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Hub You - One Thing They Never Taught You Whilst Working In An Advertising Agency - Or A Marketing Department
Where Should the First Franchise of the World Franchise System Be? An organization needs to be formed in order to help emerging nations come into the first world and alleviate some of the unbelievable strife and horrific human living conditions the people there face. Indeed, we need to help third world nations move forward, because what is going on now simply does not work and it is causing a problem as more money, aid and food are delivered, as the problem continues to get worse each year.Franchising Nations or systems to run nations makes sense for many reasons and this is why the World Franchise System must be created. But what nation would be the most likely first candidate to become a franchise. Any ideas on that; Yes I have a few nations in mind. I only need one to prove concept. I choose Cuba.Why Cuba, because it is not in terrible shape and it is close and it is workable after Fidel Castro reign ends. Indeed, although, no one has given me the choice this makes the most sense to start. Then I am ready to do three smaller nations and show how the system can work no matter what level the nations are at. To prove this I then would choose Mexico. The goal, we want to franchise the World. We need to Franchise the World.Look Communism does not work and socialism is a free fall to under whelming productivity issues. It is a flat spin, death spiral, watching the ground get closer until you have to eject. We must find a way to p So they happily carry on the usual treadmill of crafting messages. In the form of advertisements; press releases; TV commercials and many other forms of what they genuinely believe is ‘communication’. Marketing departments, through their handmaiden advertising agency paint a happy picture but no one out there in the real world of family life, believe what they are delivering and trying to force on them. The reality is, we all know better and have been taught by a lifetime of experience to turn down the volume when confronted with a TV commercial explaining that the product is the best and brightest available or failing that, even walk out of the room and do something else. But more of that little reality check, later. The old way of advertising, pouring out vast amounts of information in the desperate hope that somebody somewhere will connect certainly had one effect, it depersonalised and dehumanised the whole process of communication. Thus wasting even more millions of Client money! Consider their model of reach and frequency, who does this really serve? Does it serve the consumer, or does it provide the revenue the advertiser seeks? It was so easy in fact, that each adult person in this country, according to a client we were discussing this with, receives an average of 3,000 advertising messages a day. We call it commercial clutter. More appropriately, it should be called ‘meaningless noise’. Just consider the ways in which your customer can enter into a dialogue with you? You may have an 0800 number, which would be a good start if they could speak to a real person. But in these days of automation and wit No Sweat, No Tears. DIY Business Card Design Tool And that’s the human desire for interaction,You read it right. There is a business card online design tool you can use to create your very own business cards design. And it doesn’t require any downloading, installing any new programs or using any compatible software.The business card design tool is an online feature you can easily use to personalize your own business cards. Now you can explore your imaginative side and dig your hands into crafting your own style of business cards.The business card online design tool allows you to play with it, tinker with your design and add other details templates in other online printers would not allow you to do. It operates at your command without complicated steps and operations. Unlike professional programs used for creating graphic designs, the business card online design tool will only take you seconds to master. Its user friendly interface allows you to explore and manipulate your design at will.With the business card online design tool, you no longer have to depend on professional help. You can make business cards expertly by yourself with our easy to follow step by step procedure.Step 1 When you click on the online design tool, it will take you to a page where you have to put in your contact details. This, of course, includes your company or line of business, company slogan, name, position, phone numbers, fax number, email address and website address. If this had been taught and the lesson put into everyday practise then billions of pounds and dollars would never have been poured down the black hole of television advertising! So let’s review that desire in terms of the marketing of products and, at the same time, hope that those people working in or with advertising agencies read this simple lesson and learn a little of what they should have already known and been doing on behalf of their clients. All advertising is a form of learning whereby the advertiser is asking people to change their behaviour after learning the benefits of the products or services on offer. However, we all tend to filter out