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Did you forget about Strategy?

This may be the single biggest challenge I see facing broadcasters, and Seth Godin sums up both the problem and the solution: 

New media creates a blizzard of tactical opportunities for marketers, and many of them cost nothing but time, which means you don't need as much approval and support to launch them.  As a result, marketers are like kids at Rita's candy shoppe, gazing at all the pretty opportunities. 

Most of us are afraid of strategy, because we don't feel confident outlining one unless we're sure it's going to work. And the 'work' part is all tactical, so we focus on that. (Tactics are easy to outline, because we say, "I'm going to post this." If we post it, we succeed. Strategy is scary to outline, because we describe results, not actions, and that means opportunity for failure.) 

"Building a permission asset so we can grow our influence with our best customers over time" is a strategy. Using email, twitter or RSS along with newsletters, contests and a human voice are all tactics. 

In my experience, people get obsessed about tactical detail before they embrace a strategy… and as a result, when a tactic fails, they begin to question the strategy that they never really embraced in the first place. 

The next time you find yourself spending 8 hours on tactics and five minutes refining your strategy, you'll understand what's going on.

Starting a Facebook fan page because everyone seems to have one?  Going on Twitter because it's the "thing to do?"  Chasing an iPhone app because it's the cool thing?

Then you may be abandoning strategy for tactics.

Make sure the horse is before the cart.

View Comments
  • Great post. I lost a battle today with management blocking access to Facebook and Twitter while I am trying to develop with both. It took me a few hours, but now I am thinking that they only blocked it because they don't know what these tools are and I haven't put together a convincing enough strategy for them. So my job now is to build a killer strategy so that they get it. And they will. They're not stupid.
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MRM President Mark Ramsey has worked with innumerable television and radio broadcasters over his career, including all the biggest names, from Clear Channel, CBS, Bonneville, Sirius XM...

Mark Ramsey