The Perfection of  Marketing 

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The Perfection of Marketing

Jan. 14, 2009, NYC

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Excerpt from Chapter 1:
Introducing the CEO, Peter Gibbons

Peter Gibbons sighed-the kind of sigh only losing hundreds of thousands of dollars on ineffective marketing could buy.

"I'm told you can tell me how to fix our marketing," he said leaning back in a sensible wooden chair, designed to speed meetings in the equally sensible conference room. A manila folder, contrasting with the table's mahogany, lay tattered to his left. The insides overflowed the little folder.

"That would be some of your company's marketing materials," I stated. "May I have a look?"

Quickly, spreading the materials on the table, I glanced at no less than five different ad campaigns, two website designs, four brochures, three different company logos. They were good graphic design. But that was all. Each piece lacked the key marketing techniques that make the difference between advertising expense and advertising return on investment. Collectively, nothing more than throwing things against the wall, hoping something would stick.

I smiled gently. "Fix implies your marketing once was working. By looking at your ads, I can tell your marketing has never made money for you or your company."

Through the silence I could see the emotion rising. "I don't get marketing," Peter began. "I've worked hard to build this company. For eight years, every day, every night-I do nothing but think about how to make it better. We work so hard." He spoke with the determination of a prize-fighter.

"We're great at what we do. Our customers love us. But here's the thing. We can't quickly explain our story. We can't break through to the next level."

I nodded, understanding I was meeting yet another CEO determined to crack the marketing puzzle. For twelve years, on an almost weekly basis, I and other Brand Strategists from The James Group had met with CEOs of midsized companies.They were just like Peter, needing marketing answers to get to the next level. These meetings were interesting struggles: brand best practices sparring to overcome marketing bad habits.