How an Entertainment Strategy Helps You Cut Through the White Noise

By cdelprincipe@hubspot.com (Curt del Principe)

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This week’s master is always down for some fun, and he’s got the receipts to show it.

“The most fun brand in the world hired us to make them fun,” he grins. “We’re certified fun and we can prove it.”

Case in point: When I asked Chandler Quintin for an interview, I failed to mention what it was for (I’d blame Monday brain, but it was a Thursday) and he still gave me more laughs and insights than I could squeeze into this email.

Lesson 1: Have an entertainment strategy.

“People are subject to marketing all day long, whether we ask for it or not,” says Chandler Quintin. I immediately think of scrambling for the mute button on the gas pump that’s blaring ads at me. Is no place sacred?

“If it’s at least interesting to watch and checks a box of ‘Hey, I didn’t mind seeing that,’ then everybody’s life will improve because we won’t be so inundated with boring stuff.”

Quintin fully believes we’re at what he calls “the peak of white noise on most platforms.” (And that goes double for you, B2B marketers.)

Do you use an ad blocker? Does your thumb have lightning-fast “skip ad” reflexes? Do you scroll past sponsored posts on LinkedIn? Well, so does the audience you paid so much to reach.

Quintin believes that the best way to cut through the white noise is to make content fun — and that one day soon marketing departments will have entertainment strategies the same way we now have editorial strategies.

“Now, I do want to clarify that when I say fun content, I’m not saying all of it has to be funny.” Funny is just one kind of fun, and fun looks different for different brands.

He gives the example of a campaign Video Brothers created for an outsourcing company. On the fun-ness scale, outsourcing usually ranks somewhere around popcorn kernels stuck in your gum line. Quintin and his team created an ad suite that focused on bleeping out the word “outsource” like a curse word. By tackling the taboo of outsourcing head-on, their ad stood out from competitors that danced around the topic.

But he emphasizes that the keyword is still “strategy” — you need an overarching plan for a well-connected marketing campaign based on audience insights.

“It’s not just about making one flagship piece of content and relying on that, it’s building a strategy around the fun content.” The outsourcing series, for example, was built on direct knowledge of customers’ attitudes toward their industry.

“Think less about the marketing and more about the people on the other end. What things might they be interested in?”

Lesson 2: Think less about marketing and more about people.

For Quintin, good marketing is all about people.

Even if you’re B2B, you’re not actually selling to a business, right? You’re selling to a CMO, a director, a manager — and, contrary to the jokes, those are people.

And the thing about people …read more

Source:: HubSpot Blog

      

Aaron
Author: Aaron

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