information, which we do not want to hear. This clearly alters the effectiveness of conventional advertising in quite a dramatic way. The final purchase decision is invariably a compromise and this leads to a certain amount of anxiety; the worry that perhaps the decision was not the best or the right one. In order to minimise this anxiety the purchaser seeks to reinforce their choice and begins to take more notice of their chosen product’s marketing communications. Due to a lack of understanding of the communication process we have created a media society during the past 40 or 50 years, where the whole process has been de-humanised. There is now an extraordinary reduction in interaction because conventional advertising and marketing have become a one-way practice whereby information is disseminated in a passive form. But, people still have this desire to be taken account of. To affect change, to learn and personalise their relationship with their environment. There are a phenomenal number of reasons that cause people to interact, going far beyond just giving them things. When people agree to participate in truly interactive marketing programmes they are told that their efforts and feedback are of positive help to the advertisers. And most important to the advertisers, by participating and becoming involved, they then learn and understand the advertising message and do so at their own pace and to fit in with their schedule. Consequently, because they are being involved in the process of developing the product or service, it starts to re- personalise their relationship with the advertiser and their products. This takes the consumer through the barrier of not wanting to address change and takes that compromise, the anxiety and worry that perhaps the decision was not the best or the right one, out of the equation. In other words, there is no reason why they should not change from their usual brand in favour of this alternative that they have now learned, fulfils their needs better. And isn’t this the ultimate market the advertiser is after – the people who use his competitors’ products. Now the consumer can say, “Yes, I will change my behaviour and I have a very good reason or series of reasons why”. They can adopt this position because they have a well-in-formed opinion or have developed an image of why that product is appropriate for their needs. Now the long silence – the industrial interruption of the human conversation is coming to an end. With interactive communication every product you can think of, from fashion to office supplies, can be discussed, and argued over. Rather like the olden days when one went to the open-air market to do just that! With one important exception, the manufacturer can now become involved with this give and take to every ones advantage! People want to talk about value. But the value of a product and the company that sells them. Not just the price of something, reputation, position and every other quality that can be subject to an opinion! It has always been that way. The most effective form of advertising that there has ever been is word of mouth, which is of course, nothing more than a conversation. But as we have examined, conventional advertising and marketing give little or no opportunity for the ‘audience’ to engage in any kind of conversation about the product or the company. No opportunity to discuss value, reputation, position. It simply sends out a message of sorts, albeit a nice looking one with sublime attention to production values that in turn reflect the values of the brand. But if it isn’t telling the audience the information they desire and seek to make a decision or reinforce a decision already made, then just who is listening and who is it for? More dangerous for advertising-as-usual, is that one-way advertising doesn’t enable customers to learn the truth behind product claims. If true marketing is a conversation and there’s no allowance made for a return message, a feedback from the customer, then what does advertising-as-usual actually do? We hold the strong view that advertising-as-usual in any form and for any subject, is pitiable. It’s not funny. It most certainly is not interesting and it doesn’t even know who we, the customers are, or seemingly care for that matter. All advertising-as-usual wants us to do is buy! Without a doubt TV is the best medium ever created for advertising-as-usual. The trouble is it doesn’t actually sell a great deal of product! Why? Consider this, you might well think that Marketing Departments and their Advertising Agencies talk about communication and sales. Put simply… they don’t! As we have discussed, within an advertising agency scant attention, if any, is paid to the actual process of communication and as for an interest in sales, well that’s a joke, to put it bluntly. They are concerned with crafting messages, But not to sell product, If they did surely they would be happy enough to be paid upon results. Actual changes in behaviour and actual sales increases resulting from the advertising they have created. Are we alone in never having come across any agency willing to adopt this stance? The Creative Director loves to produce TV commercials smart enough to include on their show reel. And who knows, like some of his predecessors’ maybe they might get to direct a movie. The Account Director? All he