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Be a Brand Worth Following

The key to adapting to the digital economy…

 

 

Can We Put Digital Disruption to Bed?

Businesses have been worried about digital disruption since 1997 when Clayton M. Christensen popularized the word, “disruption” in his book The Innovator’s Dilemma: When New Technologies Cause Great Firms to Fail.

On one hand, Clayton was right.

Since publishing the book, 52% of companies on the Fortune 500 list cease to exist. However, it wasn’t the apocalypse everyone feared.

Companies for example didn’t just vanish leaving millions unemployed and unable to adapt to new tools and technology like a bunch of drooling luddites.

Rather, we retooled and slowly evolved to a changing landscape of running businesses in a post-digital economy.

 

In the last 12 months alone, most of us have had to find completely digital ways to doing business on zoom and digital meetings.

So it’s not that older companies cease to exist; they just ceased to exist doing business the old way.

We are in a never ending evolution to remain more relevant.

It’s also important to note that we’re also the same consumers who are choosing to work with the brands who are worth following and engaging over ones that stop innovating and finding new ways to make us happy.

 

Is Marketing Working?

The degree of disruption in businesses over the years has largely impacted how we communicate to the marketplace we serve.

The truth is businesses fail when we’re not creating the most compelling offer and message in our competitors’ spaces.

We’ve been tricking ourselves into the false belief that marketing isn’t working.

That would first imply that it ever was “working.” Since the beginning of time, marketing has only been a series of attempts at communicating our ideas.

 

 

Marketing at a crossroads to choose one of two paths.

Businesses can choose either the traditional path and continue renting audiences through ads or take the new path to publish content on desired networks.

On the promotional playing field, publishing free and value-added content is the name of the game.

For the past decade, we’ve been a bit selfish. The mistake we make in publishing content for ourselves is making the subject about our businesses, instead of focusing on the customers we want to attract and serve.

If we’re not publishing content that puts the customer first, then it’s just selfish. Consumers know it and leave it alone.

Having an audience is a privilege. It’s not about us anymore, it’s about them.

 

A Major Shift is Underway

Throughout the world, we see the simultaneous redefinition of the media and content industry and a reinvestment by many companies in media to produce their own content.

These major shifts won’t stop anytime soon; the single most important decision for businesses to make is to decide which game to play.

Do you continue to just buy ad and interrupt content or publish content to build and grow a community and scale a network?

 

 

This is the New Game Now

If businesses don’t contribute volumes of valuable content, it makes the effort almost downright impossible for customers to organically find businesses online.

17 new websites are added online every single second. Businesses competing only have no choice but to compete on volumes of content.

Obviously, if we’re truly looking to build awareness, convey quality and increase a healthy reputation, deciding to cut against the grain is not a recipe for success.

In today’s digital age, the customer experience begins online, and those brands that are easiest to find are the most helpful. The most creative brands get all of the attention.

 

Where Does Your Company Fall in This Space?

Today, the people and businesses that are capturing customer attention online are those communicating the clearest message. Additionally, they have the greatest plan to guide their audience to the solutions they solve, which leads to increased launches of digital movements.

  • Help Scout reports that 74% of people are likely to switch brands if they find the purchasing process too difficult.
  • And 51% of customers will never do business with a company again after a negative interaction.

For more information visit tylerhayzlett.com

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The Rise and Fall of Book Publishing – The Untold Story of Amazon.com

The state of book publishing is complicated

 

 

The Rise of Book Publishing

The book industry hit a major milestone they never bothered mentioning to anyone.

Between 2012 to now, self-published book titles have grown 156%.

 

In a report published by Bowker.com in late 2018:

“Self-publishing grew at a rate of more than 28% in 2017 and is still climbing.

In 2018 alone, book titles grew from 786,935 to 1,009,188, surpassing the million mark for the first time in human history!”

 

Then why isn’t anyone celebrating?

It’s never been easier and more affordable to publish a book to share our knowledge with the world.

Mass printers can get book costs down to $1-$3 per book.

On-demand printers that most independent authors use can get costs around $6-$7 per book before adding the author markup.

 

This Is a Good Thing Right?

We have more legit subject experts than any time in human history.

This is the single greatest achievement in book publishing since Gutenberg invented the printing press in 1454, over 500 years ago!

 

The reason no one wants to talk about this is that there’s a dirty little secret in book publishing…

 

 

A majority of books don’t actually make any money.

Seriously, it’s true.

With the introduction of e-commerce, authors can no longer rely on traditional retail, especially with the demise of brick-and-mortar bookstores.

Publishers Weekly is an American trade magazine which has been providing industry insights to publishers, librarians, booksellers and literary agents since 1872.

