Let¡¯s take a moment to commiserate, marketers.
Google is sending the whole planet to Reddit; your favorite social platforms are getting bought, banned, or abandoned; and your carefully crafted email just got pushed to a new category at the back of the inbox. Oh, and have you heard of this little thing called AI that no one is talking about?
But today¡¯s master is no stranger to seismic changes in media. He¡¯s been doing this since before the dot-com bubble. And he¡¯s got a message you need to hear to survive this one: Stop peeing in the pool.
Brian Morrissey
Founder, ; Former Editor-in-Chief, Digiday
- Claim to fame: Brian¡¯s been covering digital media and marketing long enough to remember when Pets.com was a thing.
Lesson 1: Stop peeing in the pool.
When every digital marketing channel is in a state of change, all of the usual playbooks are out the window ¡ª but Brian Morrissey sees this as more of a correction than a catastrophe.
¡°Every business got used to distribution being a commodity that you could just purchase off the shelf,¡± he says. For years, you could pay for a nearly guaranteed audience on almost any channel. ¡°But this is contrary to how marketing in general has worked¡ forever.¡±
Morrissey points out that the rise of performance marketing led (perhaps inevitably) to an era of growth hacks. A generation of marketers trying to find the one weird trick to go viral.
¡°Show me the incentives, I¡¯ll show you the outcome. And the incentives have been about quantity, not quality.¡±
The result is that ¡°there¡¯s been a ton of mid-level to low-level content pumped out. And with AI, that¡¯s going to become untenable. You can scale low-level content to infinity. It¡¯s peeing in the pool. Everyone has to get out.¡±
To Morrissey, that means the Growth Hack Era is coming to a close, and he isn¡¯t mourning.
¡°True marketing is not just looking for distribution seams before they close,¡± he says. ¡°This shift is going to put an emphasis on having a truly great product, and it¡¯s going to rely much more on word of mouth. You¡¯re going to need to earn »å¾±²õ³Ù°ù¾±²ú³Ü³Ù¾±´Ç²Ô.¡±
In other words, we¡¯re back to the basics. Marketing 101.
Lesson 2: Keep what works. But build for the future.
Now, Morrissey isn¡¯t saying distribution is or will be unimportant ¡ª and abandoning effective channels would be a costly mistake ¡ª but he does recommend taking a long view of marketing.
¡°It doesn¡¯t mean all that stuff goes away,¡± he says. ¡°But it probably stands to reason that, for example, marketers should plan for SEO to continue to go down.¡±
And the irony of what I¡¯m about to say isn¡¯t lost on me, but¡ pay attention to what you¡¯re seeing, not just what the experts are saying. Especially when those experts are also the sellers.
¡°There¡¯s this strange thing where Google comes out and says ¡®We¡¯re sending just as much traffic to everyone,¡¯ but every publisher I talk to is seeing way less traffic.¡±
As these distribution seams shift, Morrissey predicts that most marketers will simply continue to jump from tactic to tactic. ¡°Oh, email is flooded? We¡¯re going to start texting people,¡± he grins.
But that means there¡¯s a big advantage for those who start to think about what they¡¯re working towards.
¡°It¡¯s about continuing to try to win at the methods you¡¯ve been relying on, but also building what the future looks like in 5 years.¡±
Lesson 3: People trust people, not institutions.
¡°One of the big shifts we¡¯re seeing right now is from institutions to individuals,¡± Morrissey says. ¡°People trust people.¡±
Think of the current rise of microinfluencers, executive social presences, and lo-fi marketing.
¡°I think it¡¯s a little overwrought,¡± he confesses. ¡°But I think the direction of travel is pretty clear: Individuals will have leverage in the marketplace over institutions. I don¡¯t expect institutional trust to bounce back all of a sudden.¡±
In practical terms, that means highlighting the humanity behind your brand. Take a scroll through any 51³Ô¹Ï blog or email and notice that we no longer use the ¡°royal we.¡± Three years ago, I would have written this as 51³Ô¹Ï. Now I get to write it as Curt, a human being who happens to be an employee of 51³Ô¹Ï. (Nice to meet you!)
But Morrissey cautions that you need to have realistic expectations here.
¡°There¡¯s leverage in personality, but don¡¯t expect to create another Sam Parr,¡± he says, talking about the creator of The Hustle. Sticking with that example, he points out that 51³Ô¹Ï didn¡¯t create Sam Parr ¡ª it just bought his brand.
¡°The reason people like Sam have such enduring influence is because it¡¯s organic.¡± Creating an authentic, organic personality is rare and difficult ¡ª and that¡¯s exactly why it¡¯s valuable. ¡°I don¡¯t think Sam was created in a marketing lab.¡±
Lingering Questions
Today's Question
¡°What¡¯s one marketing belief you held five years ago that you¡¯ve completely changed your mind about?¡± - Jay Schwedelson, founder of SubjectLine.com and GURU Media Hub
Today's Answer
Morrissey says: ¡°That in-person events would become less important. 100% wrong. In-person events are more important than ever.
Humans are social animals and will always congregate. No matter what comes with AI, I do not believe the human species will throw in the towel on congregation.¡±
Next Week's Question
Morrissey asks: ¡°Will SEO be obsolete in 3-5 years?¡±