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Last week, in my social
feeds and yours, there was a lot of bushwa about JP Morgan Chase, using an AI
program called Persado, to write its ads.
Persado is only the
latest of about 32 million technology gimmicks, marketing pseudo-science and
data-dumbfuckery to promise magic.
The only thing that works in creativity, in breaking through to a viewership that 99.9% of the time doesn’t care and 99.99% of the time is inert, is to be creative.
Really creative.
The only thing that works in creativity, in breaking through to a viewership that 99.9% of the time doesn’t care and 99.99% of the time is inert, is to be creative.
Really creative.
You have to do something
attention-getting. Funny. Smart. Big. Irreverent. Touching and so on. This has
been proven time and again, but because creativity is capricious, hard to do,
hard to predict and a pain in the ass to work with, many marketing people spend
their days, nights and power-points looking for a scientific substitute.
There is no scientific
substitute.
The only thing that works in marketing is creativity.
The only thing that works in marketing is creativity.
The next feeding-frenzy
on social media and Lucullan industry offsites is “how do we get better
creative?” On this topic, too, there are all kinds of wild theories, usually
assertively proclaimed by people who have never done it before and firmly
grounded in a foundation of cotton-candy.
So, over my almost 36
years in this benighted business, I’ve heard them all.
·
Let’s give creative
people more time.
·
Let’s gang-bang.
·
Let’s not
gang-bang.
·
Let’s be
agile.
·
Let’s bring
in creative technologists.
·
Let’s
incorporate user experience people.
·
Let’s remove
media from the equation.
·
Let’s
incorporate media into the process.
·
Let’s let
people work from home.
·
Let’s go
open plan.
·
Let’s have
hot houses.
The list is as long as
Rip Van Winkle’s beard.
But like most of these
discussions, what’s completely missing is a basic understanding of human nature.
What really motivates the people who do the work of creating the work. Who put
their minds, hours and careers on the line to try to do something good.
Without being too
revealing and personal, I’ll just say this.
The best clients to work
with, the clients who get the best work from their agencies all have one thing
in common.
They are kind.
That’s not complicated.
It’s simple.
It’s treating people
with respect. It’s listening. It’s being nice and appreciative. Sometimes it’s
as simple as saying thank you. And understanding the magnitude of what you’re
asking.
That’s kindness.
Kindness doesn’t come
from an algorithm, or an MBA program, or processes devised by technocrats (of
which there are too many.)
Kindness comes from
being kind. (Of which there is too little.)
When the curtain closes
on my already-too-long career, when I've finally decided I have overstayed my welcome
for more years than I am comfortable with, I will remember only a few clients
and even fewer agencies.
The ones who were kind.
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