wants to do is keep the Client happy. Nobody, it seems, is really concerned with the actual job of selling a product, apart from, of course, the client. Sadly, however, they in turn are fed the belief that creativity is King. They get sucked in to advertising-as-usual, because after all, doesn’t the agency know best? Isn’t that what he is paying them for? And don’t they have years of experience and expertise? Well yes they do but expertise in, yes, you’re getting there… advertising-as-usual. So they happily carry on the usual treadmill of crafting messages. In the form of advertisements; press releases; TV commercials and many other forms of what they genuinely believe is ‘communication’. Marketing departments, through their handmaiden advertising agency paint a happy picture but no one out there in the real world of family life, believe what they are delivering and trying to force on them. The reality is, we all know better and have been taught by a lifetime of experience to turn down the volume when confronted with a TV commercial explaining that the product is the best and brightest available or failing that, even walk out of the room and do something else. But more of that little reality check, later. The old way of advertising, pouring out vast amounts of information in the desperate hope that somebody somewhere will connect certainly had one effect, it depersonalised and dehumanised the whole process of communication. Thus wasting even more millions of Client money! Consider their model of reach and frequency, who does this really serve? Does it serve the consumer, or does it provide the revenue the advertiser seeks? It was so easy in fact, that each adult person in this country, according to a client we were discussing this with, receives an average of 3,000 advertising messages a day. We call it commercial clutter. More appropriately, it should be called ‘meaningless noise’. Just consider the ways in which your customer can enter into a dialogue with you? You may have an 0800 number, which would be a good start if they could speak to a real person. But in these days of automation and with Can't Find A Job? onship with their environment. There are a phenomenal number of reasons that cause people to interact, going far beyond just giving them things.Why can’t I find a job?If you’ve been asking yourself this question recently, trust me you’re not alone.Searching for a new job can be a difficult and frustrating task especially when you are out of work or when you are in a job you hate and want to escape.If you can’t find a job and are increasingly frustrated with your lack of results, let’s look at the possible reasons for this outcome: 1. You are not getting interviews: If you aren’t getting interviews, your resume and cover letter are not doing their jobs. Their job is to get you interviews. Either that, or you are applying for the wrong jobs. Your resume and cover letter need to sell you to the employer and show them why you are the best person for the job. Alternatively, are you applying for jobs you really have no chance of getting? If so, don’t waste your time or the time of the employer who might eventually have a job that suits you that you should be applying for.2. You are getting interviews but not job offers. If you are unable to close the deal in the interview process, look for possible problems: Are you coming across as too aggressive or laid back during interviews? Are you asking for too much money? Is your style of dress turning interviewers off? Are you better on paper than you are in person? Get as much feedback as possible (ask for positive and negative fe When people agree to participate in truly interactive marketing programmes they are told that their efforts and feedback are of positive help to the advertisers. And most important to the advertisers, by participating and becoming involved, they then learn and understand the advertising message and do so at their own pace and to fit in with their schedule. Consequently, because they are being involved in the process of developing the product or service, it starts to re- personalise their relationship with the advertiser and their products. This takes the consumer through the barrier of not wanting to address change and takes that compromise, the anxiety and worry that perhaps the decision was not the best or the right one, out of the equation. In other words, there is no reason why they should not change from their usual brand in favour of this alternative that they have now learned, fulfils their needs better. And isn’t this the ultimate market the advertiser is after – the people who use his competitors’ products. Now the consumer can say, “Yes, I will change my behaviour and I have a very good reason or series of reasons why”. They can adopt this position because they have a well-in-formed opinion or have developed an image of why that product is appropriate for their needs. Now the long silence – the industrial interruption of the human conversation is coming to an end. With interactive communication every product you can think of, from fashion to office supplies, can be discussed, and argued over. Rather like the olden days when one went to the open-air market to do just that! With one important exception, the manufacturer can now become involved with this give and take to every ones advantage! People want