Is Marketing “Dirty Business?”

1250x672

This conversation happened yesterday as I discussed with an executive coach how to grow her business.

“I hate marketing,” she said.

“Why?” I asked.

“It seems like dirty business,” she said. “I just want to connect with people who need me, serve them well, and get paid for my effort.”

“If you market the right way, you’re serving them well. You’re revealing to them a path to progress,” I said.

I shared with the coach the story of a business owner who refused to use the word “marketing.”

He called it ā€œstrategic communications.ā€

The boss said he’d seen lots of bad marketing. Heā€™s seen marketers behave badly.

They indiscriminately pitch without assessing need. They fill your inbox with content that offers little or no value. They use dirty tricks to persuade prospects to buy unneeded products.

Like the coach, the business owner thought ā€œmarketingā€ is a dirty business.

Heā€™s onto something when he calls it ā€œstrategic communications.ā€

The owner’s vision for strategic communications: A deliberate, strategic, value-generating exchange between his company and individual prospects.

Here’s the thing: That’s exactly what I suggested the coach should do to “market” her business.

Develop strategies to discover whatā€™s relevant to your prospects. What do they want and need? How can you provide value?

Send content that includes interesting, informative, valuable information, not just product pitches. Donā€™t resort to a constant flow of just product pitches.

That’s not dirty business. That’s serving them well. That’s the first step in the path to progress.

To those marketers who do it the other way, the dirty way, Iā€™m not saying you and ā€œmarketingā€ are bad. Iā€™m saying you behaved badly.

Well-behaved marketers are strategic communicators. Good strategic communications is good marketing.

Don't go away yet..

p.s. Coaches, authors, and consultants hire me to power-up their creative content and storytelling to captivate prospects, stand-out and book more business.

Whenever you're ready, here are several ways I can help you become a storytelling stand-out so you'll land more clients without pitching and prodding:

1) Get theĀ Story Power Profit PackĀ -- 52 Strategies, Tips, and Tactics Ā to Transform Your Content from Ignored to Adored.

2) Watch theĀ free, 7-minute Micro-Training: ā€œThe 3 Most Important Storytelling Keys to Captivate Prospects and Inspire Them to Act -- Without Pitching and Prodding.ā€

3) Become a Story Power VIP: Master how to discover, assemble, and deliver business-building stories. Twice-monthly live masterclasses. Members-only content. One-on-one feedback and consulting sessions. And moreā€¦ If you'd like to learn more about our VIP program, just reply to this email and put "Story Power VIP" in the subject line. Iā€™ll contact you with more details.

4) Work with me one-on-one: If youā€™re interested in working directly with me -- to discover, assemble, and deliver powerful, business-building stories -- simply reply to this email and change the subject line to "Private Client." Tell me a little about yourself, your business, and what you'd like to accomplish, and I'll reply to discuss options.

5) Invite me to speak at an event: I can tailor a presentation that meets the specific needs of your organization. Informative. Entertaining. Virtual or live. Potential for continuing education credits when applicable for your group. If interested, reply to this email and change the subject line to ā€œSpeaking Engagement.ā€ Iā€™ll circle back to discuss the possibilities.

Want to get great content like this...

...delivered straight to your inbox?

Join our email list...

Hidden
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Post Categories

Previous Post

Next Post

Tom Ruwitch

Tom Ruwitch is the founder and CEO of Story Power Marketing. For more than 30 years, he has helped businesses grow by delivering powerful stories using a variety of different media.