Module 4 Roundup
Module 3 Roundup
Module 2 Roundup
Module 1 Roundup
Starting up Squared again!
Last Year I started the Google Squared course, but due to workloads and other reasons I had to put it on hold. Now they’ve allowed me to start again and so i’ll be blogging about my experiences on here!
Tutorspree Blog: How Google is Killing Organic Search
Google won search by providing the best organic results users had ever seen. Ever since then, organic has been fading from the SERPS, losing ground to revenue generating Google products.
13%
That’s the amount of real estate given to true organic results in a search for “auto mechanic" when…
(Source: tutorblog)
Here’s my video intro to the course as well. For your viewing pleasure!
One of my favourite things about tumblr is the rampant use of gifs. Here’s one of me doing my karate dance.
Pre-Squared Reading II
So the last part of the reading was some definitions of marketing and think about how they relate to digital.
Most of them were average/descriptive and not helpful. I figure that the point of giving a bunch was for us to think about it. In order to come up with a good definition, I’ve thrown a few more into the mix and pulled out the ones that were good.
This is the quote from Peter F. Drucker, (The Practice of Management, 1954) that was mentioned:
“Marketing is not only much broader than selling, it is not a specialized activity at all. It encompasses the entire business. It is the whole business seen from the point of view of its final result, that is, from the customer’s point of view. Concern and responsibility for marketing must therefore permeate all areas of the enterprise”
It’s a good place to start, showing the responsibly of a brand/company isn’t just for one department, but it’s meant to be integrated. The other key point is that he outlines customers viewing the whole business and understanding their point of view. This is key because he’s pointing it out in the decade before CSR came to prominence. The distinction between sales is important, and I discovered a quote from a random marketing book which sums this up:
“Selling means moving the products while marketing means obtaining the customer”
Marketing is much more than selling, as if you’re marketing your company right you’re winning repeat customers and brand ambassadors. The other quote that I liked is from Paul Mazur:
“Marketing is the delivery of a standard of living.”
This is brilliant. It reminds me of a Don Draper quote from Madmen:
“Advertising is based on one thing, happiness. And you know what happiness is? Happiness is the smell of a new car. It’s freedom from fear. It’s a billboard on the side of the road that screams reassurance that whatever you are doing is okay. You are okay.”
I think “delivering a standard of living” and (without throwing up), “happiness”, is tapping into what we can really do as marketeers.
Digital Marketing
The advent of the digital age has given brands a multitude of new ways that they can communicate with their customers. Do we treat these avenues as separate?
I believe the answer lies in what Drucker talks about in terms of integration with the business. Most companies are actively engaging with the internet, but it’s only just coming of age and it’s in no way finished.
So should digital marketing be separate? Should it require a different definition? In a future where everything is going to be digital, marketing will include digital by default.
That said, we’re not there yet, so here’s a start at a digital marketing definition:
The process of engaging with your customers through an on-line medium, in order to generate brand awareness and cultivate consumer loyalty.