The industry has been keeping the sales numbers close to their chest for awhile now…

 

Book Sales By The Numbers:

Recent reports indicate that the average independent or self-published author will sell less than 250 books.

The average published author will sell less than 2,000 books, and only 62 out of 1,000 book titles will sell over 5,000 copies in its lifetime.

And someone you’ve heard of took notice a few years back.

 

The Birth of Amazon

Very few people would have guessed the quiet introvert who worked at the local McDonalds in high school would one day become the world’s most successful and wealthiest man to walk the planet.

A guy who’s  personal net worth surpasses the GDP of over 125 countries.

The $126 billion dollar man by the name of Jeff Bezos started Amazon in 1996 with the wild idea to sell books online.

Bezos started Amazon with the brand promise as “the world’s largest bookstore.”

 

In the Beginning it Was Just An Idea

Amazon started in 1994, when at the age of 30, Jeff quit a high paying job at a quantitative hedge fund company on Wall Street to pursue a life-long love of computers.

No one knew he would become one of the early pioneers of the internet.

 

At that time, Bezos and a handful of others were watching internet usage skyrocket at a rate of 2300%. He had to get involved.

Bezos relocated to Seattle with nothing other than an interest to start an online business.

In June of that same year, Jeff came up with arguably the lamest name for a business in the history of the human race, “Cadabra Inc.”

…Yes, like “Abracadabra.”

He then pivoted to “relentless” for about a day, until friends convinced him otherwise.

 

He ultimately landed on the name “Amazon” reportedly for two reasons:

  1. To suggest the immense scale he was hoping to eventually accomplish; “Earth’s Largest Bookstore” (which is what Amazon was in the very beginning)
  2. Back then, website listings were often alphabetical, so he wanted something that started with the letter “a,” which was a straight-up marketing strategy from the Yellow Pages era.

 

The Vision Grew and So Did Bezos’s Ambition

The vision for the company was to be the “largest bookstore in the world.”

Building an online bookstore wasn’t exactly a grand master chess decision. However, it made sense at the time because there were three million active book titles in circulation.

 

These numbers have only increased since.

Major bookstores could only hold a max of 150,000 titles in retail locations.

While that’s an impressively large volume to logistically support at retail level, there was still no way for most bookstores to profitably sell more books that were growing ever more niche in nature.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thus, traditional bookstores couldn’t keep up with the large and growing circulation.

In addition, books were a relatively low price-point, the perfect combination for an e-commerce play. Therefore, the founding idea was a universal selection of books.

A literal “online library.” But the idea needed funding.

 

The Idea Needed Seed Funding

With the concept in place, Bezos raised seed capital to turn his idea into a working model.

Like everyone raising money does at first, he turned to friends and family to borrow money. The initial $250,000 investment from his parents to start Amazon.

When explaining the concept of his internet store to his father his dad asked Jeff, “What actually is the “internet?”

…Clearly, they were not betting on an ROI from the internet. They were betting on their son, Jeff, a powerful vote of confidence, in their willingness to invest in his judgment and ability to make something out of nothing.

Jeff raised another $1M from 20 additional initial investors who each contributed $50K for shared equity of 20% in the business.

 

 

 

Bezos Launched Amazon From His Garage

Well technically the garage part is in mostly a myth. But close enough, he launched from his new home in Bellevue, Washington.Fluid Concepts And Creative Analogies: Computer Models Of The Fundamental Mechanisms Of Thought: Hofstadter, Douglas R.: 9780465024759: Amazon.com: Books

In 1996, Amazon sold their first book and quite possibly the most boring name and niche book of all time.

It was E. Douglas Hofstadter’s, Fluid Concepts and Creative Analogies, Computer Models of the Fundamental Mechanisms of Thought,

…How’s that for a title?

Two months later, Jeff was selling books to all 50 states in the US and 45 countries worldwide with weekly sales up to $20,000.

 

Amazon Expanded Out of Book Sales

By October, that same year, he announced his decision to take the company public. Amazon swelled to 11 employees, and the company started expanding outside of book sales into music and videos.

Wondering what to sell next, the small team emailed 1,000 randomly selected customers for what they would like to see Amazon sell outside of books.

The results were interesting and surprised everyone working for the e-commerce startup.

What the customers wanted was the most randomness of anything happened to need or desire in that very moment including obscure things like windshield wiper blades.

That was the feedback the team needed. This was no longer a book play. This consumer feedback changed the world as we know it.

At that point, Bezos realized the true potential for Amazon.

 

From Selling Books to Selling…Anything They Wanted

They were going to fulfill and deliver every purchase of any product their customers wanted right to their front door, including front doors from door manufacturers.

