Skip to main content
Category

Miscellaneous

Laughter and enjoyment encouraged in our library!

Meme gallery

Think of a library and inevitably you conjure up images of a quiet, stuffy environment where public expressions of laughter, affection, anger or even shock are frowned on.

Add to this, the often down-beat demeanour of the librarian and dusty buildings and it’s not surprising the cool kids don’t hang there!

That’s about to change with the launch of a new library of tech marketing memes; #WhenTheAgency. Created and built by The Rubicon Agency, #WhenTheAgency is a collection of witty observations through the eyes of the tech marketing agency.

The series is an irreverent take on some of the marketing topics and challenges of the day – including sales and marketing mis-alignment, inter-team friction, over-automation, off-balance data and insight, budget planing (yes, planing not planning), lack of ownership, and many more.

The collection of memes has been conceived and created to appeal to the dark, ironic humour of the practicing marketer – particularly those working in the tech and telecoms space.

Sales Enablement Day Meme
Low Quality Content Meme
Who are we targeting meme
Recycled Content Meme
Too many reviewers meme
Customer Journey Meme

All memes are available to drag and drop into presentations or social posts. Visitors are encouraged to share and create knowing smiles amongst your colleagues and peers.

The full library of memes for #WhenTheAgency is available here. Enjoy!

Fast Marketing fails: bland ingredients

Fast Marketing fails 3

Fast marketing happens when marketers are institutionally influenced to choose quantity over quality, and convenience over content.

When engagement assets, landing pages, outreach or conversations are simply quickfried with little culinary skill, the results can leave customers feeling hungry or, worse still, with a bad aftertaste.

Like fast food, fast marketing can suffer from bland, artificial ingredients.

Fast food and fast marketing may be predicated on convenience but both come with compromise.

One significant compromise is typically a lack of quality ingredients in content that lacks distinctive flavours. The compromise is compounded when fast marketing means offering a limited menu of formulaic food for thought – with little choice other than ‘supersizing’ – or in other words, quantity over quality.

The Tech sector can be particularly prone to the ‘McMessaging’ approach. With access to the content equivalent of a beef herd the size of Texas, it can be very tempting to simply throw it into the marketing mincer and churn out a patty of generic messages with a side order of undifferentiated propositions.

Fresh, carefully selected ingredients are key to whetting an audience appetite for tech marketing content. Rather than re-heat a stale white paper or de-frost content that can be found in any competitor’s digital deep freezer, it pays to source and prepare your own content ingredients for a menu that offers more distinctive flavouring and ultimately a more satisfying meal to an audience that has an appetite for quality over convenience.

Fast Marketing fails:
– The all-you-can-eat buffet
– The cold take-away
– Bland ingredients

To make your marketing more enduring and sustainable, contact The Rubicon Agency for your personalised workshop.

This article compliments ‘McMarketing in the tech sector – Does fast marketing just create indigestion?’

Fast Marketing fails: the cold take-away

Fast Marketing fails 2

Fast marketing happens when marketers are institutionally influenced to choose quantity over quality, and convenience over content.

This article compliments ‘McMarketing in the tech sector – Does fast marketing just create indigestion?’

When engagement assets, landing pages, outreach or conversations are simply quickfried with little culinary skill, the results can leave customers feeling hungry or, worse still, with a bad aftertaste.

Like fast food, fast marketing can run the risk of being disposable.

Fast food and fast marketing may be a quick, convenient solution but if either is served cold then they’re likely to be quickly discarded.

Rather than satisfy a hunger for information; without a clear and relevant call-to-action or a next-step, the fast marketing meal turns into a cold offering. When that happens, customer audiences are inclined to look for the nearest waste bin.

The cold take-away is a common fail in sales enablement assets. So, why do thought leadership, business case, use case and other assets typically offer a next-step to an audience when sales enablement assets are often left without any clear call-to-action?

The answer lies in planning. Rather than expect sales to keep the heat under prospects by providing the critical next-step, it makes more sense to give it to them on a plate. Building the offer of an integrated presentation, webinar, white paper, or good old-fashioned conversation into the menu not only keeps your audience at the table but also satisfies their appetite for information without the indigestion.

