Ad Industry Innovator #24: New Marketing Labs
Posted by David Wiggs under advertising
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Today’s Ad Industry Innovator comes from New Marketing Labs, which you may know better if I tell you the name of its founder, Chris Brogan. Chris is the author of the NYT best seller Trust Agents and he’s in the top 3 on AdAge’s Power150. Being some of the most recognizable social media marketers, these guys have a nice niche. Awesome alliteration, ay?
It’s fun to profile a group like New Marketing Labs because they represent those specialists who have stepped in to challenge the traditional agency model and offer unique and much needed services to brands. Anyway, Hanes, Sony, Citrix, Comcast, Molson Coors, PepsiCo, AMD and Microsoft seem to think so.
I spoke to New Marketing Labs’ General Manager, Justin Levy about what makes their firm stand out in the marketplace. Besides his many duties keeping everyone rowing in the same direction, he is the co-organizer of their Inbound Marketing Summit and Inbound Marketing Bootcamp. Prior to joining Brogan’s group Justin was Managing Director at an SEO public relations firm and President of Talent Network. His answer to question # 7 practically had me weeping. In all, it was a pleasure to get the perspective of such a well-rounded gent.
1. What was the aha moment when you realized “our company needs to be doing things differently than we have been”?
New Marketing Labs didn’t go through that period because we were founded to help medium and large businesses either figure out that aha moment or navigate their way through it . We assist our clients with using these online tools to move the needles that are important to them. We help them to enhance their communications, marketing, customer service and PR plans by using these new media tools to reach their prospects, customers and fans.
2. What books are on your nightstand or great blogs on your Google reader?
I am an avid reader and information junkie. At any given time I am subscribed to a few hundred RSS feeds, read a few books per month and read the Washington Post, Boston Globe, NY Times and Wall St. Journal on a daily basis. I love the consumption of information!
Right now I have about 15 books waiting to be read but I am currently reading the following books:
The Audacity to Win by David Plouffe
Six Pixels of Separation by Mitch Joel
The Back of the Napkin by Dan Roam
You’ll usually find me reading about marketing, business, lifestyle design, politics, productivity or food related books.
3. Give me an example of marketing you think is brilliant and why.
Dell has been doing an excellent job at using online tools to help them market to, learn from and listen to their prospects and customers. From generating $2 million dollars with just one of their Twitter accounts, to IdeaStorm, a website where Dell allows their customers to generate new ideas for the company and then vote those ideas up and down, to how Dell uses the listening and monitoring company, Radian6, to help them be involved in conversations taking place around the web. Dell has also done a great job at showing that they’re human. Dell uses both corporate accounts (e.g. DellLatitude) and personal Twitter accounts with their staff (e.g. RichardatDell). Using the employee name in the Twitter account helps to show the human side of the company and in turn, that makes stronger bonds with their customer base.
4. We’ve all read that the pitch / RFP process is broken. Many agencies aren’t even interested in competing in pitches. Do you see an alternative to this process?
The pitch/RFP process still serves a purpose in that it provides structure and the ability for the prospective client to walk down a check list to compare potential agencies who they’re interested in working with. Where the pitch and RFP process suffer is that they don’t usually showcase the human side of both the agency and prospective client. We have a natural tendency to want to do business with friends. Therefore, I think agencies need to take opportunities to develop relationships with the people who make up the corporations. Try being helpful to them in some way or connecting with them by sending a hand written note.
5. What does the agency of the future look like?
The agency of the future is more of a partner with the company that they’re working with instead of a typical agency/client relationship. The agency of the future will need to ensure that they’re delivering value to their clients and will need to provide hard data to quantify and prove that data. That’s not to suggest that agencies currently aren’t providing value to their clients. But, with budgets continuing to tighten, companies are looking at what hard value they’re receiving from their vendors and agencies. There is a difference in using new media tools that can provide hard data versus data that suggests that an approximate audience size probably saw your message.
6. What do marketers need that agencies are not giving them?
Marketers need data that will help show them the value of what they’re investing their time and budget in. Marketers need an agency that understands the complexities of their responsibilities, their department, their company and their industry and have the tools available to help navigate through it all. Marketers want agencies that provide education, both internally and externally to help them and their staff to grow.
7. Who do you admire and why?
I admire a variety of people from many different industries and for different reasons. If I had to choose one person though, I would choose my mom. Unfortunately my mother lost a long battle with Lupus during my senior year in high school. For the better part of my life my mother struggled to deal with a disabling disease. Lupus, as well as some other factors, closed many doors for my mom at an early age. Even while struggling with a disease that was constantly kicking her while she was down, she did everything in her power to see that her son, me, had everything I could ever need to help position me to be successful now. Whether it was hand-written math books to work on over the Summer, pressuring me to apply myself in school, teaching me how to deal with hardship at a young age, or any of the may other life lessons she taught me.
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Hitch is a consultancy that helps marketers hire the right marketing agency.




