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Six Pixels--A chat with Mitch Joel

Posted by: Stephen Baker on September 15, 2009

Mitch Joel, author of Six Pixels of Separation, says to start out by focusing 100% of ad budgets on search.

Now that BusinessWeek is on the block, just about everyone around here is sniffing around for other opportunities. When one of my colleagues asked me how to get up-to-date on digital strategies, I handed him two books, Groundswell, by Charleni Li and Josh Bernoff, and Mitch Joel’s new book, Six Pixels of Separation. Both books are clearly written, and both steer clear of sloganeering and provide real examples of companies carrying out transformations.

mitch joel.jpg

Mitch Joel

I recently talked to Mitch about his book, digital marketing, and some common misperceptions.

His first point: Emphasize slow. People in business, he says, often associate the power of digital communications with speed. But much of the magic is in the communication—people learning about each other. That takes time.

2) Look for engagement first. This means starting with 100% of the marketing budget reaching people through various forms of search—and only looking for other alternatives (like, say, business mags). “Start with 100% and see what you’re left with when you’re done maximizing,” he says.”Companies spend millions to reach people who aren’t interested, in the hopes that the right people will drive by on the freeway and see it…”

3) A quote he gave me from Gen. Eric Shinseki: “If you don’t like change, you’re going to like irrelevance even less.”

(Cross-posted on TheNumerati.net)

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Reader Comments

Tim

September 16, 2009 02:48 PM

Mitch, the points about emphasizing slow and that engagement takes time- and is the key thing to attain, are key, and easy to forget in the fast-paced, next-frame-please Internet world. The quote is interesting but I'd encourage people not to "take it on" for themselves, but instead find or create relevance for themselves and the market they choose.

Steve Cunningham

September 29, 2009 10:03 PM

Like Tim, I agree with Mitch on the whole "slow" issue. It's not a quick fix and it never will be. But for those willing to put in the time and effort, it truly is a better way to engage an audience.

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In Blogspotting Senior Writer Stephen Baker and Associate Editor Heather Green take a look at how cutting-edge technologies are changing business and society. Whether its blogs or wikis, data crunching or data targeting, technology’s advances are reshaping the world that we live in.

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