to talk about value. But the value of a product and the company that sells them. Not just the price of something, reputation, position and every other quality that can be subject to an opinion! It has always been that way. The most effective form of advertising that there has ever been is word of mouth, which is of course, nothing more than a conversation. But as we have examined, conventional advertising and marketing give little or no opportunity for the ‘audience’ to engage in any kind of conversation about the product or the company. No opportunity to discuss value, reputation, position. It simply sends out a message of sorts, albeit a nice looking one with sublime attention to production values that in turn reflect the values of the brand. But if it isn’t telling the audience the information they desire and seek to make a decision or reinforce a decision already made, then just who is listening and who is it for? More dangerous for advertising-as-usual, is that one-way advertising doesn’t enable customers to learn the truth behind product claims. If true marketing is a conversation and there’s no allowance made for a return message, a feedback from the customer, then what does advertising-as-usual actually do? We hold the strong view that advertising-as-usual in any form and for any subject, is pitiable. It’s not funny. It most certainly is not interesting and it doesn’t even know who we, the customers are, or seemingly care for that matter. All advertising-as-usual wants us to do is buy! Without a doubt TV is the best medium ever created for advertising-as-usual. The trouble is it doesn’t actually sell a great deal of product! Why? Consider this, you might well think that Marketing Departments and their Advertising Agencies talk about communication and sales. Put simply… they don’t! As we have discussed, within an advertising agency scant attention, if any, is paid to the actual process of communication and as for an interest in sales, well that’s a joke, to put it bluntly. They are concerned with crafting messages, But not to sell product, If they did surely they would be happy enough to be paid upon results. Actual changes in behaviour and actual sales increases resulting from the advertising they have created. Are we alone in never having come across any agency willing to adopt this stance? The Creative Director loves to produce TV commercials smart enough to include on their show reel. And who knows, like some of his predecessors’ maybe they might get to direct a movie. The Account Director? All he wants to do is keep the Client happy. Nobody, it seems, is really concerned with the actual job of selling a product, apart from, of course, the client. Sadly, however, they in turn are fed the belief that creativity is King. They get sucked in to advertising-as-usual, because after all, doesn’t the agency know best? Isn’t that what he is paying them for? And don’t they have years of experience and expertise? Well yes they do but expertise in, yes, you’re getting there… advertising-as-usual. So they happily carry on the usual treadmill of crafting messages. In the form of advertisements; press releases; TV commercials and many other forms of what they genuinely believe is ‘communication’. Marketing departments, through their handmaiden advertising agency paint a happy picture but no one out there in the real world of family life, believe what they are delivering and trying to force on them. The reality is, we all know better and have been taught by a lifetime of experience to turn down the volume when confronted with a TV commercial explaining that the product is the best and brightest available or failing that, even walk out of the room and do something else. But more of that little reality check, later. The old way of advertising, pouring out vast amounts of information in the desperate hope that somebody somewhere will connect certainly had one effect, it depersonalised and dehumanised the whole process of communication. Thus wasting even more millions of Client money! Consider their model of reach and frequency, who does this really serve? Does it serve the consumer, or does it provide the revenue the advertiser seeks? It was so easy in fact, that each adult person in this country, according to a client we were discussing this with, receives an average of 3,000 advertising messages a day. We call it commercial clutter. More appropriately, it should be called ‘meaningless noise’. Just consider the ways in which your customer can enter into a dialogue with you? You may have an 0800 number, which would be a good start if they could speak to a real person. But in these days of automation and wit Trends in the UK Wood Panle Market discussed, and argued over. Rather like the olden days when one went to the open-air market to do just that!Wood-based panels are a part of the general timber industry, one of the UK’s largest and most diverse business sectors. The increasing globalisation of key industry sectors such as the timber industry means that they are more easily affected by a wide range of influences including:* Over-capacity in some regions and under-supply in others; * Consolidation of supplier networks; * Raw material shortages; * Increases in input costs such as energy and labour.The UK wood-based panels market grew by 26% in value terms between 2000 and 2006, showing