Marketing is every definition you’ll find in a textbook. Every single linear explanation of good/service, want/need, and satisfaction. But making marketing matter, making marketing powerful must come from a deeper place.
In any environment, under any circumstance, my work as a marketer matters to me. I care about it, all of it. No word, no colour, no decision exists without a little bit of me inside of it. Many will say this is foolish. Business is business, right? It’s not personal. For me, that’s where the real foolishness resides.
Take a moment to ponder the great successes of our time (marketing and otherwise). Do you not think those products and successes were personal? Making your work personal, instilling emotion, when necessary, is a means to success.
When that end product is not just a derivative of tasked work created from monotonous thoughts and movements, it holds you inside of it. And because it holds you, it also holds your emotions — passion, praise, weakness and strength. And emotion is powerful.
As marketing moves away from interruptive strategies and towards compelling storytelling, marketers will rely more and more on emotion. On evoking a particular emotional response from the recipient of the marketing message. It’s because that emotional response weaves a bond. A bond which can lead to a purchase, to loyalty, to advocacy.
Gates, Jobs, Page and Brin — some of the geniuses of our time — channel the hardship and heartache they are forced to endure into positive emotion — because when it matters to you, the marketer, there’s a greater chance it will matter to you, the consumer.





