Internet
Marketing - Why Is It So Difficult?
By Mike
Moran
Old-style marketing wasn't
easy, but at least we knew how to do it. If we
wanted to buy TV ads or print ads, we hired some
creative people—or
even a whole ad agency's worth. If we wanted to
do publicity, we hired a PR person. Whatever kind
of marketing you wanted to do, you could just hire
an expert.
Times
have changed.
One
of the things that makes Internet marketing
difficult is that you can't centralize it, but
you must control it. You don't succeed at search
marketing by outsourcing it, or by hiring one
expert—you
must get everyone working on your Web site and
on your Internet marketing to learn their piece
of the job. Likewise, you'll never have a blogging
department—you need many employees writing
their individual blogs to make a dent in your customers'
perceptions.
So,
if centralization is out, what's in? You control
Internet marketing by establishing policies,
providing training, and monitoring the results.
Certainly you need to update your procedures
so that employees know what's to be expected
of them. And you need to teach them new skills
and approaches. Of course you must pay attention
to success metrics.
And
that's the problem. It's so much easier to
centralize or outsource or delegate something
to an expert, and so much harder to change your
organizational culture to succeed with these
new marketing approaches. So if you've been struggling
to adapt to the new world of marketing, give
yourself a break. Accept that it's not the same
as the old days. If you understand the kind of
culture change you need, and how to bring it
about, you'll be more accepting of the time it
takes to really make it happen. It's OK to start
slow and improve each day.
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