Then and Now: Content Is A Product
THEN:
Content was a product.
Content drew people, the people drew advertisers, and the advertisers paid to make more content/product.
Advertisers had to latch onto the content/product because it was the cheapest way to get to the people, and it wasn’t cheap…just cheaper than becoming a content/product itself.
NOW:
Content is still a product.
Content still draws people and still draws advertisers.
Advertisers can now create their own content cheaply. They can broadcast and publish with no need of another content/product as long as they can build their own audience.
CONCLUSION:
- You don’t have to pay $100/month for a small ad in the Yellow Pages.
- You don’t have to pay hundreds of dollars to be in a local coupon booklet.
- You don’t have to pay a thousand dollars for a full page ad in the newspaper.
- You don’t have to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars for television commercials.
Still not sure? Check out Rhett & Link. They’re a product. Their content is their product. Their product is their content. General Motors saw their content/product and hired them. Who might buy your product if you start getting into the content business and out of advertising?
Tags: content as promotion strategy, General Motors, new media marketing, Rhett & Link, socialmediamarketing, Yellow Pages


March 7th, 2008 at 10:45 am
[...] mentioned Rhett and Link in a post earlier this week. They do some really funny and creative work. Here’s one that was quite funny. You can check [...]