Fast marketing fails:

– The all-you-can-eat buffet
– The cold take-away
– Bland ingredients

To make your marketing more enduring and sustainable, contact The Rubicon Agency for your personalised workshop.

Fast Marketing fails: the all-you-can-eat buffet

Fast Marketing fails 1

Fast marketing happens when marketers are institutionally influenced to choose quantity over quality, and convenience over content.

When engagement assets, landing pages, outreach or conversations are simply quickfried with little culinary skill, the results can leave customers feeling hungry or, worse still, with a bad aftertaste.

Like fast food, fast marketing can be served up in a number of ways.

Take the all-you-can-eat buffet for example. With everything you might like to taste, there’s no menu required. You can fill your plate to the brim, tuck in, and go back for more as often as you like. Sounds good, doesn’t it?

But how satisfying can a meal be when it’s a confusion of cuisine? With so much on offer, do you grab a bit of everything but ultimately leave most of it untouched.

The all-you-can-eat content buffet is the result of marketers forgetting that buyers have developed particular tastes for the content that they are prepared to digest. Yesterday’s buyer may have been fed the equivalent of meat and potatoes, with a menu restricted tech features rather than business benefits, but today’s buyer is far more discerning.

The fast marketing buffet fails because it offers too much, with copious amounts of unstructured content simply being poured into multiple paid, owned and earned content channels and spread across digital marketing platforms. And if too many ingredients are simply too bland; stale or reheated, then covering them with a thick gravy of ‘brand character’ doesn’t make the buffet any more palatable.

Ultimately, the ‘feast’ offered by the fast marketing buffet can quickly turn to famine as it leaves dining customers feeling hungry for content that not only caters to their specific tastes but also has enough nutrition to feed a healthy decision-making process.

Fast Marketing fails:

– The all-you-can-eat buffet
– The cold take-away
– Bland ingredients

To make your marketing more enduring and sustainable, contact The Rubicon Agency for your personalised workshop.

This article compliments ‘McMarketing in the tech sector – Does fast marketing just create indigestion?’

McMarketing in the tech sector

McMarketing in the tech sector blog header

Does fast marketing simply create customer indigestion?

Like fast food, ‘fast marketing’ may appear to satisfy customers across the digital equivalent of a takeaway counter. But, with a limited menu and ingredients that may be lacking nutritional value, does it cater to the needs of marketers more than customers.

Fast marketing happens when marketers are institutionally influenced to choose quantity over quality, and convenience over content. When engagement assets, landing pages, outreach or conversations are simply quickfried with little culinary skill, the results can leave customers feeling hungry or, worse still, with a bad aftertaste.

Across client-side and agency environments, four aspects appear to have contributed to a rise in fast marketing:

Professionalisation of Marketing Operations – introducing rigid, process driven leadership into marketing planning.

DevOps, Pivot and Agile Marketing – encouraging a ‘test/fail/learn/adapt’ approach to most disciplines in marketing.

Marketing from a platform – new build, automation and monitoring tools enable non-marketers to have marketing involvement.

Agency left-braining – agency culture and expertise has been skewed in favour of exploring tech possibilities ahead of – and often in absence of – content and creative considerations.

In an ‘all you can eat’ digital marketing age it would be wrong to imagine that markets and customers are so hungry for content that they’ll consume anything. It’s far better to assume they have the time and discernment to look for something more satisfying. And if you can feed them content that forms a healthy diet, they’ll not only be happy to digest but also keen to come back for more.

Extending the analogy further, imagine catering to an extended decision making group (typical of the tech sector). The CIO wants an appetiser of tempting strategic advantages, a main course that has an aroma of innovation and finally, a selection of tasty testimonials. IT tend to prefer meat and potatoes with a gravy of integration and lifecycle benefits. And the CFO? He or she may want to spend longer comparing menu prices before making a final selection.

Four fast marketing fails that create customer indigestion

McMarketing in the tech sector - Mystery menu

Mystery menu – brand and product marketing fail to describe what’s on offer and why it should whet the customer’s appetite.