The doors literally flooded opened with orders of the most common and most obtuse products. Amazon was in a dead sprint to connect their customers with EVERYTHING their shopping cart hearts desired.

 

When Amazon’s Success Threatened the Status Quo

The following year, in May of 1997, the company issued their first stock option valued at $18 per share. Today, the stock price is over $2,000 per share.

They were well on their way to becoming a major player.

However, business is business, and the excitement was met with resistance from the industry when Barnes & Noble sued the new company over their slogan claiming to be the “largest bookstore on the planet” when they didn’t in fact have a physical store.

Their case was that Amazon was not a bookstore rather they were a “book broker.”

While they were technically correct, Amazon is a broker, and Amazon eventually settled the claim out of court.

What the retailer, and others to this day, would soon come to learn, is that to us, the consumers, brick and mortar bookstores were also “just brokers.”

 

We’re All “Just Brokers” Now

At it turns out, people prefer to order products from the comfort of their own homes rather than venture out to do all the tedious brokering themselves for products in massive retail locations.

To think we should somehow value going into a retail store over having whatever we want delivered to our front door for FREE SHIPPING, is absolutely ridiculous.

Convenient e-commerce shopping and delivery has been the driving force behind why more than 9,300 retail stores closed their doors in 2019 and more since, as the retail apocalypse peaked.

 

BARNES & NOBLE RETAIL CASE STUDY

In 1996, Amazon became a major threat to bookstores with $16 Million in sales.

Barnes and Noble took in $2 Billion that same year.

Today, Amazon controls half of the entire print book marketplace, while B&N has only one-fifth remaining. Amazon’s sales jumped to 84% for e-book sales, while B&N held at 2%. Amazon’s e-commerce revenue is around $1 Trillion in market cap while B&N has dropped to $475 Million, a .05% of Amazon’s revenue.

 

Today, people claim Amazon is the biggest threat to retailers

But in my humble opinion, retail disruption wasn’t Amazon’s fault. Amazon was simply the first company to offer the first online retail experience; and consumers have accepted the alternate shopping experience and prefer the convenience of it!

Amazon capitalized on the way people prefer to shop today.

The customer is not always right, but they have options for how they prefer to consume products now.

By 2010, Kindle sales exceeded print sales for the first time in the history of the company.

 

Amazon didn’t kill the book publishing industry!

The consumer did when we made a choice to add a premium on preferred digital consumption.

At the start, Amazon employed a handful of workers.

Growth accelerated at lightspeed with 30,000 employees in 2010, exceeding 750,000 employees today; not too shabby considering when he started, Bezos hoped that at one point, Amazon would be large enough to purchase a forklift for the warehouse.

 

In 2013, Amazon’s site went down for 45 minutes, and the company lost out on $5.7 million in revenue!

Since 2014, Cyber Monday has been the “online Black Friday” post-Thanksgiving holiday online shopping day. History was made, again. Analytics showed Amazon sold over 300 products per second on the first Cyber Monday.

Bezos can now afford to buy 105 million forklifts. Just saying…

 

Bezos made a fortune by building the most efficient platform of the era by focusing on one core principle…

 

“Give the customer what they want. The way they want it.”

This is the advice marketers should wisely and carefully consider.

People don’t buy most books because most people don’t want to consume them in the manner they are offered.

In today’s media world, when the consumer can consume limitless amounts of content on their own terms and devices, they have many other avenues for consuming the information they want.

Often times on platforms that make it easier to consume the information like YouTube and Podcasts.

For more information visit tylerhayzlett.com

 

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Fight or Die. The Content Wars

Who will survive the content wars?

 

When was the last time you went online to look for a premium content subscription to pay for?

Not for at least 10 years for most people!

In order to get your business, publishers first have to create content you actual want before they can sell you anything whether via ads or god forbid an actual premium subscription.

For a long time this has been a problem plaguing publishers of all shapes and sizes.

Getting anyones attention these days is no joke.

 

 

The Content Dilemma

When everything consumers want or desire is now only a “google search” away, the battle for their attention has now become the war.

But up until recently the pawns of the war have been traditional media publishers. But that has changed forever.

For example, YouTube is now the second largest search engine with how-to videos.

Podcasts are now exploding in growth with over 900,000 podcasts delivering amazing insights on any topic.

Anyone with a blog is now a “media site.”

In other words, anyone can create and compete in the media game. And so everyone is.

If you have anything to sell. You’re now part of the content wars. Here’s why…

 

The Death of Traditional Media

When  digital content took over, consumers were no longer willing to pay a premium for content the way they did in the past…Why should they it’s free?

