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RE: The Wizzards of Nothing
Thanks a lot my steady companion in this blog. As you know, I know., as we all know. Always much too less STEEM comes in.
Thanks a lot my steady companion in this blog. As you know, I know., as we all know. Always much too less STEEM comes in.
@afrog interesting
Not all of it ;)
If the product the person is marketing is already tested as a remarkable one - no need to blab for example - a Harley motorbike - just a scene of the Harley on the road with its broom broom sound is enough - it would sell - and perhaps Gerard Butler on it (just because he's so hot on 300 hahahah)
but if the product is not remarkable or unusual or it won't outdo its competition - the blabbing comes and yes - that we call a lie.
Actually, marketing has a template. I learned it from several business trainings with financial experts and they don't really make their talks go in circles. I think the most annoying marketing is that of too many words - too many promises that can't be overdelivered. That's not cool - it's very annoying I watched a video about that - I wanted to shoot the speaker with water guns in the mouth just for the fun of shutting it up. Yes, it sounds mean but you see - empty talks are earache. They should learn from the experts - they always just KISS it - Keep It Stupid Simple and they always over deliver.
Thank you for reading my blab about, @englishtchrivy.
Of course I looked up Gerard Butler. Now I know more.
I'm not convinced at all we need these marketing people and I remain on my point of view. The world would be a much more better place without their art to benefit from the work of others. Same with consultants like KMPG, Berger, and so on. You have to pay them even when their work doesn't pay out one more buck. Same with the most of all these managers out there. They are like migratory locusts. They smitten corporations, together with their preferred consulting people and suck like your aphids. These people are the real pestilence of economy. Producing nothing, but earning lots of money by driving crazy whole companies.