Monthly Archives: October 2008

Blazing New Trails Takes Nerve and Pays Big Rewards

Blazing New Trails Takes Nerve and Pays Big Rewards

Last week a college friend came up from Atlanta, husband and daughter in tow, for their annual trip to New York.

We went to an off-Broadway musical called Hank Williams: Lost Highway. Hank was a small town Alabama boy who became a great country singer in the late forties and early fifties. He never made it to 30 years old. Hank drank himself to death but not before he gave us Your Cheatin’ Heart, Honky Tonk Blues, I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry, Jambalaya, Hey Good Lookin’, I Can’t Help It If I’m Still In Love With You, and dozens more great tunes.

Jason Petty plays Hank in Lost Highway and he is just amazing. To me, Jason and his backup group sound better than the great Hank Williams and I said so to my friend as we were leaving the theater.

“Well, sure”, she said, “But he was imitating”. Hank didn’t imitate. He wrote new music, wrote new lyrics, arranged everything by himself and recorded every song in single takes. He did things nobody else had ever done. He was the first, the original, and everybody after him stands on his shoulders. They write plays about him.

And, of course, she was right.

History is full of people like that. They do things nobody else ever did and then along come the imitators. If they’re talented, the imitators make the original better. Without them, our televisions would still be small, round and in black and white. But the guy who invented that old TV was the genius. The people who came after him were merely clever. Direct Marketing is like that, too. Very few originals, lots of imitators. And the imitators don’t always make the original better.

Part of the problem is that most people think they’re better off being followers. Genuinely original ideas startle them. It’s not that they’re afraid to try something new; they think they don’t have to, so why bother? It’s as if they’ve been eating roast beef and mashed potatoes all their lives and then suddenly someone gives them sushi. They say things like “let’s not re-invent the wheel” and “we’ve always done it this way.” They get into a comfort zone imitating, but not improving.

They like Hank Williams now, but they wouldn’t have liked him back in 1948.

Banks and insurance companies are the worst offenders. They get in comfort zones and they do the same things over and over. You are pre-approved. Low APR. No medical exam required. Look after your loved ones. Safe driver discount. Our strength is our people. But that’s going to change. The Hank Williamses got involved. Whoever’s the Hank Williams over at Aflac gave us the frustrated duck and Geico’s Hank gave us their gecko and suddenly insurance looks different.

When our agency makes a creative presentation, we usually show three concepts: a breakthrough kind of idea which we usually love; a slightly more conservative (imitative) idea but with a little edge to it; and a safe idea which just follows the pack. Nowadays, most clients go with the safe idea.

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Is Your Pipeline Full?

Is Your Pipeline Full?

A couple of months ago, two engineers dropped by our office to talk about a lead generation program for their consultancy business. “Things are slow,” said one of them, “and we might have to lay off some of our staff.”

So we asked questions and learned about how they made their money, got an idea of their budget and they went away while we went to work developing a program for them.

I called them a week or so later to set up our next meeting and they asked if we could postpone for a while because they were up to their elbows on a new project that had just come in.

“Sure, we can wait,” I said.

I wanted to add “But I don’t know if you can” and then ask if he’d ever heard of Howard Ruff.

Howard Ruff was one of the first of those financial self-help authors. At one point, back in the ‘70s, his newsletter “Ruff Times” had 175,000 subscribers. If he still has that many, all those $149 subscriptions bring in about $2,600,000 a year. He had his own syndicated TV show for a while and he’s written a lot of books. One of them was on the NYT bestseller list for over two years.

I remember him for one great line he came up with back in 1975. He wrote “It wasn’t raining when Noah built the ark.”

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