For the first time in history, publishers had to ask themselves; what the hell do we actually sell?

Content? That’s what they thought they sold. But the digital age proved that idea wrong.

Publishers of all types, from news to music, are less than pleased that consumers won’t pay a premium price for content anymore.

What they’re learning to understand now is that they never sold content. They just sold access to content, and the price consumers paid was dependent on the cost of the format.

 

The music sector sold records, then tapes, then CDs. Now, they sell the devices to streaming services.

Print publishers sell paper via magazines and books, the content of which, only determines how much paper they can sell off each author or issue.

Publishers simply sell paper in binding form.

Economically, the print media are in the business of marking up paper. Now, traditional publishers are realizing that they never really sold content. They just assumed that’s what the consumer was paying for.

Traditional publishers had a monopoly and ability to the access the information we wanted.

But now that access can be created by anyone who produces content. Traditional media is dead.

 

Music Platforms Don’t Actually Sell Music…

Building an audience in the digital age is about capturing the access point to where consumers consume content. That’s why traditional media can’t keep up.

It can’t move where consumers prefer to consume their information. Take music for example.

Napster (the original digital stream source for music), crashed the music party in 1999 and started giving music away for free.

They attracted the masses onto one platform (illegally) to consumer music the way they wanted it (free).

Then advertisers took note and copied the model, taking over the music industry by controlling the distribution (legally through royalties (that they were willing to pay for on behalf of the consumer).

Now the industry doesn’t care about making money selling music anymore. They pay to give it away instead.

 

Today, iTunes is the new version of the brick-and-mortar record stores of the past.

Apple promotes extremely discounted music to sell Apple’s lucrative products, such as phones, tablets, earbuds. Music is just he bait.

Think about it. How is it that music streaming services like Spotify and Pandora, whose sole business model is to make money from the streaming of music, DON’T ACTUALLY MAKE ANY MONEY selling music?

  • 80% of Pandora’s net revenue comes from the ads playing to people listening to free music.
  • Only 20% comes from users who pay for ad-free listening.

In turn, Pandora pays musicians ridiculously low royalties established in 2016 at $0.00176. For each single song played by a single artist for one million times, the artists grosses $1,760.00. This fee is treated, essentially, as Pandora’s marketing expense.

 

They Sell Ads. Content Is The Bait

The kicker? THEY DON’T EVEN SELL CONTENT! They provide access to it. They pay to give away content for free, in order to sell advertising.

Pandora hasn’t turned a profit since it started in 2000.

After 13 years and 96 million subscribers, Spotify finally reported a profit for the first time in 2019 of $107M. They plan to spend all of it and another $500M to acquire podcast networks to build the same model.

They’re not in the business providing music to customers as that would require consumers to actually pay them for that service.

They are advertising companies, which we allow to advertise to us, in exchange for listening to the music they purchase, just like advertising during television programming.

 

By now you’re wondering, what the hell’s your point?

 

The Rise of Content Marketing

In 1995, internet pioneer, Esther Dyson asked an important question about the burgeoning web.

“What new kinds of content-based value can be created on the internet?”
– Esther Dyson

More than 30 years ago, Dyson observed that as the internet would become more populated with various content, and that the content owner’s intellectual property would depreciate in value.

“The likely best defense for content providers,” she argued, “is to distribute intellectual property free in order to sell services and build relationships.”

What worked in the past, won’t keep working in the future.

In a world with unlimited competition for attention, we must find a way to deliver value to our customers before they ever pitch to sell because if we don’t, someone else will.

The modern era of marketing has been an entire shift from advertising benefits, to teaching what we know to help the most people.

Businesses today are treating their content as the carrot to capture people who may be interested in learning about their field and who may likely become customers.

The Rise of Value-Rich Content


Subject matter experts today are standing out by providing the most useful, easy to find content to create a community around the passion they share for their subject matter.

The term, “content marketing” isn’t new.

It was simply adopted by the marketing industry wishing to put a stake in the ground.

In 2007, the industry wanted to highlight the shift away from annoying traditional interruption advertising to a more mature discipline of differentiated value-oriented content creation that would help people not just sell people.

 

 

78% of CMOs believe custom content creation is the future of marketing in order to sell our products and services in today’s cutthroat digital battlefield.

It’s not surprising, given how it influences 61% of consumer’s buying behavior with a 6x higher conversion rate compared to marketing that does not include a digital content strategy.

Businesses today that produce the most relatable content WIN.

 

With Today’s High-Volume of Experts, You Can’t Move Up If You Don’t Stand Out in YOUR Field!

