As managers we should never forget that the first inclination most of our employees will have is to please us, to tell us everything is under control. When we say "Do you understand?" the immediate answer is "Got it!" But is it true. Now I'll start asking twice. Because it's in the second - or even third - question that the employee starts to feel your genuine concern and curiosity.
Attention is the world's most valuable currency. Speed kills, and the things it kills most often are trust and effectiveness.
Technologies and publishing models change. But sales objections are forever. And this post from December 2014 is evergreen.
A couple of years ago in this space, I wrote about objections that we hear from…
I just ordered my copy of "Black Ops Advertising: Native Ads, Content Marketing and the Covert World of the Digital Sell" by former media exec Mara Einstein. If you're not going to do the same, then at…
If you're reading this post you probably have a job that's connected to digital marketing and advertising. And whether your company had a wonderful year or a terrible one, whether you're the right or wrong…
Before anyone can feel interested, they need to feel interesting. We all carry around the powerful currency of our attention with us every day, and most of us never really spend any of it. When we do, we simply get more of everything we want out of life and work. So regardless of the situation, regardless of the need, regardless of who you're dealing with, put away your phone, shut your laptop, look up and pay full attention. You'll be amazed at what you've been missing...and what you'll get back.
Those who read this blog regularly know that I don't use it for personal expression very often: you open and read The Drift because it offers perspective on sales and our digital marketing world. The last…
Quiet down now. Don't speak, just for a little bit. Let the moment marinate. Most of us in sales are running over-programmed sales calls in which every pause, every quiet second, is something to be filled and patched over like so many cracks in a leaky boat. We believe that there is just so much to say and explain that to waste even a second means perhaps missing the one point or feature that might create the magic moment. But it's a fool's errand: the magic moments were there all along....we just talked over them. Empty seconds of silence are actually filled with anticipation, consideration, curiosity. They are the wellsprings of customer collaboration and commitment to the idea. But as the seller you have to do more than just listen. You have to program these white space moments into your sales calls.
Some will find the ceaseless march of change terrifying. Others will be exhilarated by it. But it's a fact for us all. If you're not questioning your current assumptions and business plan, you're already starting to lose control of your future. Stop obsessing about the latest micro-controversy about the details of attribution or viewability or header bidding. Start paying very close attention to consumer behavior and media consumption. If it's faster, more mobile, more video enhanced, more private, easier or cooler, consumers will adopt it. And once they do, they never, ever go backward.
Thinking about how to navigate your career during these murky times? Maybe what you need is a North Star...and some timeless rules about how and where to focus. This January 2015 post may be just the thing.
It's…
Last week in this space I published a post called "The Full Service Publisher," in which I speculated that media companies were stepping into the full-service void created by decades of ad agency fragmentation…
First there's understanding the client's objective: Which feature of their product do they need customers to better understand? To which competitor are they trying to compare themselves favorably? Then…