Yelling Isn't Selling

2 Views      
What do you think about this article? Rate it using the stars above and let us know what you think in the comments below.
When I was an art director at an advertising agency, I remember our president's mantra, "Telling isn't selling." Alan Rosenshine, then BBDO President and a visionary among visionaries, was clearly ahead of his time. His statement was simple, memorable, and insightful. But today, it wouldn't go far enough.

Today "Selling" is more difficult than ever, and a lot of "Yelling" has replaced even the "Telling." Telling your audience that your product "shines like there's no tomorrow," or what you're drinking has "a rich cola taste," falls on deaf ears and doesn't motivate anyone.

As messages get more and more difficult to be heard, seen, and clicked, we see marketers'—through their agencies— frustrations taken out on consumers by attempting to be the loudest person in the room. Like the guy who increases his volume at a meeting when he wants to be heard — thinking the louder he speaks, the more important what he has to say might seem. These marketers, failing to either have anything of substance to say or a creative way to say it, pound us over the head, ears, and eyes with put-you-to-sleep arguments served up in expensively executed media, devoid of an idea worth remembering.



Some marketers—you know who you are—tend to plead their cases, not in decibel level, but in trying to push their self-centered, assumptive, and "uniquely" held points-of-view as "good," "better," or "best" on the market.

Today's generation, having just left or about to leave their protective, warm, cozy, yet "annoying" parental handcuffs, isn't ready to be manipulated by anyone. Telling them what's best, then demanding they LISTEN is a big mistake. Yelling at them? "Fogedaboudit." They've grown up leaning into computer screens, where there is no need to yell.

It's not much different than walking down a busy metropolis being hawked by, screamed at, and maligned by street venders. You run the other way...or should. Young consumers don't want to be SOLD anything...they are much mores sophisticated and wary of "the pitch."

Today, marketing should be more like an invitation than an inquisition.

An invitation that is engaging and has something to say. And in the very style it is written and designed says a lot about where you're being invited to, the reason you might choose to attend, and the kinds of people you might mingle with if you do attend.

Rather than yell at consumers, we should engage, inform, and use our brand's charming personality to create a dialogue with them. A unique and memorable idea couldn't hurt. Today, that's a more productive and enduring way to sell.

Harvey Hoffenberg
President
Propulsion
www.propulsionllc.com
(203) 801-0526
If this article has helped you in some way, will you say thanks by sharing it through a share, like, a link, or an email to someone you think would appreciate the reference.

Popular tags:

 consumers  offices  ears  visionary  thinking  art directors


I was facing the seven-year itch at my previous workplace. Thanks to EmploymentCrossing, I'm committed to a fantastic sales job in downtown Manhattan.
Joseph L - New York, NY
  • All we do is research jobs.
  • Our team of researchers, programmers, and analysts find you jobs from over 1,000 career pages and other sources
  • Our members get more interviews and jobs than people who use "public job boards"
Shoot for the moon. Even if you miss it, you will land among the stars.
AdvertisingCrossing - #1 Job Aggregation and Private Job-Opening Research Service — The Most Quality Jobs Anywhere
AdvertisingCrossing is the first job consolidation service in the employment industry to seek to include every job that exists in the world.
Copyright © 2024 AdvertisingCrossing - All rights reserved. 168