For more information visit tylerhayzlett.com

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The Rise of People as Brands

Today, anyone can create a platform around anything they love…

 

 

The Rise of The Services Industry

In the 1970s, the US economy moved from a manufacturing-based economy to a service-based information economy.

Today, the service business in the US alone, represents 85% of the US private sector.

As service businesses emerged, the “brand promise” transferred from product quality to a specialized knowledge expertise and skillset.

 

Thus Gave Rise to The Knowledge Business

Business between the 70s and 80s used to be called the “Knowledge Industry”. 

That was soon forgotten in the 90s when the internet was born. The information era came with a new way of delivering information. The world wide web.

 

 

The Knowledge Business was about to become a global business endeavor and competition started to heat up.

 

The Rise of Individuals As Brands

In a 1997 Fast Company article,  Tom Peters sparked a phenomenon when he publicly acknowledged for the first time that developing individual personal brands is a necessity for businesses to compete in a cut-throat digital economy.

The key to getting ahead was then linked to your ability to establish a personal equivalent of the Nike swoosh.

The conclusion: “It’s that simple, that hard, and that inescapable.”

 

 

Fast forward almost 25 years. Peters and his original article still remain a leading authority on the topic.

But now, because anyone can be positioned as an expert, everyone is.

 

 

“The Brand Called “YOU.” You Can’t Move Up if You Don’t Stand Out.”

 

The Rise of Thought Leaders

In case you haven’t noticed, there’s a growing rate of increased competition for subject matter experts and ideas.

With so many “experts” right now, how will B2B businesses differentiate themselves to their desired customer in an era when everyone is a consultant, speaker, author, and coach?

How will we find customers in such a crowded space?

The good news is that demand for information is at an all-time high. The bad news?

The rapidly increasing supply of on-demand content. It’s definitely becoming difficult to stand out from the crowded room of other experts.

 

Based on a simple LinkedIn search using titles, there are:

  • 22 million consultants
  • 12 million authors
  • 6 million experts
  • 300,000 coaches
  • 300,000 trainers
  • 40,000 speakers
  • 6 Million Experts

 

The Rise of Coaches

6,109,719 people identified themselves as “experts.” There’s an expert on every topic!

Consultants surpassed experts with a whopping 22,009,581 million results.

Fortunately, if anyone desires to be coached, they will only be able to find the best fit by searching and meeting with the 5,904.507 available to assist you.

Even celebrities are coaches. For instance, Gwen Stefani identifies as a “music coach” because she is a judge on “The Voice,” a television show that evaluates musicians for the “next big star.”

 

 

The Rise of Media Brands

Today, every person and business has access to the same distribution tools as the largest publishers and media networks.

Today, anyone can create a brand reputation on any topic.

While it may appear that the rise of people as brands is a relatively new phenomenon, in reality it has been a 50-year overnight development in the making.

For more information visit tylerhayzlett.com

 

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Will the Last One Still Advertising Turn Out the Lights?

According to Harvard, over 615 million devices are now using ad blockers.

 

 

There’s a Lot of People Tuning Out to Ads

615 million people.

That’s 11% of the entire internet population escaping the way they’re being treated by brands.

People hate most ads so much they’re actually paying not to see most of them.

 

Based on advertising surveys consumers express dislike for the most common ad types:

  • Direct mail ads or promotions (48% dislike)
  • Auto-play video ads (51% dislike)
  • Pop-up digital ads (70% dislike)
  • Telemarketing calls (81% dislike)
  • 96% of ALL consumers don’t trust ANY ads!!!
  • Only 4% of consumers believe marketers practice integrity

While I’m not here to bash advertising as they can be highly effective, for most of us as B2B brands, we need to re-calibrate our sales approach into a customer approach.

For example, most people today don’t care about most ads they receive, but a surprising 84% of people actually expect and want brands to create content for them!

 

Unfortunately, our initial content marketing attempts have missed the mark with consumers, especially considering 60%  of branded content is reported as poor, irrelevant, and fails to deliver.

That’s a massive gap in consumer expectations and what we’re delivering against so far!

Most businesses produce content to fill sales quotas rather than produce content designed to inform, delight or entertain audiences.

In this new media economy, consumers are demanding high volumes of relevant information, so it only makes sense that we move in that direction.

 

 

We now all have an amazing opportunity to publish information people actually look forward to learning and enjoying.

Today, brands can act much more like media companies to deliver quality and engaging content for the consumer they want to reach.

Whether through articles, videos, or podcasts, we can publish content designed to help our audience achieve the results they desire through content pieces such as the following list.

 

The Growing Marketing Mix

  • Social media marketing
  • Blogging
  • Vlogging
  • Podcasting
  • PR
  • SEO
  • Email marketing
  • Influencer marketing

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

For a full review here’s a list of the 75 marketing tactics every entrepreneur should know.

