The INVEST Method - The Modern Marketing Mix by Carl Holden
The INVEST Method - The Modern Marketing Mix by Carl Holden
The INVEST Method - The Modern Marketing Mix by Carl Holden
To begin implementing The INVEST Method today, check out the free
downloads at
www.theINVESTmethod.com/resources
WHY READ THIS BOOK?
In a post-internet world, the basic principles being taught about marketing
are wildly inadequate or simply based on the latest trend. Whether you are
a CMO, marketing professional, sales person, or entrepreneur, you must
truly understand marketing to achieve the greatest success.
The INVEST Method will change your perception of marketing. I’ve had
colleagues and clients say, “That makes total sense.” Its principles have
helped many people better understand how marketing works. People with
whom I have shared this moment often say they feel more prepared to
make important marketing decisions.
Do you want to feel like your marketing is less guess and more
confidence? This method gives a framework to check your ideas, model
plans, and execute a more positive effort– not just for the marketing
department but the company as a whole.
As you internalize the principles ahead, your marketing will become more
logical and thorough. Or you can stop reading here and keep guessing
about why marketing works at all.
These models and principles are key to understanding modern marketing.
Read them openly and thoughtfully. This method has the potential to give
you a clarity about marketing you’ve not had before. On your first read-
through, try to read this book in a day or two so that you can see the big
picture. There’s a marketing “a-ha” moment in your future.
PROLOGUE (Rant)
This is not the “next big thing” or a quick “reach-a-million-followers”
scheme. That’s not the purpose of this book. The point of this book is to
instill a more solid, logical foundation of marketing to develop greater
skills and more profitable profession.
The marketing industry is sick, filled with a cancerous slew of
catchphrases, quick solutions, jargon, “Social Media is the New
Marketing” and solve-all-your-problems software. There’s quality content
out there, but for every good piece of content, there are a dozen bad ones.
Not only that, but marketing relies so heavily on trends, expert opinions,
and dumb luck that it feels like most decisions are either backed by
assumptions on big data or lucky educated guesses. Some marketers rely
just on social media or influencers, claiming that is the best way. Others
rely on data and the latest studies to make their decisions. Few people have
a marketing method to ensure consistent success that uses all the elements
of marketing. Let’s face it. Marketing is the red-headed stepchild of most
organizations, except in marketing or software companies. Most marketing
departments could technically fit in a broom closet, and many
organizations assign marketing employees with non-marketing tasks. It’s
usually the first to get cut when times get hard.
What if a company said to cut the wings when their plane is too heavy to
fly? But how could you prevent that cutting when you can’t explain fluid
dynamics? The same applies to marketing– it gets cut because it remains
misunderstood.
Each of the models will be explained in detail to relate how each of the six
elements contribute to marketing. We are in dire need of a new marketing
mix as the world has left our old ideas behind.
It’s obvious that the advent of consumer electronics has changed the way
we live. To believe that the same marketing tactics of yesteryear will work
today is naïve.
Product. Price. Promotion. Place. They are merely nouns in the novel of
marketing. INVEST is an action word, a verb. These two share some
similar elements, but INVEST elaborates in greater detail what to
accomplish. The four P’s should stand for perfectly pitiful, paltry
principles.
INVEST is a modern way of thinking, not just a clever acronym.
Marketing takes time and patience to be truly effective. If you treat it as an
expense, you get what you pay for– a bill and buyer’s remorse.
Something must change. We can’t keep using inadequate principles from
the 60s. Sweet mother of marketing, let’s do something other than P!
Some data is useful and some is not. The art of appropriately organizing
information is what all marketers should seek to learn. What information
must you communicate to convince a consumer to convert? That’s the holy
grail of marketing!
The facts and data about most businesses are everywhere they exist and
touch. Stats about their products, staff, and processes reside in many
departments. The difficulty begins when trying to decide how to
communicate all of this to the outside world.
A great deal of Information is communicated visually, which is why there
are models for each of the letters of INVEST. Again, these are not models
based on some big data algorithm but are formed by what the world needs
more of– basic common sense and logic.
An important concept of INVEST is to embrace the fact that marketing is
quite complicated. Embrace the chaos, yet approach it with logic and
mindfulness. Chaos is what created the atom because deep below the
madness of physics are patterns that work behind the scenes.
