The B2B Lead

Lose Control of Your Marketing – ReachForce Book Club

Lose Control of Your Marketing is the latest eBook from David Meerman Scott.  It is mostly composed of excerpts from his new book World Wide Rave.  Readers of The B2B Lead already know I am a huge fan of Mr. Scott, especially his book, The New Rules of Marketing and PR.  However, the ideas presented in this eBook were a little hard for me to accept whole-heartedly.  As the name suggests, he encourages marketers to take down any barriers to their content and lose control to allow their ideas/content to spread.  As a bit of a control freak and one who lives by the mantra that everything marketing does must be measured, I had a bit of an internal struggle while reading this eBook.

According to David, You need to think in terms of spreading ideas, not generating leads. A World Wide Rave gets the word out to thousands or even millions of potential customers. But only if you make your information easy to find and consume.

One of the most difficult ideas for me to accept is the idea that sales leads are the wrong goal.  Isn’t my number one goal as a marketer to provide qualified leads to Sales?  David’s most compelling argument is that he has seen content downloads multiply by as much as a factor of 50 when a registration form was taken off.  I don’t know that I could ever take down every form on my website, but it is worth a shot on an eBook or two, just as a test.

The last part of the eBook focuses on how organizations should create a social media policy for its employees.  At ReachForce we are very open to allowing all employees to participate in social media, but if you are trying to create your own social media guidelines, David gives some great tips.

Helpful hint: if you are strapped for time you can probably skip pages 16-21.  And if you really don’t have time to read this eBook at all, let me leave you with David’s main point: The biggest requirement is that you change your behavior, so let me remind you of the most important strategies for successful marketing in a world of social media:

  • Stop obsessing over the old measurements of sales leads and marketing ROI.
  • Make your valuable online content free and registration-less.
  • Give away lots of good information (videos, photos, data, graphs, audio, blogs, e-books, and the like) to enthusiastic or curious people interested in your products and services.
  • Encourage an organizational culture of sharing.
Share and Enjoy:
  • del.icio.us
  • Digg
  • Technorati
  • Sphinn
  • Facebook
  • StumbleUpon
  • MisterWong
  • Mixx
  • Furl

comments.php

3 Responses to “Lose Control of Your Marketing – ReachForce Book Club”

  1. David Meerman Scott Says:

    Leigh Anne,

    Thanks for writing about my ebook.

    Question – if measuring leads are your primary goal, why are you even doing this blog? You can’t measure leads against it can you?

    My point is that when you live your entire life based on how many people fill out a form to get your stuff and become a “lead” you don’t create great things that cannot be measured that way (like this blog).

    I’d give it a year. Your mind will change. Mark my words…

  2. Leigh Anne Wallace Says:

    David,
    While I can’t measure every lead from the blog I use a nifty little tool called HubSpot (pretty sure you have heard of them, seeing as you are on their board) which keeps track of by blog traffic, subscribers, comments, etc. It also tracks my web visitors (at least those that have filled out a form) to see where they have been on the website including our blog.

    I completely respect your assertions and am willing to give it a try but if I stop delivering leads to sales, forget about losing control, I will lose my job.

  3. Carlos Vidal Says:

    I think we can have it both way. Notice that page two of David’s ebook has a link to Amazon (classic call to action right up front). He can measure conversion from the ebook lead source. I still do not understand why PDF documents are so static.

    You could have graphical links like “what do you think?” or “Have a question that needs an answer right now?”. You could measure the conversions from those events. I think white papers are still written as stand alone paper monuments to a concept. The investment to add a few links and see the results is chump change.

    It would be easy to justify opening the gates if you get strong take up on the new conversational links and just factor in the multiple effect of removing the links.

Leave a Reply

Enter this code

Share and Enjoy:
  • del.icio.us
  • Digg
  • Technorati
  • Sphinn
  • Facebook
  • StumbleUpon
  • MisterWong
  • Mixx
  • Furl

- - -     |     Home     |     About ReachForce     |     Contact     |     Archives     |     - - -