The Marketing Department of the Future
Marketing Industry
The author's views are entirely his or her own (excluding
the unlikely event of hypnosis) and may not always reflect the views of Moz.
My first marketing job was in porn.
After leaving my journalism career and having studied
marketing in an M.B.A. program in Boston, I moved to Israel some years ago to
pursue a marcom career in the so-called "Startup Nation." My first
job, however, turned out to be at a pornography website that broadcast live
"shows" for $1 a minute.
Yeah, it's a little embarrassing. But I learned a lot –
about what not to do.
Every day, I would write fake porn stories that would be
stuffed with keywords and then published on an "independent" site
with links to the main website. One day, I heard that Amy Fisher – the
"Long Island Lolita" of the 1990s Joey Buttafuoco scandal – would be
"performing" on the website. Finally, I thought, a chance to use my
marketing knowledge! I outlined a few ideas on promotion and publicity – but
the SEO director dismissed them with a wave of his hand.
"I'm sure the marketing department is handling
that," he said. As I understood later, I was in the SEO department. I left
that job quickly. (Actually, I was doing "black-hat SEO" – in other
words, spam. Of course, real SEO – "white-hat SEO" – is something
entirely different. But more on that below.)
Today, I recommend that anyone who wants to get started in
real digital marketing should work for a company that sells a specific product
to a specific audience. Porn, forex, and gambling websites – despite their
lucrative potential salaries – are usually generic businesses that rarely
differentiate themselves and instead rely on methods that try to
"trick" Google. (Seriously, I just heard the other day about one
company here doing what it called "black-hat PPC" to get around
Google AdWords' restrictions on its industry.) And those tricks don't work
anymore.
After leaving the porn website, I held various positions at
global agencies before working now as a digital marketing and communications
consultant. Today, based on the problems that I have seen and the fallacies
that I have encountered, I wanted to propose a strategy to Mozzers on how
marketing departments and agencies should structure themselves in light of the
need to integrate traditional and Internet marketing today.
Note: This is my third post in an unofficial series on Moz
on integrating online and traditional marketing. For more on this topic, please
feel free to read An Introduction to PR Strategy for SEOs and The Coming
Integration of PR and SEO as well.
Don't divide traditional and online marketing
In large corporations and similar companies that have been
in existence for decades, digital marketing is often added as a second parallel
structure alongside the historical marketing activities. The incorrect
assumption is that traditional and Internet marketing are entirely different
things that need entirely separate approaches. My basic example:
marketing-department-based-on-type-of-ch
But such a structure can lead to major problems.
At a prior agency, we had a client who hired us for both
public relations and organic social media (in addition to paid social-media
advertising and conversion-rate optimization). The goal of the PR team was to
get coverage of the business and its executives in major, relevant
publications. The goals of the Social Media team were to generate qualified
sales leads and build a large Twitter following.
However, due to the flawed decision to separate PR and
social media, the extremely-large number of good Twitter followers did not come
despite the company's gaining of major coverage from outlets including Fox
News, The New York Times, Forbes, Wired, and AdWeek.
Why? The PR team did not concern itself with social media,
and the Social Media team did not think about public relations. There were many
missed opportunities:
Press releases that were sent to reporters and influencers
could have included the Twitter handle and links to the Twitter account
The PR team could have asked the Fox News' segment producers
to include the company's Twitter handle on the bottom part of the screen when
the program showed the CEO's name and business
PR could have advised the CEO to make sure that the
company's Twitter handle was listed in the footer of presentation slides
The company's booths at global events could have showcased
the Twitter hashtag
Now, it was not the PR team's fault – I can attest that they
were intelligent, professional people. It was just not how the agency's operations
were structured as a whole. The PR team did not think about anything relating
to social media because it was the Social Media team's responsibility – and
vice versa.
In a personal essay on my website, I explain how to get more
good Twitter followers. First, use Followerwonk to find relevant journalists,
bloggers, and influencers based on your target audience and strategic messaging
and positioning. Then, incorporate Twitter naturally into your PR and publicity
activities. There are no "tricks" to gaining large followings. The
key to being big on social media is to become something big in the first place.
The online and offline worlds reflect each other. (Rare viral cases such as
"Alex From Target" are exceptions that prove the rule – "going
viral" is too-rarely successful enough ever to be a solid strategy in and
of itself.)

 
 
 
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