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The Making of a Web Superstar Business
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| Guest post by: Jerry Bader |
Article Overview: Being an expert is not enough, you have to be able to communicate your expertise effectively, and that means presenting complicated concepts in a way your audience can understand and remember. The art of ‘superstar guru-ism’ lies in your ability to simplify and entertain an audience with the culturally relevant connections between society and commerce.
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Free Download - Essential Web Video Concepts: Make’em Feel By Jerry Bader |
The Making of a Web Superstar Business
We live in the age of communication. We are in constant
contact with friends, family, and business colleagues. Each new digital device,
software solution, or Internet phenomenon creates an opportunity for
entrepreneurs to position themselves as the next-big-thing, and business
executives to establish themselves as marketing mavens, business gurus, or
technology boffins.
“In the future everyone will be world famous for 15
minutes.” - Andy Warhol
Superstars & Cultural Influence
Andy Warhol was a graphic genius of course, but as
importantly, Warhol was a cultural influencer with an eye for image and an ear
for sound bites. It was Warhol who popularized the term “Superstar” which if
you think about it in today’s terms is fittingly ironic and incredibly
perceptive.
Warhol’s “superstar” reference wasn’t to a Marilyn
Munroe or Elizabeth Taylor but rather to Edie Sedgwick, a talent-deficient,
troubled, anorexic Twiggy look-a-like socialite. If anyone can be famous, it
follows that anyone can be a superstar, and the World Wide Web has spawned an
entire society of ‘wanna-be’ Web superstars.
But Sedgwick wasn’t about making a viral spectacle of
herself in return for her fifteen minutes like so many YouTube superstar
pretenders. Sedgwick had real pretensions and surely thought associating with
the famous Warhol would help her rise above her own unfortunate upbringing and
self-destructive tendencies, but Sedgwick was merely a pawn in Warhol’s world
of marketing self promotion.
The real superstar in this tragic opera (Sedgwick died
at the age of twenty-eight after years of mental illness and drug abuse) was
Warhol himself, for Warhol was the brand, not Sedgwick or any other of the
carefully cultivated hangers-on in his entourage. Warhol was the consummate
marketing maven who knew how to communicate his vision to a wider public
audience better than the more traditional members of the abstruse jargon-filled
pretentious art community.
Expertise Doesn’t Make You A Superstar
The Internet is full of very talented and
not-so-talented people who have some expertise and who are willing to offer at
least a snippet of their knowledge to entice their audience to buy their wares,
but knowledge and expertise alone is not going to make you a true Web
superstar.
The real marketing superstars, the ones that make a
difference, the ones that influence culture and make a lasting and profound
impression are the ones that understand the Superstar Guru Effect.
The Superstar Guru Effect
Being an expert is not enough, you have to be able to
communicate your expertise effectively, and that means presenting complicated
concepts in a way your audience can understand and remember. The art of
‘superstar guru-ism’ lies in your ability to simplify and entertain an
audience with the culturally relevant connections between society and
commerce.
People like Malcolm Gladwell (‘The Tipping Point’),
Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner (‘Freakonomics’) are superstar gurus because
they know how to make complicated concepts simple to understand and easy to
remember. The ability to articulate clearly and with flair and imagination is
what makes the difference between someone who is an expert and very good at
their job and someone who captures people’s imaginations and becomes the market
leader, the one that sets the agenda for everyone else to follow including the
buying public. Bill Gates may be a shrewd business executive but success and
wealth don’t make him a superstar. Steve Jobs is the superstar.
Apple Computer arguably always made better products than
their competitors but it wasn’t until Apple’s marketing efforts clearly
articulated Jobs’ vision of man and machine that the company took off. Where
most business owners asked future executives how they would reduce costs and
improve ROI, Jobs asked how they were going to change the world? Jobs’ vision
was clear from the outset: develop handsome, well-designed, convivial products
that make life easier for people, and deliver that message in memorable
entertaining advertisements and presentations.
Three Things Every Superstar Website Needs
I see a lot of business websites designed by designers
who have technical expertise but who don’t necessarily understand how to
communicate, and just as importantly, don’t advise client’s how to develop and
construct a marketing vision so it’s simple to understand and easy to remember.
Clients with their left-brain bias and short-term ROI perspective are as much
to blame as the geek-wunderkinds they hire. It’s a tortoise and hare scenario:
business is a marathon not a sprint; successful marketing takes time, patience,
and the guts to stick to a simple, memorable conceptual vision.