 

“The aim of marketing is to know and understand the customer so well that the product or service fits them and sells itself.”

– Peter F. Drucker

To best serve customers today marketers are turning to content. What types of content can we build for the customers we want?

 

Isn’t There Already Too Much Content Out There?

Hell yes!

But also, no. In the age of information, everyone can publish anything. So, everyone does. Now, the Internet’s filled with a lot of uninspiring and mediocre junk.

And think about it this way; the average person today receives over 5,000 ads per day! Insane, right? And harder yet for advertisers.

As Bill Gates stated in 1996 his Content is King Essay in 1996, “Content is where I expect much of wealth will be generated on the internet, just as it was in broadcasting.”

 

 

Connect With Your Audience on Share Interests and Values

The core of the human experience is looking for solutions we need and those in which we feel we belong.

People want to feel that they’re getting closer to the goals they have set out to achieve on their journey. Passion is one of the great drivers of building a business.

When you started your business, why did you start it? What’s the purpose behind your business? Which passion are you sharing with them in this journey? What goal are you ultimately looking for your customers to experience or achieve?

 

People are Tribal

We join tribes to surround ourselves with people who share the same journey and want the same outcomes.

Our tribes bring us together around a common goal. So, build one.

Whether it’s politics, religion, national identity or a brand, people are hungry to define who they are and what they want. We join communities and clubs to find other people who are like us.

We do business with brands that “get us” and who understand what really drives us forward. This is why the largest, most successful brands think of themselves and communicate as “movements” instead of products and services.

 

People are looking for new and exciting solutions to change their lives We’re not just selling products or services.

If we did, we would risk becoming a commodity. Today, business leaders are learning that most businesses fail because they fail to capture the attention and interests of the customers they really want.

For more information visit tylerhayzlett.com

 

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WATCH: Life Lessons From This is Water

This is Water…

 

What the Hell is Water?

American author, David Foster Wallace, was credited with giving one of the best commencement speeches of all time.

Which is a pretty impressive accomplishment given it was the only public appearance he ever gave on his view of life and the lessons he drew from it.

He was the winning nominee for the graduation event at Kenyon College, beating out then senator Hillary Clinton and astronaut turned senator John Glenn.

Wallace gave a speech that went viral for explaining the “unsexy” and yet very real realities of day-to-day adult life.

The speech contained a lesson from a parable of an encounter among three different goldfish.

 

It went something like this:

One day, there were two goldfish that were swimming along the ocean floor, when along came an older and wiser goldfish.

In passing, the wise goldfish said to the two young fish:

“Morning boys, how’s the water?”

The two fish kept swimming along for a bit until one of the younger goldfish eventually turned to the other and said, “What the hell’s water?”…

 

 

Summary:

The point of the parable is that the most obvious realities that affect us in life (and in our case, business) are often the hardest to see and identify.

But often remain their hidden in plain sight.

The fact is that in the day-to-day trenches of success and survival, banal platitudes can have a life-or-death importance.

 

Self-Awareness

Wallace explained that the real value for education,  has almost nothing to do with knowledge, and everything to do with simple awareness.

Awareness of what is real and essential is hidden in plain sight all around us at all times; so much so, that we must keep reminding ourselves over and over, “This is water…”

“This is water,” is the current state of nearly every business struggling to identify our pathway to succeed in today’s ever changing environment.

 

 

As we continue to adapt and change to meet the demands of today, I thought i would end by providing another platitude:

“Many of life’s failures are people who did not realize how close they were to success when they gave up.”

-Thomas Edison

 

WATCH: This is Water. The Best Commencement Speech of All Time

 

Never stop, keep going and enjoy the journey.

For more information visit tylerhayzlett.com

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The Buyer Is In Control. Does Your Marketing Reflect That?

Want to Hear About a Marketing Lesson Worth $883 Million?

 

 

The buyer is in control, but we’re still marketing as if that’s not true…

 

Mike Volpe was the original CMO of HubSpot, a leading tech platform for marketers.

He had been with HubSpot since he was their fifth employee. Volpe helped scale the company from 12 beta users to 1,000 employees generating $150M in revenue with a successful IPO leading to a $1.78 market cap.

Today, they’re valued at over $883M.

How did they do it? In part, they created content to attract and add value to their ideal client marketing companies.

Mike focused on creating content to help other marketers be successful.

 

By teaching potential customers how to be impactful in their messaging and marketing strategies, HubSpot became a tool, or resource, for best marketing practices taught by HubSpot.

The focused on teaching over selling.