No one model can show what works every time in every business. Every
model of INVEST attempts to show underlying reasons behind why
marketing works. This first model will show the importance of organized
data in relation to it being communicated to a consumer and how this
process relates to aiding conversion.
Consider INVEST the bones around which to build the body of your
marketing efforts and a system of diagnostics to make sure you stay
healthy and productive.
A chart helps us understand that as information is communicated, other
factors of conversion are reacting to this delineation of information.
People buy according to the Information they
have and don’t have.
That may seem obvious. However, rarely do businesses stop to evaluate,
“What does the consumer know about us?” The question is usually, “What
should we say next?”
People learn in a linear fashion, fact by fact. Embracing that you are
feeding them dots like Pacman simplifies what marketing is. We are simply
leading people in a journey of mental discovery.
Many understand that businesses are educators but fall prey to the thinking
that they just need to keep sharing information. While lots of content is not
bad, tons of content without a direct purpose is bad.
What do you do with this “information” on Information?
Organizing information is a self-evaluation. Have a long list session of
writing (or typing) as many facts as you can about the company and
offering. Exhaustive is optimal. Once you start to do this, many truths
begin to reveal themselves.
You will begin to realize how much subtle information is being
communicated. Often, strengths are revealed simply by looking at what’s
been there the whole time.
Share what is simple first.
Knowledge is a progressive journey, so start small. This is not always what
companies do. What may seem like simple knowledge to them is a
mysterious puzzle to the consumer.
The most complicated facts are usually not even necessary for a conversion
to occur. Do I really need to know what techniques of manufacturing were
used? On the other hand, talking down to people is also destructive. If you
are only sharing the simplest of facts, then the blue line stops and the
probability of the sale undoubtedly falls.
Of course, common knowledge to one is uncommon to another. We will
discuss in Strategy how to discern the needs of specific groups of people.
Segments of your market may even necessitate the consideration of an
InfoGraph specifically for them.
A common starting point is the name (and hopefully logo). You’d be
surprised at the revelations available just by taking a hard look at your
simplest asset.
The inspiration caused by the name and logo often lead to simple facts
about the offering(s). How many ___ do you have? What varieties are
available for ___? Once this primitive listing has occurred, more specifics
arise.
The beginning of the blue line does not significantly pull up conversion
likelihood. It’s when we start to learn the unfamiliar (as expressed by the
comprehension line) that likelihood begins to increase. We begin to know
what we did not know.
The simple exercise of listing all the information available about an
offering has been an eye-opening experience for many. It can be time-
consuming but is necessary to begin to INVEST in your marketing.
No one chart is going to solve every issue. What the InfoGraph can do is
illuminate what Information currently exists in the marketing efforts and in
what general order it is being communicated.
You can then base how you want to facilitate this information flow within
your marketing plans. If a simple point of information should belong at the
beginning of the blue line, a plan must be made to incorporate it earlier in
your marketing process.
Look at your local Yellow Pages book and notice the lack of ads. Watch
your local news frantically try to put out interesting stories or even try their
hand at social media. News channels are even opening their own digital
marketing firms, surely to combat loss in revenue.
Before, people were viewers. They watched and listened and often did
what was advertised to them because the big media powers flexed their
muscles. Today, mass audiences have dissolved and society expects to
experience life customized to their individual wants and needs. Now,
“people” doesn’t matter so much as “person.”
Back then you could express your voice to your neighbors or coworkers,
but you rarely had the power to join or oppose the larger network of media
voices. You weren’t invited to participate, merely subjected to listen.
The internet broke these walls and a sea of voices became available. Now a
network is more readily connected through apps, forums, video chat, and
other connective technologies.
To understand network, an interconnected matrix best illustrates the need
for communication and partnership.
The three elements are the x, y, and z axis of the cube. If the upper and
lower limits for each element are defined, theoretically all market offerings
could be plotted inside the ValCube.
The dotted line is only there to help you visualize the depth and height of
the orange dot.
The orange dot can represent your offering or the optimal offering you
would like to provide that would have the highest likelihood of conversion.
The other dots are to illustrate that the offering is not alone in the market
and that your value is a reflection of its worth compared to other offerings.
As you see the two experiences in the same ValCube, you can understand
how changing Value determines the success of an offering in a market.
