4 responses to “Thoughts on marketers and marketing”
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My problem with marketing directors is that they don’t seem to do much marketing – they administrate a process of outsourcing lots of activities to third parties and get promoted on the basis of the size of the budget they manage. Or is that unfair?
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I can see your point, and yes that does happen a lot. Like most things, there’s extremes and both ends – but I think the above is fine, so long as they actually take the advice of the third parties!!
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Hi Mr. Northern,
Happy New Year! It’s been a while since I replied so hope everything’s good up in the good old North.
I joined a marketing company last year after I had spent the majority of my career outside of creative companies but as an inhouse creative. The first thing that struck me is how logistically driven the industry is. Management of the job comes first and creativity seems to fit into that. Maybe I’m just naive but I would have liekd to have thought it should be the other way around.
Saying that – my job now is as that creative type person and the people who deal with the accounts are very good at creative stuff.
So there you go – a typical Monday morning post. Trying to say 8 things but fail in all of them.
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Interesting to hear you say that the “cold, rational side” generally triumphs.
My impression is that the single greatest deficiency in most marketers is anything resembling analytical or reasoning skills.
As a creative, I don’t have a lot of face-to-face experience with clients to back this up.
But based on the reasons that filter through from suits as to why clients do and don’t like certain concepts, and the reasoning behind the changes they ask for, it really seems like a lot of them don’t understand what they’re buying.
That’s not to say they’re stupid. The few clients i have met have been articulate, curious, engaged people. But analytical skills have to be learnt. just like any others.
People used to make a disctinction between tertiary courses that teach “how to do” and those that teach “how to think”. I wonder if marketing degrees ought to involve more of the less of the former and more of the latter.LikeLike

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