 

 

“You don’t want to interrupt the content that people are trying to consume but be that content they want to consume. The buyer is in control, but you’re still marketing as if that’s not true.”

– Mike Volpe

 

Buyers Consume Information. Give It to Them!

If you weren’t reading this right now, you would be consuming information somewhere else.

Do you know how much time the average person is consuming information online today? Over 11 hours each day — that’s how much time.

US adults are spending more than 11 hours a day on average, or about two-thirds of their waking time, consuming media information.

Peter Katsingris, who led the report at Nielsen, attributed the rise of online streaming services due to the fact that it made it easier for consumers to tune in anywhere.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

People don’t want to buy from us. They want information to make their lives more enjoyable.

Attention is what we want, and it’s certainly true that it’s becoming more difficult to get noticed.

Customers now have a new level of control over how, when, and where we’re permitted to attract their attention.

 

Why it Pays to Create Content For Your Business

Companies that put out 16 or more posts a month receive 3.5 times more traffic to their website than companies that post four or fewer posts per month.

According to the Content Marketing Institute, content marketing attracts three times the number of leads than outbound marketing and costs 62% less.

Small businesses with blogs get 126% more lead growth than businesses without them.

 

 

But 94% of B2B companies are doing some form of content marketing and yet ONLY 9% rate their efforts as highly successful.

The truth is marketers have become more fixated on HOW to promote than WHAT consumers actually want or care about.

Ask most people what they think about marketing, and they will tell you it’s an ad or some form of promotion.

That’s where marketing has a slight marketing problem.

In the real-world, marketing is just the process of building relationships and satisfying customers. Customers who understand their buying power know they have many options.

 

 

The brands who win more customers are the ones who put their customers’ needs ahead of their desire to sell more stuff.

Promoting ads that don’t have a customer acquisition strategy is like throwing good money out the window.

Once we’ve nailed our audience’s interests there’s no shortage of tools to reach them.

For more information visit tylerhayzlett.com

 

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Best Practices Entrepreneurship Management Marketing Personal Development Technology

Why is Nobody Talking About This?

 

Every Business Struggles With This!

 

 

Everyone Has a Marketing Problem

Hands up if you’re a business owner concerned about the growth of your business?

Now keep your hand up if you’re struggling to put together a plan to grow in today’s digital economy?

 

 

If your hand’s still up, you’re not alone.

In fact you’re actually in good company. Surprisingly half of B2B companies are approaching digital without any strategy whatsoever.

 

Why Is No One Talking About This?

It’s the fact that almost EVERY single one of us is struggling to get up to speed with digital marketing.

Not even just the strategy part, like actually getting online.

 

 

Did you know, that only 64% of small businesses actually even have a website?

Not shitting you I heard this and had to look it up for myself (here) and it baffles me!

Could you imagine? Thats like Guttenberg inventing the printing press and the Catholic church saying, “nah we’re good. We’re gunna keep on hand writing the bible thanks.”

WTF?

The internet is the biggest revolution in human communication technology and a ton of us are not taking advantage of it!

Before We Put 2020 in the Rearview

Before we put 2020 in the rearview and wave goodbye to the complexity of running a business during a global pandemic, there’s one lesson that stood out like a sore thumb…

 

 

We Need a Digital Roadmap

Thinking we will grow in today’s digital environment without a plan is like trying to drive from Dallas to Seattle without directions.

2020 offered a really interesting glimpse of what doing business in the future looks like. It’s completely digital.

We all need a game plan to amplify our success.

We’ve been dancing around this issue for a decade. How to leverage the internet to grow our business?

I don’t know about you, but I don’t intend to be the next Block Buster.

 

Let’s Netflix This Baby!

Having a plan to engage an audience, create awareness, and convert new business on digital platforms has now become mission critical for businesses moving forward.

 

 

And it’s about time we get after it.

Take Advantage of New Media!

Take advantage of new media.

Im gunna skip the part about the importance of having a website and assume YOU have one. Good job!

Now you need to get people to it…that’s where traffic come in.

Here’s the thing about traffic. You don’t create it. It already exists. That’s what the internet is.

Your job is to get peoples’ attention and convert traffic.

 

Publish Content Your Audience Actually Likes

There’s a number of ways of creating content to add value to the network your building .

 

Launch a Podcast: 

It’s not as hard as you think. We covered how to Start a Successful Podcast For Your Business  podcast in this article that outlines everything you will need to know to get started.

 

 

Start a YouTube Channel

YouTube is’nt for the youngsters anymore. It’s a massive platform of people looking to discover informational content.

 

 

Take a look for yourself, heres an example of Patric Bet-David’s Valuetainment channel (home to 3 million subscribers) that creates content for entrepreneurs.

