I’m sure you have heard this before: Marketing is both art and science, wisdom and magic.
I very much believe that’s true. But lately, marketing evolution has leaned hard
on anything but magic or art. This thought came to me when I was sent an industry survey that asked which ads I had recently seen or encountered that made me think, laugh, take notice, etc.
I
thought about it, and: nothing. Nothing I had recently encountered made me stop in my tracks and look up the message or sender -- or do anything else to reconnect with it.
And when I thought
about it a little longer, all examples I could think of were in my past -- and mostly from TV. Have I really not recently seen an online, print or outdoor ad so interesting, surprising or
engaging that it made me think again about the message sender? Have you?
Which made me wonder if I could recall an advertiser who has even attempted that kind of messaging? Is the relentless
onslaught of Geico, State Farm or Progressive ads doing anything for me? Are the commercial breaks in the local evening news, literally filled only with car ads and drive-by law firms, making me
rethink their role in my life? Is the ridiculous amount of retargeting that some retailers let loose hitting me in any kind of positive way?
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Sure, I have bought stuff I saw advertised on
Instagram. I have clicked on links if the offer appeared to be relevant. But I can’t remember anything that showcased a brand’s wisdom and magic -- the alchemy of art and science.
It seems that with all the wisdom and science we (supposedly) have injected into marketing, we have lost the art of magic. To repeat another one of my favorite marketer quotes: “We have more
data than we have ever had before, and I am more confused than ever.”
Clearly data and consumer insights are leaning on the practical, the doable, the cost-per-click,
ROI-to-action-driven dashboards that each marketer covets. Useful goals, sure, but magical outcomes, no.
What also gets in the way: overreliance on marketing manufacturing processes that do
not allow for time spent on thinking, noodling, brainstorming or other ways to find inspiration. Procurement is trying to corral each step for contributors in hours and cost, which is often in direct
contradiction to inspiration and creativity.
Am I against data science? Of course not. Neither am I against process-building and process alignment. But I am a big proponent of allocating time,
resources, and opportunity to let the magic happen.
And before the performance marketing jockeys and procurement guys all jump on me: Of course, I want marketing to aid sales and brand
performance. I want to grow healthy brands and businesses. But I believe that growth is delivered best when we allow for the wisdom AND the magic. The art AND the science.
That takes a
conscious effort. You may need to fight for an extra week and hourly cost in the work process to allow teams to figure stuff out and tease out the magic.
Because next time I am sent that
survey, I want to be able to share at least three memorable brand engagements -- and perhaps one that convinced me to buy.