We need to go back to the basics to start this series. Marketing Fundamentals - What we used to do is NOT the same as the present.
Here’s a highly recommended book
with some basic highlights from it below:
The Old Rules of Marketing and PR:
- Marketing simply meant advertising
- Advertising needed to appeal to the masses
- Advertising relied on interrupting people to get them to
pay attention to a message
- Advertising was one-way
o
Company-to-consumer
- Advertising was exclusively about selling products
- Creativity was deemed the most important component of
advertising.
- It was more important for the ad agency to win advertising
awards than for the client to win new customers.
- Advertising and PR were separate disciplines run by
different people with separate goals, strategies, and measurement
criteria.
- Advertising was based on campaigns that had limited life.
- The only way to get ink was through the media
- Companies communicated to journalists via press releases
- Nobody saw the actual press release except a handful of
reporters and editors
- Companies had to have significant news before they were
allowed to write a press release
- Jargon was okay because journalists all understood it.
- You weren’t supposed to send a press release unless it
included quotes from third parties, such as customers, analysts, and
experts.
- The only way buyers would learn about the press release’s
content was if the media wrote a story about it.
- The only way to measure the effectiveness of press releases
was through “clip book,” which noted each time the media deigned to pick
up a company’s release.
- PR and marketing were separate disciplines run by different
people with separate goals, strategies, and measurement techniques.
And now here are the NEW Rules of Marketing and PR:
- Marketing is more than just advertising
- PR is for more than just a mainstream media audience
- You are what you publish
- People want authenticity, not spin
- People want participation, not propaganda
- Instead of causing one-way interruption, marketing is about delivering content at just the precise moment your audience needs it.
- Marketers must shift their thinking from mainstream marketing to the masses to a strategy of reaching vast numbers of underserved audiences via the Web.
- PR is not about your boss seeing your company on TV. It’s about your buyers seeing your company on the Web.
- Marketing is not about your agency winning awards. It’s about your organization winning business.
- The Internet has made public relations public again, after years of almost exclusive focus on media.
- Companies must drive people into the purchasing process with great online content.
- Blogs, podcasts, e-books, news releases, and other forms of online content let organizations communicate directly with buyers in a form they appreciate.
- On the Web, the lines between marketing and PR have blurred.
So reflect on these changes and in our next post we’ll start
the journey of how to start thinking about these changes and how to implement
them into your social media efforts.

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