1. Websites Are About Content
The first thing you need to provide your audience is
content; but not all content is created equal. Everybody understands content is
a key component of a website, it is why people come to your site in the first
place, but so many websites simply throw everything but the kitchen sink at
their viewers and that just irritates and frustrates them, and worse, it drives
them to their competitors.
The problem with website content is a bit like the
problem with intelligence gathering: distinguishing what you need from the vast
array of options and information dumped upon the viewer. So many websites are
so dense and confusing that finding what you came for is next to impossible.
We all understand that people are in a hurry and that
much of the Internet community has a short attention span, but that is really
only the tip of the problem. I’ve written over ninety articles most of which
are between a thousand and fifteen hundred words and people read them, a lot of
people read them, so short attention spans are not really the issue when you’re
dealing with a properly qualified audience.
Scott Fenstermaker publishes a great little blog called
“People Triggers” and in one of his posts he discusses a Lake Forest leadership
presentation and a Jon Stewart video concerning different demographic groups
and their relationship to authority (business, government, etc.)
The discussion holds the key to why so many website
visitors opt-out of your site before they actually get to the important
content. The high-value Web audiences that most businesses target are the
Gen-Xers (born 1960-79) and Gen-Yers (Millennials born 1980-2001). The common
thread that binds these two groups together and differentiates them from their
parents (Boomers born 1946-59), and their grandparents, (Veterans born
1935-45), is that the X and Y Generations are primarily interested only in what
business and government can do for them. The main difference between Generation
X and Generation Y is the latter only wants to know what you can do for them
NOW!
2. Websites Are About Entertainment
The second thing you can do for these visitors is to
engage them, and that demands your website be more than a catalogue of
products, services, and specifications. These X and Y Generations want to be
catered to; they want to feel they matter. Your audience has a definite feeling
of entitlement and the only way you are going to break through their cynicism
is to engage them with an entertaining presentation that speaks to their
psychological demand to be recognized as important.
The Web is more than a giant digital encyclopedia with a
Sear’s catalogue attached; it’s an entertainment platform with an audience that
demands the right content quickly, and they demand that you make the effort to
deliver it in a clever, entertaining package. Your hard-noised no-nonsense
approach might have worked for previous generations, but it’s not going to work
on today’s self-absorbed consumers.
3. Websites Are About Free
We are all in business to make money, but as much as
websites are about content and entertainment, they are also about free. An
audience that demands to know what you are going to do for them wants to know
what you going to give them for listening to what you have to offer.
That is why the entertainment element is so significant;
memorable presentations (things like branded entertainment videos) speak to the
notion that you are paying attention to your audience’s desire to be recognized
as important. A clever video presentation that demonstrates you understand your
audience and are willing to invest in telling them so, carries more weight than
a lengthy e-book filled with platitudes and generalities.
The Web has changed the way business is done: music,
news, information, and entertainment are all free. Provide your audience with
it and they’ll reward you by paying attention to your message. Treat them like
you’re doing them a favor and you’ll never get their business.
So You Want To Build A Superstar Website
When you started your website you probably thought it
was a exercise in ROI, when it actually turns out to be more like running your
own mini broadcast network, complete with news, entertainment, and commercial
messaging. Successful websites only need three things to drive business:
content, entertainment, and free. Like it or not, you’re in the communication
business, and if you want to be a superstar communicator keep it simple and
memorable.
Article Tags: consultants, gurus, how to videos, presentations experts, video, viral videos, Web superstars, YouTube superstars
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About the Author: Jerry Bader RSS for Jerry's articles - Visit Jerry's website Jerry Bader is Senior Partner at MRPwebmedia, a website design firm that specializes in Web-audio and Web-video. Visit http://www.mrpwebmedia.com/ads, http://www.sonicpersonality.com, and http://www.136words.com. Contact at info@mrpwebmedia.com or telephone (905) 764-1246. About MRPwebmedia People ask, "What do you do?" You could say we inform, enlighten, innovate, and create; you could also say we deliver our clients' marketing messages in memorable ways using video, audio, webmedia campaigns and websites; all created in-house from concept to implementation, from graphic and motion design to Web-design, from script writing to video-production to post-production, from music composition to signature sound design. What do we do? We motivate action by speaking to your audience's real needs. We tell your story so your brand, your message, embeds in the minds of your clients. We are corporate storytellers. Click here to visit Jerry's website 18 WebMarketing Concepts That Make A Difference The Making of a Web Superstar Business Shaping Web Audience Preference WebMarketing Analysis Questionnaire The Art Of The Sale Developing Website Content |
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