Archive for the tag 'Marketing'

Seth Godin: All Marketers Are Liars

Penguin March 10th, 2008

seth-godin-all-marketers-are-liars

Seth Godin gives a great presentation at Google.

The two major things that you’re striving for as a business are: 1) Organic growth. People telling their friends about your product or brand because they care about it. 2) Permission marketing. It’s personal and relevant to your customer. It also allows you to tell you story to them and also teach them.

Marketing is all about telling a story and delivering on that story. It’s about giving people what they want.

The key to successful marketing is to ask yourself about your brand or product: Is what you’re doing worth talking about? What do people talk about? Things that are at the edges. It’s at these edges where people will notice you.

Make something worth talking about. Then tell it to people who want to hear from you. Get permission to tell them about your next product. And let them tell others about your product.

-Penguin

Related posts

Better Than Free

Penguin March 3rd, 2008

better-than-free

Edge

When copies are super abundant, they become worthless.
When copies are super abundant, stuff which can’t be copied becomes scarce and valuable.

When copies are free, you need to sell things which can not be copied.

Immediacy — Sooner or later you can find a free copy of whatever you want, but getting a copy delivered to your inbox the moment it is released — or even better, produced — by its creators is a generative asset.

Personalization — A generic version of a concert recording may be free, but if you want a copy that has been tweaked to sound perfect in your particular living room — as if it were preformed in your room — you may be willing to pay a lot.

Interpretation — As the old joke goes: software, free. The manual, $10,000. But it’s no joke.
Authenticity — You might be able to grab a key software application for free, but even if you don’t need a manual, you might like to be sure it is bug free, reliable, and warranted.
Accessibility — Ownership often sucks. You have to keep your things tidy, up-to-date, and in the case of digital material, backed up.

Embodiment — At its core the digital copy is without a body. You can take a free copy of a work and throw it on a screen. But perhaps you’d like to see it in hi-res on a huge screen?
Patronage — It is my belief that audiences WANT to pay creators. Fans like to reward artists, musicians, authors and the like with the tokens of their appreciation, because it allows them to connect.

Findability — Where as the previous generative qualities reside within creative digital works, findability is an asset that occurs at a higher level in the aggregate of many works. A zero price does not help direct attention to a work, and in fact may sometimes hinder it. But no matter what its price, a work has no value unless it is seen; unfound masterpieces are worthless.

- Penguin

Related posts

Interview: Brian Chirls

Penguin February 2nd, 2008

CinemaTech sat down with Brian Chirls to talk about the marketing he did for “Four Eyed Monsters” and “Honeydripper”

Some good insights for you indie filmmakers out there. Brian hits a lot on permission. If you’re familiar with Seth Godin, he’s a huge proponent of permission based marketing. Databases and data mining them is just the first step in permission marketing.

-Penguin

Related posts

Marketing and Distribution in the Digital Age

Penguin December 8th, 2007

I was reading a post by Seth Godin about monopolies and it got me thinking about distributing your short film or indie movie in the current digital age.

First he talks about how the media companies got their monopolies in the first place.

There are three things that led to the monopolies we now enjoy:
1. The FCC limited the number of TV and radio stations in every market, allowing three networks to dominate TV and the record companies to dominate radio.
2. Copyright ensures that we can charge a lot for a book or a record… way more than it costs to make it.
3. The limited number of physical distribution outlets (record stores, movie theatres) guarantees that distributors with clout get more shelf space.

In the age of the internet, all three of these are gone.

1. Channels - We no longer have a limited set of channels that our media can go out on. Even though YouTube is the big daddy in video distribution, there are plenty of other sites that offer essentially the same features. Sure, they may not have the same number of views or hits, but have you seen how much garbage there is on YouTube? Your masterpiece will be lost amongst the chaff.

As important as YouTube is, I think all these services are just that, a service. You still need your own blog to act as the channel. Once customers know a consistent place to get their information or their entertainment, they’ll keep coming back. YouTube and all these other video sharing services are just the platform that enables you to create your own channel.

2. Copyright - Copyright is dead. It lost to Napster (which also died), BitTorrent, and all the other P2P applications out there. Although the media companies try and say that copying digital material is “stealing”, it’s technically only copyright infringement which is a civil law. But what does that mean for you? It means that the value of your work is the work, not the media it goes out on.

People are so used to getting free music or movies or TV that the idea of paying for it doesn’t make a lot of sense. Yet, people do. Look at Radiohead’s latest release, set your own price. And people paid for it when they didn’t HAVE TO. Those are the key words, “have to”. Radiohead can do this because their “channel” is consistent, we’ll talk more about this later.

3. Distribution - Copying 700mb, 4gb, is almost trivial today. The same reasons that make copyright dead enable distribution to cost essentially nothing: P2P. This isn’t to say that as an indie filmmaker you shouldn’t be pressing DVDs, but don’t make that the only option to get your movie into people’s hands. Especially if it’s your first movie. No one knows how good it’s going to be so no one’s going to invest the time in it without some sort of referral.

