Of course, that’s only the first half; marketing works only if the follow-up is just as memorable as the attack – and in a positive way. If everyone who bought the headache remedy advertised in the annoying commercial got a blistering rash on his forehead, then the marketing plan hasn’t worked. Part of marketing is providing high quality. If you market a cow pie as the best roast beef sandwich in the world, you won’t have to sell many before people figure out that you’re not selling the part of the cow they’re interested in eating.

There’s no easy answer

Marketing works through a complicated combination of learned experience and trial-and-error. It works when you understand your audience as much as anyone can understand anything, and when you can spot both their needs and wants from a mile away. It works when you know what your client is going to need before she does. And it works when you consistently and creatively turn out a quality product or service.

There’s no easy answer, and there’s no magic bullet. Marketing works by hard work alone.

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