
04.17.01
Don't be one of THOSE people. You know the ones. They promote their
websites like they're the best thing since the discovery of the mind
warping properties of fermented fruit. Stick to the truth in your
promotion efforts. Make your site seem special, but don't go
overboard.
Michael McDonald and Stephanie Mitchell
The PromoteNewz Team
School's out and yesterday I submitted my students' final grades to
the registrar's office. What a relief! Grading is probably the most
lengthy and arduous part of my duties as a college professor -- I'm
quite sure it's the same for most teachers. This semester, with over
100 essays (each averaging 30-50 pages) and 200 final exams, it took
me well over two full weeks to finally emerge from the avalanche.
It's no wonder though.
Students had a lot about which to write this semester, especially
when compared to previous ones. (For example, we've experienced
Y2K's whimper, legal battles in the supposedly unbreakable high-tech
industry, stock market roller coaster rides, protests in Seattle and
Washington, and so on.)
But the exciting part -- yes, there is a fun part in all of this --
was to discover that some of my students recognized what they believe
to be the catalyst behind much of these events. It's people. Human
beings. According to one, we are successfully managing the heap of
information that is being thrown at us. We are making more conscious
decisions. We are filtering the important from the redundant. And we
are taking everything we encounter with a grain of salt.
Undeniably, some tools help us to do such. But in essence, we are
becoming more sophisticated and educated than ever before -- surely
the result of this "Age of Information" (an expression that's all too
common these days).
For instance, new information management applications (such as online
shopping comparison tools, like MySimon at www.mysimon.com or
EvenBetter Express at www.evenbetter.com), as well as new
Internet legislation (such as Canada's Privacy Bill C-6), among many
others, all give the individual -- not high-tech corporations -- the
ability to shape the Internet.
On my way to college while listening to the radio in my car, I heard
an interesting remark that not only made sense to me but also
expressed what my students were debating. Stephen Covey, author of
"The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People" (see www.franklincovey.com), arrived in Ottawa yesterday for a
seminar he'll be delivering here.
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Whether such things are really geared for the individual, and whether
they are legal or ethical (such as with the case of contested MP3
file swapper Napster), are different debates of which I'm not
prepared to be a part. But in my mind however, these are some of the
many examples that we are experiencing Naisbitt's "high-tech,
high-touch" mega-trend (discussed in his book of the same name) --
for more, see www.hightechhightouch.com.
The bottom-line is that it all comes down to the individual.
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His firm, which is a leadership management consulting company, is one
of the most respected of its kind. And since Ottawa is also known as
"Silicon Valley North" (home of the likes of Nortel Networks, BCE, Cognos, JDS
Uniphase, Corel and many others), Stephen Covey's
audience will no doubt comprise high-tech management types. So Covey,
poised to speak to this type of audience, pointed out while being
interviewed from his limo on his way from the airport that the world
is right now in a state of transition.
I found his comment interesting. However, what followed really
clicked. Covey said: "The world is slowly shifting from the 'Age of
Information' to the 'Age of Wisdom'." We are slowly recognizing that
the Internet is truly for the people, by the people. And no matter
where the Internet and ecommerce go, like it or not it really all
comes down to the individual -- the driving force behind the web.
Does Internet marketing fall in the same boat? Do we need to
recognize the individual in our promotional and sales efforts?
Absolutely. In the very least, we need to do so more than ever
before. For over a decade we've been habituated to speak to a
computer screen or to communicate with others within that narrow
frame of mind, all the while forgetting, to some extent, that there's
a real, live person on the other end.
Flamers in discussion groups keep telling others to never take their
abrasive comments personally. Spammers keep invoking their rights
over those of others when in the process of pushing their wares.
And Internet marketers keep focusing on their clients' purses (such
as with sales puffery on their website copy or obfuscated diatribe
from their customer service departments, among many others), and not
on their clients' hearts and minds.
Sadly, we see this trend growing everyday.
But if it is growing, or just the fact that such activities do occur,
then there is a reality behind it all. It is that there are human
beings behind these electronic veils -- real people with wants, goals
and desires. And in this age of wisdom, we are slowly recognizing
that Internet marketing success is solidly grounded on people and how
we treat them. If this wasn't the case, the need to justify our
actions, as in the above examples, wouldn't be as prominent as it is.
My friend Bob McElwain, of www.SiteTipsAndTricks.com, sums it
best as he stresses this undeniable truth in his latest article,
"Does Your Site Tell the Truth?" To quote his final paragraph, Bob
states: "If you lack great copywriting skills, give some thought to
sticking to the facts and the truth; it's a giant step toward a
relationship of trust." And there's the magical word, the foundation
of truly successful Internet marketing in this age of wisdom:
"Trust."
Michel Fortin is an author, speaker and marketing consultant
dedicated to turning businesses into powerful magnets. Visit SuccessDoctor.com. He is also the editor of the "Internet
Marketing Chronicles" delivered weekly to 125,000 subscribers --
subscribe free at SuccessDoctor.com.
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