Our senses define our lives. All our life Experiences can be categorized
into sensory inputs.
Due to the proximity issue, it’s important to note that some contact senses
can be initiated by proxy through abstract senses. The preceding example
of a fast food company playing an audio clip of
meat sizzling is a proxy example. The sense was not actually initiated but
your mind unconsciously associates that clip with previous sensory
memories of smell.
Furthermore, contact senses tend to be the final customer senses of product
Experiences. Conversely, abstract senses are often the customer senses of
service Experiences.
Be sensitive to senses.
Even just 20 years ago, the average consumer would not have thought
touch would ever matter to phones. Now we are addicted to the touch of
phones and use them less for calling. One may never know how the senses
may influence a shift in the market.
Just like the previous sections, you can and should be creative. Emphasize
senses that get ignored, or make connections that were not there before.
The key to changing your offering may be in the very sense you think
about the least.
There’s so much to each of these, so many ideas you can come up with. So
how do you choose which ideas to use? Strategy, the next section, helps
solidify our attempts to convert consumers by assigning reasons to our
marketing.
STRATEGY
"What is of supreme importance in war is to attack
the enemy’s strategy."
- Sun Tzu
What better author of strategy is available than the wise Sun Tzu?
Marketers are not at war, but consumers are. They fight with so many
issues and problems, not always dealing with them in logical ways. Instead
of viewing it as a battle against them, see Strategy as planning to end their
fight– to beat their fight for them. Get them peace and resolution.
Empathy is the key to ending the struggle, understanding the consumer
better than they understand themselves. You must understand their self-
imposed identity, the problems they face, and the perceived and available
solutions.
Study to understand them and do your best to predict their actions. A
recent emphasis in personas in marketing automation is evidence that this
is true. Once you understand their fight, you are better capable of helping
them win.
One way to spark the specifics is to begin with a general idea. The iPod as
a concept was stated to be “1000 songs in your pocket.” It solved
realization by fixing the problem of portability– our pockets don’t fit CDs
and their players. If you are starting off with little but your offering, create
some ideas that can easily turn into real applications. For example, “Our
car wash should be 80s themed.” That solves representation by aligning the
current, busy parenting generation with an offering.
This path is outside of the maze because everyone exists here. They are
going about their day, unaware or unmotivated to fix their problem. Here is
where you do those activities that get their attention and point out their
ignored dilemma. This often serves as a place to initiate realization as
described in Strategy.
The gates here are any advertising or marketing you do that focus on
problem-solving. A gate may also be the consumer’s realization that they
have a problem. An over-simplified version of this might be the “Got
Milk” campaign. Many stores benefited from its simple triggering, even if
they paid nothing for that ad. But it was about a simple problem, the lack
of milk.
Voices in your network can bring attention to the consumer’s needs. The
voice of an advertising organization or the podcast of an expert can initiate
people’s desire to satisfy that need.
Since the consumer is probably not physically present, many of the senses
in this path are abstract or abstract acting in proxy for contact. Simple data
tend to be communicated here so it is usually the beginning of the facts in
the InfoGraph.
Do you see how it is all beginning to culminate into a full marketing
method? Each of the principles build upon and within each other.
CONVERSIONISM
Shakespeare was one of the greatest philosophers of all time; through his
plays he communicated subtle, profound truths. In “Romeo and Juliet,”
Juliet lamented, “What's in a name? That which we call a rose by any other
name would smell as sweet.” Yet, it was names that killed Romeo and
Juliet. There’s a lot in a name– that’s the tragedy of the play. The two star-
crossed lovers could not exist together possessing separate names.
I hate the name “Marketing.” I hate the name “Sales.” What should be a
love story of their efforts is fraught with the tragedy of contempt and
competition. I couldn’t admit this at the beginning of the book because
marketing by any other name might not “smell as sweet.”
I challenge you this one thing. Go back through the book and cross out
every time it says sales or marketing and write the word “Conversion.”
You see, I’m pulling back the curtain for a moment to show my true desire.
I’m excited to see how INVEST continues to change and improve. Check
out its accompanying website at: www.TheINVESTmethod.com
All reviews are greatly appreciated!
There are several blank pages throughout this book. Please feel free to
write your notes and plans there!