moderate but consistent growth of between 2% and 4% per annum, apart from 2003/4 when growth reached 11%.The 11% growth in 2004 was encouraged, in part, by a general upturn in the economy after a few years of recession, but was also due to a number of other factors, including a strengthening of demand for particleboard, which peaked in the last quarter of 2004 with some manufacturers reporting up to 10-week lead times. MDF and OSB also enjoyed strong demand as well as record output throughout the European market as well as within the UK, and the cost of plywood is also reported to have skyrocketed during 2004, further increasing market value. Good growth therefore occurred in 2004 despite a slowdown in the furniture sector which was experiencing a drop in demand, consolidation and some loss of production t With one important exception, the manufacturer can now become involved with this give and take to every ones advantage! People want to talk about value. But the value of a product and the company that sells them. Not just the price of something, reputation, position and every other quality that can be subject to an opinion! It has always been that way. The most effective form of advertising that there has ever been is word of mouth, which is of course, nothing more than a conversation. But as we have examined, conventional advertising and marketing give little or no opportunity for the ‘audience’ to engage in any kind of conversation about the product or the company. No opportunity to discuss value, reputation, position. It simply sends out a message of sorts, albeit a nice looking one with sublime attention to production values that in turn reflect the values of the brand. But if it isn’t telling the audience the information they desire and seek to make a decision or reinforce a decision already made, then just who is listening and who is it for? More dangerous for advertising-as-usual, is that one-way advertising doesn’t enable customers to learn the truth behind product claims. If true marketing is a conversation and there’s no allowance made for a return message, a feedback from the customer, then what does advertising-as-usual actually do? We hold the strong view that advertising-as-usual in any form and for any subject, is pitiable. It’s not funny. It most certainly is not interesting and it doesn’t even know who we, the customers are, or seemingly care for that matter. All advertising-as-usual wants us to do is buy! Without a doubt TV is the best medium ever created for advertising-as-usual. The trouble is it doesn’t actually sell a great deal of product! Why? Consider this, you might well think that Marketing Departments and their Advertising Agencies talk about communication and sales. Put simply… they don’t! As we have discussed, within an advertising agency scant attention, if any, is paid to the actual process of communication and as for an interest in sales, well that’s a joke, to put it bluntly. They are concerned with crafting messages, But not to sell product, If they did surely they would be happy enough to be paid upon results. Actual changes in behaviour and actual sales increases resulting from the advertising they have created. Are we alone in never having come across any agency willing to adopt this stance? The Creative Director loves to produce TV commercials smart enough to include on their show reel. And who knows, like some of his predecessors’ maybe they might get to direct a movie. The Account Director? All he wants to do is keep the Client happy. Nobody, it seems, is really concerned with the actual job of selling a product, apart from, of course, the client. Sadly, however, they in turn are fed the belief that creativity is King. They get sucked in to advertising-as-usual, because after all, doesn’t the agency know best? Isn’t that what he is paying them for? And don’t they have years of experience and expertise? Well yes they do but expertise in, yes, you’re getting there… advertising-as-usual. So they happily carry on the usual treadmill of crafting messages. In the form of advertisements; press releases; TV commercials and many other forms of what they genuinely believe is ‘communication’. Marketing departments, through their handmaiden advertising agency paint a happy picture but no one out there in the real world of family life, believe what they are delivering and trying to force on them. The reality is, we all know better and have been taught by a lifetime of experience to turn down the volume when confronted with a TV commercial explaining that the product is the best and brightest available or failing that, even walk out of the room and do something else. But more of that little reality check, later. The old way of advertising, pouring out vast amounts of information in the desperate hope that somebody somewhere will connect certainly had one effect, it depersonalised and dehumanised the whole process of communication. Thus wasting even more millions of Client money! Consider their model of reach and frequency, who does this really serve? Does it serve the consumer, or does it provide the revenue the advertiser seeks? It was so easy in fact, that each adult person in this country, according to a client we were discussing this with, receives an average of 3,000 advertising messages a day. We call it commercial clutter. More appropriately, it