Another Recommended Book: UnMarketing

UnMarketing: Stop Marketing. Start Engaging. By Scott Stratten (Revised edition, Wiley, 2012)

Scott Stratten just put out a revised edition of his social media classic, UnMarketing: Stop Marketing. Start Engaging—and I realize I’d never reviewed the original. It’s one of the better books on marketing by building relationships: a mix of wise theory, concrete practice, and enough snark to make the whole thing enjoyable (be sure to read the footnotes, where most of the snark lives).

Stratten spends a lot of time laughing at the old, ineffective ways of marketing–but then he turns it on his head and shows exactly how the firm could do better. And he’s a particular master of convincing prospects—both in-person and online—that it’s in their best interest to turn over their contact information. Of course, it’s up to the company to use that information effectively once you have it, and Stratten has lots of good advice on that too.

Right at the beginning, on the second page of the introduction, Stratten declares that marketing is not a task, a department, or a job; “marketing happens every time you engage (or not) with your past,present, and potential customers…[and] any time anyone talks about your company.”

And to Stratten, that means a few key principles:

  • Seize every chance to  engage with customers and prospects
  • Do this in ways that build your credibility and your likability; avoid alienating your customers and prospects (e.g., by jamming “buy me” messages down their throats—or by ignoring them)
  • And that means being authentic, being truly you, showing (not bragging about) how you’re different
  • Build both trust and genuine engagement; it’s better to have a small list that really engages with you than to have a huge list that ignores you
  • Have systems in place to scale up effectively and rapidly

I’ve been an advocate for this viewpoint for many years,and it amazes me how many companies are still completely blind about these concepts. Yet, Stratten cites numerous cases where a company took itself out of the running for some major pieces of business by being rude or indifferent in a retail environment, a trade show, or online. In once case, he was asked to recommend a six-figure software package, and the only company on his list was the single company whose reps took him seriously as he’d walked a trade show with a student registration badge, some months earlier.

I really like Stratten’s practical advice on maximizing results: whether at trade shows, in the store (read his case study of how he built engagement at a frame shop), or even on Youtube—where a simple tweak to the way people viewed his videos led to a 38% subscription conversion rate. He’s even got a three-page chapter on how to organize a successful charity fundraiser via Twitter.

Do I agree with all of his advice? No. I think, for instance, that it is still totally possible to be authentic if you prewrite some tweets and schedule them ahead. But I agree with him that it isn’t smart to puff an event you’re leading and then not be around to answer questions about it because you’ve prescheduled the tweets and are off on a no-Internet vacation.

Overall, I’d put my agreement at somewhere north of 90 percent. It’s a useful and enjoyable read, and I’d be surprised if you don’t come away with at least five or ten ideas you can implement right away in your own business.

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