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Test, iterate, and retest. Testing the variables, and refining a product or service through repeated adjustment cycles is in essence marketing and this is what people get wrong.
I’ve been operating in this space for more than two decades now and whenever I’m asked what precise code will unlock the treasure trove, I humbly reply with: “We’ll need to test it.”
There is no recipe for success to be replicated 1:1 to achieve the same results. Variables differ across businesses, time, ecosystems, economies, etc. Everything is in a constant flow and therefore you’ll need to test what works best for you in that specific time frame.
Yes, there are key ingredients to success that are the foundation aka the main pillars required to attain a certain outcome. Those should be included in the recipe. Apart from that, you’ll encounter a plethora of variables that add a specific flavor and a unique spice to what it is you’re offering.
Indeed, success leaves clues, and there’s a lot of wisdom in adhering to core principles that enable you to mirror processes and fast-track the learning curve.
However, testing will reveal the good and the bad to help you understand where you’re at.
So then, what’s marketing all about?
Here’s the non-academic and non-mainstream approach to marketing:
This gives you a fair insight as to what blueprint my team and I follow when we embark on a new marketing adventure with a client.
Marketing is not your brand, story, tagline, website, or some fancy ad on Facebook.
If we reverse-engineer the concept of marketing we end up with testing.
Big retail companies continuously test the store layout. They even have a department in charge of this task; it’s the category managers. Ecomm shops always test their color palette, the position and size of the search icon, and how related products and bundles are displayed to ensure their marketing enhances and influences customer behavior.
Furthermore, marketing works in tandem with sales. Those who understand the power of this lethal combination rarely think and design campaigns in silos.
So, what’s it going to be? Will you adhere to the mainstream narrative of what marketing is supposed to be, or are you open to new perspectives that embrace the notion of marketing as a gigantic pool of testing?
_____________________________________________________________
Image by Mikael Blomkvist via Pexels
_____________________________________________________________
The post Marketing is a Fancy Word for Test appeared first on StrengthInBusiness.
By Krisz Rokk5
33 ratings
Test, iterate, and retest. Testing the variables, and refining a product or service through repeated adjustment cycles is in essence marketing and this is what people get wrong.
I’ve been operating in this space for more than two decades now and whenever I’m asked what precise code will unlock the treasure trove, I humbly reply with: “We’ll need to test it.”
There is no recipe for success to be replicated 1:1 to achieve the same results. Variables differ across businesses, time, ecosystems, economies, etc. Everything is in a constant flow and therefore you’ll need to test what works best for you in that specific time frame.
Yes, there are key ingredients to success that are the foundation aka the main pillars required to attain a certain outcome. Those should be included in the recipe. Apart from that, you’ll encounter a plethora of variables that add a specific flavor and a unique spice to what it is you’re offering.
Indeed, success leaves clues, and there’s a lot of wisdom in adhering to core principles that enable you to mirror processes and fast-track the learning curve.
However, testing will reveal the good and the bad to help you understand where you’re at.
So then, what’s marketing all about?
Here’s the non-academic and non-mainstream approach to marketing:
This gives you a fair insight as to what blueprint my team and I follow when we embark on a new marketing adventure with a client.
Marketing is not your brand, story, tagline, website, or some fancy ad on Facebook.
If we reverse-engineer the concept of marketing we end up with testing.
Big retail companies continuously test the store layout. They even have a department in charge of this task; it’s the category managers. Ecomm shops always test their color palette, the position and size of the search icon, and how related products and bundles are displayed to ensure their marketing enhances and influences customer behavior.
Furthermore, marketing works in tandem with sales. Those who understand the power of this lethal combination rarely think and design campaigns in silos.
So, what’s it going to be? Will you adhere to the mainstream narrative of what marketing is supposed to be, or are you open to new perspectives that embrace the notion of marketing as a gigantic pool of testing?
_____________________________________________________________
Image by Mikael Blomkvist via Pexels
_____________________________________________________________
The post Marketing is a Fancy Word for Test appeared first on StrengthInBusiness.