Generation Rx
Subject: Generation Rx
 I have to disagree with Mehbs  Remtulla who said marketers, 'have a way sometimes of overlooking the obvious, '  in the recent article by Laura Pratt 'Generation Rx.'
 Marketers and marketing  communications professionals have spent so much time and effort chasing the  latest and best buzz word or next miracle to make $1,000,000 'branding  miracle,' they have forgotten the basics of marketing.
 The basics of marketing is to  identify your market, and decide how to communicate with it.
 It is a widely, and old, know  fact that when you sell a car or suit to a husband, that you must also sell it  to their wife, spouse, or girlfriend, or the car or suit will be back sooner  rather than later.
 It is also widely known that  you not only must have a sales message designed to bring the customer in the  start, but a message to keep them in the store, a message to buy the service or  product, and a message after the sale is made to make the lucky customer sure of  their sale, after they leave the store, and when they are bragging about their  purchase to their friends, neighbours, and immediate circle of family and  friends.
 Figuring out who the gatekeeper  is, is old news.
 Ramesh Srinivasan's quote, "but  we try and communicate to both audiences in a single piece of collateral," is  older news.
 Splitting up the message is as  simple as choosing different venues for it to appear in, has been around since  the cavemen started to draw pictographs on the cave walls.
 Why it is only now, this is a  surprise in the marketing efforts of health-care professionals must be  the biggest surprise here.
 The source of this problem can  be placed at the feet of the large chorus section of the marketing  communications choir, who seem bent to beat the phrase, 'branding,  branding, branding,' to death
 Lets close the lid on that  horse, drink a dram of the good stuff, and kiss the bandwagon that pulls,  'branding,' off in to the horizon goodbye. After the wagon is gone, we can then  drink another dram in salute to the return of the use of real  marketing principles in all that we do in the marketing communications  field.
 Hell, lets finish the bottle,  dram by dram.
 Thank you
 Norm Greenfield
 Provoco Status  Quo
 Corporate, Marketing, and  Political Communications
 Calgary,  Alberta
 403-807-1251


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