I was on a teleconference with my mastermind group the other day and we were brainstorming to help one of our group members come up with a name for her new book. She had a title that she had been using for her ebook and that had been well-received by her clients, and she wanted to keep that title but expand on it for the next version of the book which was to be published. She also shared with the entire group that she felt she needed a "gimmick" for the book to attract media attention. She had come up with a gimmick that she felt worked well with her book content, and that her readers could relate to. She also felt it would generate the media attention she wanted. All good things.
Here's where the problem came in. As we were brainstorming we were trying very hard to tie her existing book title - and her established brand - in with this new "gimmick.” We were really struggling to tie the two together in a way that made sense. Every time someone threw out a suggestion it felt forced. It felt like we were trying to shove a square peg into a round hole and it just wasn't working. We finally hit a wall with our brainstorming.
And I realized something ... that sometimes gimmicks in marketing are good, but if they just don't fit with your product or service in a way that makes sense, they may be better left out. I guess my biggest piece of advice would be, if a gimmick works, then use it. But if it doesn't, don't force it. Because it will likely feel forced to your prospective clients.
Have you successfully used a gimmick to market your product or service? If so, I'd love to hear about it.
Marketing Success Podcast: Do Marketing Gimmicks Work?
Click Here to Download MP3/Audio
(length 3:06 minutes)
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