Isn't micromarketing just marketing but smaller and targeting fewer people? Short answer no...


and let me just preface by saying, there is so much to say on this topic that I feel like a general going into battle, you're not all going to make it....So in the spirit of writing upside down for the web I put a table together with some preliminary ideas on how micromarketing is distinct from marketing.


































Activity
Marketing
Micromarketing
Overarching metaphor Hunting, targeting (shotgun/rifle) Farming, Cultivating, Growing
Budget big bang spending after a tonne of planning, big spike and steady drop off until the next big bang. Media and content lose value over time ready for the next big bang Small budget, media and content get more valuable over time through continued updates and customer participation
Finding Customers Finding/Identifying targeting demographics Customers identify themselves, part of a 'network' of prospects and customers
Talking to Customers Tightly controlled messages broadcast 1 way to mass of people who may or may not be prospects or customers. Only authorized agents create and disperse messages from ad companies to PR agencies. Messages, ideas, and news spread through network of employees, customers & prospects
Listening to Customers Fragmented, filtered through numerous channels, for various purposes. Focus groups, customer research, customer service. The result, a fragmented view of the customer and their relationship with your products and services Built into the process of talking to customers, the advantage of a dialogue, listening is built into the communication medium
Delivering Value One way value chain through the company - outputs value for cash A value network that co-creates value with the customers that want to contribute

Marketing - Sacred Cow or Not


Marketing is a young discipline, you can argue that marketing has been around as long as trade, but modern marketing is a result of the ability to mass produce ie. the ability for production capabilities to outstrip basic demand. It was only after the industrial revolution that marketing became a necessity and replaced accounting as the discipline to lead business. In fact modern advertising came about after world war II as businesses tried to combat societies "post war frugality", and the fact that companies were trying to do that at the same time as television was becoming a dominant medium was how modern advertising was born. What i'm trying to say is that marketing and advertising is a very young discipline and should not be mistaken for some kind of 'science' with thousands of years of history.

The Irony of the Mass Marketing is a Mass of Individuals


I call it irony because mass marketing treats the market as a mass of individuals that are not connected. Why is this important, because mass marketing and mass advertising relies on embellishment and hyperbole, with the assumption that all your customers aren't going to get together and compare notes to expose the fibs. Why is advertising becoming less effective, because you can only get away with the "new and improved" story so many times before the market gets wise. Don't get me wrong i actually "love" advertising and think it's an incredibly creative medium, telling a story in 30 seconds is a beautiful creative constraint, but lets say it's like me "loving" email, despite the spam.

The mass market is dead, long live the massive market


The mass market concept of groups like "adult males 18-35" is totally dead, now it's about the massive market, the billions of interconnected customers that are just waiting to self select to be your prospect, customer, partner, evangelist. Phew, i'm tingling just writing that, but it's happening right now. How did 37signals get to half a million users in a year or two with no advertising? Great product that was worth talking about, and a connection into the blogosphere of web developers that were just waiting to talk about a great new tool.

Micromarketing is the opposite approach to marketing


Traditional advertising involves lots of planning, then a big bang, followed by an immediate spike in activity, followed by a steep decline until the next campaign, this is why I really like the hunting metaphor of targeting and firing some kind of weapon. Lots of marketers like to talk about shotguns and rifles, picking off customers, but in the end once the bullets fired it will eventually lose power and plough into the ground. Micromarketing takes totally the opposite approach, and is certainly more akin to farming where you are essentially seeding ideas onto fertile ground, that will be more valuable and be generating more interest in a years time. A blog is the perfect example of this, I mean a blog has essentially no value when you launch it, it's like a savings account with $1 in it, but over the year every post you make, every comment that a customer makes, every link that comes from another blog is like a deposit of a couple of dollars, and what you end up with in a year is a blog full of ideas and content that is appreciating with compound interest. This is why the whole ROI conversation on blogs is a total red herring until you do something.

Change is Scary


Clearly this kind of sea change is a terrifying prospect for many traditional marketers, but the good news is all this stuff is going to make your jobs easier. C'mon take a look at these points here and then go read a blog:

  • Customers identify themselves

  • Customers transmit your marketing messages

  • Your marketing tools will become more valuable over time

  • You don't need to talk to the 90% of people that don't care about or need your product

  • Product development and market development is built in

  • Talking to and listening to customers will no longer require separate channels


A shameless plug for my blog that is dedicated to micromarketing & microbrand - customersonfire.com


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Moving from Mass Market to the "Massive Market"

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Karl Long, straight talk, critical thinking, and strategic vision. Karl is fascinated in what happens and what value can be created "in the space between" customers and businesses, it is this space that customer experience happens, brands are built, value is co-created, and sometimes customers are let down.

Karl likes to focus on these areas and is a passionate believer that companies that pay attention to this space, like Google, Netflix, Amazon, ikea & ebay, create the strongest brands that essentially market themselves.

Karl writes the number 2 site on the topic of customer experience at blog.experiencecurve.com - customer experience strategy est. 2003, where he explores the marketing, branding and design implications of customer experience.

More recently Karl started up CustomersOnfire.com - microbrands & micromarketing to explore what he thinks is next generation marketing and branding that will rely on non-traditional marketing channels, like blogs, social software and co-created content.

Karl holds an MBA in Design Management from the University of Westminster in England and currently lives in the South of Florida for his sins.

Feel free to get in touch:
karl.long@gmail.com



c. 617 794 8475