McMarketing in the tech sector - Cold Takeaway

Cold takeaway – call-to-action and sales enablement assets lack the intellectual rigour that may be baked into thought leadership, business case, use case, and other assets.

McMarketing in the tech sector - Bland flavours

Bland flavours – marketing serves up undifferentiated messaging that lacks any distinctive flavour.

McMarketing in the tech sector - Confusion cuisine

Confusion cuisine – paid, owned and earned content programmes provide a baffling buffet of themes, arguments and messages.

Fast marketing may be perpetuated by the speed and immediacy of a digital marketing age which continues to mature. Compare this to the introduction of fast food some six or seven decades ago and you realise it may take some time yet before we fully realise the downsides of convenience over quality. In the meantime, let’s not be too pious about the occasional equivalent of a takeaway content kebab or a McMessaging proposition but continue to strive for quality over convenience.

Fast Marketing fails:
– The all-you-can-eat buffet
– The cold take-away
– Bland ingredients

‘For a balanced diet of marketing – and one that’s trusted by leading tech brands such as Cisco, AT&T and Xerox – contact The Rubicon Agency.

Are the geeks now calling the marketing shots?

Geeks calling the marketing shots blog header

Information and insight has been widely recognised as the new oil within organisations, but has this movement towards ‘big data’ led to an evolution in the DNA of the modern marketer?

Historically, marketers hail back to the golden age of advertising, versed in the art of creativity, punchy headlines and establishing product USPs. The stack ‘em high, sell ‘em cheap philosophy of the early 20th Century spilled into the world of marketing as brands competed for market share.

The next wave of marketing evolution saw a more sophisticated approach to the buyer. Who are they? What are their purchasing triggers? What are their challenges and what do they want to see/hear from us? The birth of CRM saw a more consider approach to selling. Buyer journeys and sales funnels were more closely scrutinised. The age of analytics and accountability had well and truly arrived.

Fast forward to current day. Data has become invaluable and marketing is now a highly reactive and informed beast. Marketing communications are user led with interactions happening every few minutes, instead of weeks or months. Automation of marketing operations has meant content is predetermined and triggered by a set of rules. So, who sets these rules? Well marketers do.

But, here’s the rub, has the pendulum of the marketers skill set totally swung from right brain to left brain bias? On first glance, it appears so.

The next generation marketer

How many marketing jobs are now advertised specifying in-depth knowledge of CRM, automation and analytics platforms as an essential skill? How many marketing graduates are now equipped with some degree of coding acumen? The answer to both is the vast majority.

This begs the question, is there still a place for traditional know-how? Are skills such as the identifying the 7P’s, SOSTAC, acquisition and retention strategies, audience profiling and creative nous now redundant? Clearly not, but if left unchecked a decline in these skills can leave marketing campaigns exclusively dependant on data and low on ideas.

Machine learning, AI and Big data can’t be ignored and it would be foolhardy to do so. All provide organisations with unprecedented levels of customer insight that 20 years ago would have been impossible to collect, let alone analyse. This raft of information flooding into the business has, in its own right, cannibalised the role of the marketer. Being able to analyse and action data is a unique skill and one that should be embraced, but here is the million-dollar question. Should organisations be focusing exclusively on employing the new wave of marketing ‘geek’ at the expense of more traditional practitioners?

What’s the trade off?

A purely analytical approach to marketing will ultimately be number driven. The movement through the sales funnel is scoring based, attribution modelling can determine channel, persona and collateral hot beds and data can be mined to give the campaign the greatest chance of success, but does ‘all this science’ come at a cost? Ultimately yes, referring to the left brain, right brain balancing act, analytics informs and drives marketing but it doesn’t create the silver bullets that ultimately convert prospects to customers require a completely different type of marketer.

Yes, the ‘geek’ marketers are here to stay but it would be marketing suicide to give them exclusive power to call the marketing shots while ignoring or even replacing traditional skillsets.

Take a look at our quick guide to discover how content can be more ‘killer’ and less ‘filler’.