Great insight, via Armano’s blog. The above video is a presentation given by the staff of an experience design consultancy called Adaptive Path to employees at Google. The presentation highlights the key points that are made in the book entitled, "Subject To Change".
Google obviously invests heavily in its brand. Its home page may have nothing but a search box and links to Google’s services — which means the company is forgoing tens of millions of dollars in advertising — but it’s doing something more important: putting its customers first. Untargeted ads, even simple text links, goes the rationale, would put too steep a cost on its users.
This decision is "revolutionary," wrote Havas Media Lab director and London economist Umair Haque on Harvard Business Online in February. "By choosing to invest in consumers over advertising, Google is a living example of a deeper truth: The future of communications as advantage lies in talking less and listening more."
The biggest challenge that today’s marketers face is understanding HOW to overcome the obstacles that get in the way from creating user/customer/consumer experiences that people want to make part of their everyday lives. Everything has changed. Years ago, Starbucks was celebrated as a brand that understood this—today, it’s customers are less loyal and it’s stock price is reflecting this. Blockbuster promised to transform our living rooms into home theatres—today, media consumption including movies is fragmented. Marketers today are faced with a choice. As Seth Godin points out, we can choose to become liars—spinning fabrications around inferior products and services who depend on traditional marketing to make themselves appear more appealing. Or we can be honest, and figure out how to actually make the product, service, and brand better—so marketing initiatives will become a natural extension of the experience a customer has with that brand.
Is this the job of the company, the consultant, the agency, the brand? If you want to thrive in an age where basically we’re all spoiled and demanding—then the reality is, it’s all of our jobs. So watch the video and think about which side you choose to be on.
Comments Closed
Google+
My Tweets
Recent Comments
- Headstream – the social brand agency » Social Brands 100 in Review on Top 100 Social Brands–How we came 15th!
- Steve Rubel at 2011 talking about time and attention. via The Web Pitch on Time and attention are the next big fight in social
- Social Media Analytics–A Book Review | Pulplit Magazine on Social Media Analytics–A Book Review
- Binärwelt vom 7.10.2008 | FluxFM – Die Alternative im Radio. on Steve Ballmer’s Keynote in London
- Social Brands 100 are go | Headstream Consulting on Top 100 Social Brands–How we came 15th!
Tags
Apple BBC Best Practices Blogs Blue Monster Book Review Books Carsonified Case Study Cloud Conferences Cool Stuff Facebook Forrester Gartner Gifted Amateurs Google Hugh Macleod Interviews Laptops Microsoft Nick Carr Online Ads Opinion PDC Presentations Reports Seth Godin Small Business Social Media Social Media. Reports Social Networks Social Objects Startup Statistics Steve Clayton Talks TED Tips & Tricks Twitter Video Videos Web 2.0 Web 2.0 Expo WorkshopArchives
Categories
- Apple (3)
- Best Practices (11)
- Blogs (20)
- Book Review (6)
- Books (13)
- Case Study (4)
- China (1)
- Cloud (7)
- Conferences (25)
- Cool Stuff (24)
- Facebook (16)
- Forrester (3)
- Gartner (1)
- Google (5)
- Hugh Macleod (2)
- Interviews (14)
- LeWeb (1)
- Microsoft (20)
- Nielson (1)
- Opinion (39)
- Personal Brand (1)
- Podcast (1)
- Quotes (1)
- Reports (6)
- Seth Godin (2)
- Social Media (35)
- Social Networks (8)
- Startup (1)
- Statistics (3)
- TED (3)
- Twitter (22)
- Videos (65)
- Web 2.0 (88)
- WordPress (1)





