Thursday, January 26, 2012

This New Marketing Revolution

There is a Marketing Revolution taking place, as profound as the Arab Spring Revolution or the Occupy Wall Street. It is not making the daily news on BBC & CNN but it is being driven by the same force that drive its more popular sisters.

This force is the technology that allows the man in the street to talk back. The vegetable vendor can strike back. He has a voice. The silence is broken, the centre cannot hold, noise is everywhere. Once upon a time the customer was silent, she just looked, listened and complied, no more.

The customer is speaking and brand owners have to listen. She uses Twitter, Facebook, Blogs, Online Communities and Forums to express her delight or dissatisfaction. Its no longer a one way communication, it is a conversation.

Brands are no longer the sole possession of its owners and managers, its also owned by its customers. Customers decide how they will use them, how they will be useful to their lives. She will twist them to serve her purpose and when they are no longer valuable she will discard them and she will tell her friends that she has discarded it.

In this New Marketing Revolution even the word 'Marketing' sounds perverse, since it has become to be known as manipulation, slight of hand, do what I tell you and you will be happy. Probably a better word now is Service, Customer Service. Brands now have to provide value, service, utility. The best brands do that, Apple, Google and Amazon are valuable because they provide utility, they empower the customer. Its no longer a brilliant advert, though if you provide value and utility that will most certainly help, but that is not the starting point. The starting point is 'How can I make the brand experience Memorable, Useful of value to the Customer?'

Isn't this the same that the young revolutionaries are asking of their Governments? Welcome to the New Marketing Revolution.

2 comments:

  1. This is true, people now have platforms to voice their opinions and express their feelings; however who really uses these platforms... Are they dominated by people who are naturally vocal, opinionated, and loud; or are these platforms allowing people who would not normally say something to finally be heard....

    ReplyDelete
  2. The idea that the brands are no longer control by the marketer is fascinated. It is about time customers became empowered, for too long we have been in silence, being satisfied with what-ever they give us.

    Education, the internet and globalization have led the new marketing revolution. Customers now have choice and the ability to make decisions on what they want to purchase.

    Marketers now have the challenge of pleasing us, if we not satisfy we would write about it and the internet has provided us with an array of mediums to voice our concerns.

    I welcome this revolution, now we can have a united voice, as customers.

    ReplyDelete