should be called ‘meaningless noise’. Just consider the ways in which your customer can enter into a dialogue with you? You may have an 0800 number, which would be a good start if they could speak to a real person. But in these days of automation and wit I Really, Really Want to Be a Hairdresser ow who we, the customers are, or seemingly care for that matter. All advertising-as-usual wants us to do is buy!Hairdresser-Training is a no nonsense way of learning hairdressing skills and techniques, its focus is on the learner and how we as hairdressers learn, using our psychomotor skills, (I will go into this later).What do you actually need to know to become a Hairdresser? Do you need to know how sulphur bond react or what chemicals are contained in shampoos, I know you need to know how to test for an “S bend” when perming, I look for 3 indicators, and that a neutraliser “Fixes” the curl in place. Fast track teaches you what you need to know with a no frills approach.Unfortunately the piece of paper you have studied so long and hard for does not always make you a good hairdresser.How good you are at your hairdressing skills, how well you cut hair, or the results you get from colouring and perming, are the indicators a client will look at.I go back to the opening paragraph, Hairdresser-Training is a no nonsense way of learning hairdressing skills and techniques, its focus is on the learner and how we as hairdressers learn, using our psychomotor skills.There are two main areas of learning, Cognitive, (knowing) and Psychomotor, (doing).Cognitive, is academic based, reading instructions is a good example, so if I was to ask someone with good academic skills to assemble a wardrobe for instance, I would give them a set of written instructions and Without a doubt TV is the best medium ever created for advertising-as-usual. The trouble is it doesn’t actually sell a great deal of product! Why? Consider this, you might well think that Marketing Departments and their Advertising Agencies talk about communication and sales. Put simply… they don’t! As we have discussed, within an advertising agency scant attention, if any, is paid to the actual process of communication and as for an interest in sales, well that’s a joke, to put it bluntly. They are concerned with crafting messages, But not to sell product, If they did surely they would be happy enough to be paid upon results. Actual changes in behaviour and actual sales increases resulting from the advertising they have created. Are we alone in never having come across any agency willing to adopt this stance? The Creative Director loves to produce TV commercials smart enough to include on their show reel. And who knows, like some of his predecessors’ maybe they might get to direct a movie. The Account Director? All he wants to do is keep the Client happy. Nobody, it seems, is really concerned with the actual job of selling a product, apart from, of course, the client. Sadly, however, they in turn are fed the belief that creativity is King. They get sucked in to advertising-as-usual, because after all, doesn’t the agency know best? Isn’t that what he is paying them for? And don’t they have years of experience and expertise? Well yes they do but expertise in, yes, you’re getting there… advertising-as-usual. So they happily carry on the usual treadmill of crafting messages. In the form of advertisements; press releases; TV commercials and many other forms of what they genuinely believe is ‘communication’. Marketing departments, through their handmaiden advertising agency paint a happy picture but no one out there in the real world of family life, believe what they are delivering and trying to force on them. The reality is, we all know better and have been taught by a lifetime of experience to turn down the volume when confronted with a TV commercial explaining that the product is the best and brightest available or failing that, even walk out of the room and do something else. But more of that little reality check, later. The old way of advertising, pouring out vast amounts of information in the desperate hope that somebody somewhere will connect certainly had one effect, it depersonalised and dehumanised the whole process of communication. Thus wasting even more millions of Client money! Consider their model of reach and frequency, who does this really serve? Does it serve the consumer, or does it provide the revenue the advertiser seeks? It was so easy in fact, that each adult person in this country, according to a client we were discussing this with, receives an average of 3,000 advertising messages a day. We call it commercial clutter. More appropriately, it should be called ‘meaningless noise’. Just consider the ways in which your customer can enter into a dialogue with you? You may have an 0800 number, which would be a good start if they could speak to a real person. But in these days of automation and wit Management Team Section of Business Plans Writing an award winning business plan is a great skill, but rather than winning any awards you need to get funded. In order to be funded the bank, venture capital firm or even family members need to be sure they will either be paid back or receive their required return on investment. To succeed in business you need a quality management team one, which can move you thru the rough waters of start-up and control the ship as you sail away from the competition.Here are some pointers for your Management Section. Keep the information tight, short and sweet. Use a consolidated approach to cutting down resumes to two-three paragraphs of each team member. If you are a sole proprietor and will be the only one in the company do not exceed two-pages of resume and remove the fluff. Below is a sample Management section for a business plan minus the resumes of the team members. It is written for a simple business to illustrate the points; a mobile car wash company which is part of a franchise system. This sample will help you in your mission to write an exceptional management section of your next business plan.- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Management:(Insert Name of Franchisee) will be the owner and sole proprietor. He will be the owner/operator of the first car wash truck in this exclusive territory. He is qualified as a manager having completed The Car Wash School So they happily carry on the usual treadmill of crafting messages. In the form of advertisements; press releases; TV commercials and many other forms of what they genuinely believe is ‘communication’. Marketing departments, through their handmaiden advertising agency paint a happy picture but no one out there in the real world of family life, believe what they are delivering and trying to force on them. The reality is, we all know better and have been taught by a lifetime of experience to turn down the volume when confronted with a TV commercial explaining that the product is the best and brightest available or failing that, even walk out of the room and do something else. But more of that little reality check, later. The old way of advertising, pouring out vast amounts of information in the desperate hope that somebody somewhere will connect certainly had one effect, it depersonalised and dehumanised the whole process of communication. Thus wasting even more millions of Client money! Consider their model of reach and frequency, who does this really serve? Does it serve the consumer, or does it provide the revenue the advertiser seeks? It was so easy in fact, that each adult person in this country, according to a client we were discussing this with, receives an average of 3,000 advertising messages a day. We call it commercial clutter. More appropriately, it should be called ‘meaningless noise’. Just consider the ways in which your customer can enter into a dialogue with you? You may have an 0800 number, which would be a good start if they could speak to a real person. But in these days of automation and with luck, eventually getting through to a call centre, unless you tire with frustration or collapse with fatigue, where is the dialogue there? Hey, they could go to the trouble of writing to you. But they are making the effort of putting pen to paper or more likely, tapping the keyboard keys these days. Then they have to buy a stamp unless freepost is provided. Then the letter has to be posted. And finally, they sit and hope that it does indeed reach the right person and that their message is responded to. And sadly, it is often the case that the process takes so long that they have lost interest but more importantly lost FAITH in your company and your product. And everyone in marketing is fully aware that it costs more to find a customer than it does to keep one. But so far there has not been much opportunity to easily talk to you! One of the problems that Advertising has created is the process of dehumanising people. Advertising apparently, forgets that every customer and every prospective customer is a human being with a constantly evolving set of attitudes and opinions. And if Advertising is aware, then it does so very little to cater for this all important human factor. The other problem is advertising agencies don’t realise that customers don’t really like advertisements! One agency had this statement on the briefing form for their creative brief, “The audience doesn’t like you, doesn’t trust you, and they can get rid of you immediately. Now go and create some advertising.” Precisely summing up the essence of today’s adversarial relationship between the customer and advertising people. They really don’t like each other, customers tolerate advertisements but they don’t really like them in terms of the content. However, when you create a dialogue out of your advertising it turns passive information into active, meaningful advertising and actually alters behaviour during the learning process. It cuts through the psychological barriers, which prevent the individual from changing their attitude and behaviour towards brands Interactive Communication suits the New Consumer! Interactive Communication, in whatever form reflects a shift from monologue to dialogue, in dealing with customers. The results are a reversal of traditional consumer and producer roles, with the consumer dictating exactly how he or she would like to be served. New customers expect to asked about their individual preferences and treated – to the most extreme degree possible – as if these preferences are being respected. This is and should be now, the future of advertising and the mainstay of Advertising Agencies, television commercials, will hardly be immune from these forces of change.
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