Have you heard the new album from Bill Frisell? Read Descarte’s Error? Seen Croupier? Didn’t think so. No time. Of course, if someone you trusted insisted that you spend the time to try them out, you might. Of course, if they were created by people you’d liked in the past, you’d be more likely to try them out. If you could try them out for free, you’d be more likely to try them out as well.

Conclusions

So, what does that mean to you, as an indie filmmaker? Stop trying to fit into the old model. It’s obvious that the old model is dying. Why jump on a dying boat? The new model is all about relationships. Your relationship with the customer.

Seth sums it up with these 5 points

1. Make it easy for your happy users to tell as many of their friends as possible.
2. Give away free samples early and often.
3. Get permission from anyone who likes what you do to follow up with anticipated, personal and relevant messages that benefit both of you.
4. If this requires changing what you make and what you charge for, fine.
5. If steps 1,2, 3 and 4 mess up your current business model, fine.

So here’s my little secret idea. Give away all your work until you’ve built up a fan base. That fan base could be 5, it could be 5000 people, but it’s a start. Prove to them that your product is worth consuming. Let them consume it on their time. Offer different options for the way they consume your product: YouTube or Veoh, BitTorrent in HQ, BitTorrent for iPod, DVD. And then price them accordingly.

For the physical product, differentiate it from the digital offerings. How can you make it different? How can you add value? Maybe a poster or an action figure. Maybe you get two DVDs so you can give one to a friend.

Even when you’re successful, I would say, give the first quarter of your movie away. Enough with the trailers that are a poor indication of story structure and what the film is actually about. Set them up so they will be interested in the product and people will eat it up.

- Penguin

Related posts

Fund Raising for Evangelization of West African Muslims

Penguin November 22nd, 2007

I did my first promotional and non-personal piece. The following is a video to raise awareness and funds for the evangelization of West African Muslims.

There were definitely some limitations, like not being able to shoot anything in Africa, but I think it came out well.

Credits:

Speaker: Rev. Dr. Matthew Cook
Director, editor, camera: Penguin
Photo editor: Ninja
Beta testers: Q, Ninja

-Penguin

Related posts

DIY Manual for Indie Filmmakers from Hunter Weeks

Penguin November 6th, 2007

There aren’t a lot of resources for the budding filmmaker, so whenever one comes around, it’s a godsend. Hunter Weeks, director of 10mph has made it available online for FREE! You can view the DIY manual online or buy it (pdf) for .99$.

Links:
+ Free Indie Filmmaker Manual
+ Buy the manual for .99$
+ Trailers for 10mph
-Penguin

Related posts

Trajan Sucks Tees

Ninja October 1st, 2007

Ninja says

shirtimgplace.jpg

I do like Trajan, but maybe it’s not the best face for University of Kansas’ Jayhawks basketball uniforms. There’s a bit of debate about the legibility vs. personality over this in some forums.

From the Trajan Sucks website:

[In] an ill-conceived (and expensive) attempt to standardize the KU brand, university officials have replaced these famed letterforms with a typeface that only a corporate consultant could love. The new typeface—Trajan—cuts a lackluster profile unfit for the country’s premier program.

The protest shirts available in red or blue + are going for $10 a pop. They can be purchased on the Trajan Sucks web site.
via Murketing

Link:
+ Trajan Sucks web site

Related posts

How Software Dies

Penguin September 27th, 2007

Found this article about how software dies, written by Orson Scott Card, of “Ender’s Game” fame.

Link

The environment that nutures creative programmers kills management and marketing types - and vice versa.

Continue Reading »

Related posts

NSFW: Lida’s sexy type

Ninja August 9th, 2007

Ninja says

This calendar came up in a recent convo with Pei…

I remember 4 years ago someone asked me if type was a turn on. I know… what a weird question! (Um, it’s not, just in case you’re wondering). But it got me thinking—I should make type-based centerfolds. I wrote the idea down in my sketchbook, but never got around to doing it. It’s just as well, because Lida did a bang up job with their 2005 calendar. Here’s a sampling:
lida-calendar_page_03.png

lida-calendar_page_05.png

lida-calendar_page_07.png

lida-calendar_page_09.png

lida-calendar_page_11.png

lida-calendar_page_13.png

lida-calendar_page_14.png

lida-calendar_page_10.png

Funny thing, this calendar created a 25% turnover increase from existing + new clients.

Agency: LIDA, Great Britain
Creative Director: David Harris
Copywriter: Peter West
Art Director: David Harris
Typographers: David Harris, Justin Shill, Stuart Addy, + Jan Hansen

Sell Out

Penguin August 6th, 2007

Penguin says

This may not be a real step for most people. But who knows? You may get lucky. To that end, you want to get as many people to watch your movie as possible. If you can, make a trailer and throw it up on YouTube. Put a lower-res version of the movie on BitTorrent. Tell your friends to watch it. If they like it, they’ll tell their friends, etc.

The more eyes are on your movie, the more likely someone of influence (read: with money) will come across it. Who knows. They may really be enamored with your work and will be jumping at the opportunity to finance your next project.  Robert Rodriguez did it.  So did Matt Stone and Trey Parker.
You do have a next project, right? Even if you don’t have a finished script, you should at least have a treatment done. So, get back to work!
-Penguin

Related posts

Next »