 

Get Active On Social Media

Over 80% of all content that gets consumed is discovered and shared on social media platforms.

So…share your content on them.

 

Consumers Can Access Anything Almost Anywhere

Consumers today expect to receive a B2C content experience.

Meaning they expect the content you produce to be for them, not your sales quota.

So just be sure to make your content personal, like-able, and shareable.

When consumers can consume limitless amounts of content on their own terms and devices, the battle for their attention is the new game.

Creating content they will actually like is the finish line.

 

 

Learn 5 ways C-Suite Media can help you publish content like a pro. Click here.

 

For more information visit tylerhayzlett.com

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Best Practices Economics Entrepreneurship Leadership Marketing Personal Development

Welcome to the Media Economy

A Marketing Lesson From a Media Mogul

 

 

This Leveled the Playing Field

In 2006, Conde Nast purchased Wired Magazine for $25 million.

Later that year, one of the original founders of the magazine, John Battelle, was recognized as being one of the first media moguls to point out the fact, that for the first time in history, there’s absolutely nothing stopping brands from actually becoming media companies.

The emergence of digital communication platforms has enabled brands to attract customers seeking information online by creating content that educates, informs, and inspires communities to support their mission.

Own Versus Rent

In the past, brands had to pay publishers like Wired and others, to advertise to a specific audience they wanted to reach in their industry publications, magazines, newspapers, TV programs, and trade shows.

Until now we had to rent consumer attention from publishers.

Today, we can build our own. All of the tools to create an audience for our businesses are everywhere.

Playing the Long Game

The long game is building a digital audience for our businesses.

We now have the ability to build an online following of people who share similar interests and passions.

Today, there’s nothing stopping us from becoming the publishers for the audiences we aim to serve.

But What’s the Catch?

Unfortunately, when consumers can choose from limitless amounts of content, on their own terms and on their own devices, the battle for their attention becomes the obstacle.

 

 

Over time, companies have recognized these developments and we’re all reaching the same conclusion.

We all are in the media business now…

Ready or not, we’re all in the media business. We just happen to be selling products and services.

This Changes Everything…

In the past businesses only competed against 3 differentiating factors; Speed, quality, and price.

Businesses today are competing on a 4th factor, getting customers to follow their content.

Moving forward, the success for most businesses will be judged on their ability to create engaging content.

 

 

If you need a place to build content for your B2b brand go to C-Suite.Media to learn 5 ways to take your digital influence to the next level.

For more information visit tylerhayzlett.com

Categories
Best Practices Leadership Marketing Skills

WATCH, “Every Single One of You Is a Media Company”

Having Marketing Troubles? WATCH THIS!

 

 

“Why every single one of you is a media company”

Gary Vaynerchuck, the CEO and founder of Vayner Media spoke at our C-Suite Network Leadership Summit in Huston in 2014.

What he said back then is even more strikingly relevant in 2021.

Because he explained exactly how to be successful in today’s crowded digital jungle.

And that has something to do with creating content. Like a media company.

Let me explain…

 

The Rise of Media Brands

In order to be successful online, Gary said that every single one of us are now media brands.

Because the internet is the marketplace we’re competing on now and that requires us to think and act like media businesses.

As Gary said: “producing content is now the BASELINE, for all brands and companies.

If we don’t produce content for consumers, we don’t exist to them where they go to discover useful information related to our industries.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The New Media Game

The internet changed the way we communicate and discover new things.

We now search for information in browsers and search engines and content is what we expect to receive as consumers.

The process of created content for brands has presented obstacles and headaches no doubt.

But it has also unlocked a lot more opportunities for companies willing to put in the time and effort to create valuable content to inform their industries.

 

 

Benefits of Being a Media Brand

Companies and individuals who create content (just like a media company) will earn a few pretty cool things like:

  • Brand awareness
  • Lead generation
  • Website traffic

 

Benefits to NOT Being a Media Brand

And companies that fail to adapt will earn some not so cool things like:

  • Lack of new leads
  • No brand growth
  • No subject matter authority

I’m with with Gary on this.

If we’re not creating content and telling our stories online, we can’t expect to grow with it.

 

Skeptical? I like you… me too!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

That’s why you shouldn’t take my word for it, take it from the guy that’s created a 800+ person agency creating amazing content for his audience.

And who has been saying this long before I caught onto it…

 

WATCH THIS:

 

Go be a positive voice for your industry!

Create and share content that adds value to the audience you serve.

 

Need help doing that? Head over here and learn the 5 ways C-Suite Media can help make the shift into creating your media brand.

For more information visit tylerhayzlett.com