Creating Opportunities
“Helen Woodward, an influential copywriter in the 1920’s, famously warned her co-workers that “if you are advertising any product, never see the factory in which it is made…Don’t watch the people at work…because, you see, when you know the truth about anything, the real inner truth – it is very hard to write the surface fluff which sell its.” No Logo Naomi Klein
In my copy I wrote “FUCK THAT.” Doing the opposite of what Helen is trying to get at is pretty much the guiding principle for how I make my decisions and run my operations online. I only work on stuff that I like.
It’s not idealism either. When you work on subjects you’ve had a long term interest in you make connections faster, relate to the community better and work harder. In short – you’re able to actually do your job.
As we’ve see over and over again – with Fanlib and BlueCollar most recently – you cannot fake it. You can get lucky for a little while but eventually it all comes crashing down. It’s a suicide rap.
When Tom (and that other guy) started Myspace, one of the first things they did was set Tila Tequila up with an account because she’d be having problems with Friendster. The rest, we know, is history. But how did they know to do that? Because they spent enough time there to know the ins and outs of the social scene and they saw how important marquee users were. They turned personal into business, not the other way around.
There’s this delusion that marketing is about strategy or connectors or whatever. But before any of that its about knowledge of the terrain. Maybe it’s possible for you, but for me, I can’t drag myself to learn about shit I don’t care about. In other words, you can only leverage new media in areas that aren’t new at all – the ones you know backwards and forwards because they’re not business to you, they’re your life.
So new media isn’t about flickr or twitter or mixx or anything of those things. It’s about you. That might mean baseball or gossip or creepy goth people. It could and should be anything.
In terms of practical advice, what they basically means is this: Spend your time learning as much as you possibly can about what you like. The business and the social and the technological opportunities will come from that base. In fact, it’s the only place they ever have and ever will come from.
Ryan,
This is one of my favourite posts that you have written.
I read your blog often and its on my favourites bar at the top of my Firefox browser.
There’s one thing that bothers me about your site – your template doesn’t match the content of your writing.
It’s not that it’s not a good template, it just seems that you have outgrown it.
The photo doesn’t reflect your writing. It gives the impression of you as being introverted and not confident. Perhaps in trying to develop the narrative that you are not “a Tucker Max wannabee” you’ve gone a step to far to push this image.
Also the generic Rudius template, though simple and easy to read, is boring.
Be bold. Differentiate yourself. Stand out. You’ve earned it.
Cheers,
W
Good advice, much of which I came to on my own accord prior to reading this post. What I have decided to study? Theatre and Comedy. Ekk, and that’s after obtaining a business major.
David Ogilvy, who worked in the 50s-70s, had basically the exactly opposite stance (from Helen Woodward). I’m pasting one of his several “wife-quotes”, which always have the same point:
“It is flagrantly dishonest for an advertising agent to urge consumers to buy a product which he would not allow his own wife to buy.”
After reading his “Confessions of an advertising man”, I get a strong feeling that he would effortlessly adapt and make the most of today’s rapidly changing world of information and technology.
Here’s the book link: http://www.amazon.com/Confessions-Advertising-Man-David-Ogilvy/dp/0689708009/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1218093084&sr=1-1
It’s a great read. He writes about his very interesting life and how it made and influenced his career in advertising, and he also gives tips on advertising, a lot of which are still very useful today.
Art of Acquiescence was your best post.
Do another one like that.