marți, 25 octombrie 2011

When Good Companies Do Stupid Things

By now most of you are aware of Facebook’s PR disaster. The firm’s secret smear campaign against Google has turned out to be one of the biggest fiascos in the company’s history. Google is no saint, but they have done a decent job positioning themselves around the idea that you can make money without doing evil. This is stated as one of their core 10 principles. Facebook could do a better job following suit. At RBM, a Marketing Firm in Hong Kong, they believe that the brand equity lost as part of Facebook’s shortsightedness will take years to recover.Marketing Firm in Hong Kong

A lot of performance-based marketing firms are missing half the equation. For RBM, performance means two complementary things. It means that they will treat clients business as if it were their own, and it means that they focus on delivering measurable business results.

A lot of digital firms deliver their clients performance, but they don’t put the client’s interests first. The media industry is notorious for fly-by-night operations that take a very short term approach to making money. The approach often involves adding poor performing elements to a campaign solely because they will boost media company margins. They call it “mixing bad whiskey in with the good,” and it is a terrible way to do business.

They believe that true performance marketing comes with operating as an extended part of their client’s teams, always operating with the client’s interest in mind. That creates the greatest long term value for both their clients and firms like theirs. That also produces trusting clients who stick around for the long haul.