Signs of marketing burnout

From Mark Evans saying the word VoIP confuses consumers to the constant barrage of anti-2.0 tactics employed by the 1.0 powerbrokers, it seems that the effort required to get our message through to the masses is growing by the day.  The problem is, in order to effectively market a concept, you have to describe your service, and this is something we fail at.  Before I get into that, check this–To me, here’s what our movement, our 2.0 revolution, our VoIP mission, can accomplish for people:

1. Create a framework for multimedia networked applications in manner  similar to what the web did for data and messaging in the mid 1990s.

2. Eliminate consumer reliance upon, and subsequent tarriffing and pricing fixing by, the big telcos.

3. Re-define the last mile operators as access networks, not application providers–which will give consumers two things: (1) access network companies more focused on providing access and (2) application providers which compete against each other, not against the access network companies.

4. Leverage WiFi as the rule for ubiquitous access, not the exception. This means less 3G and more IP for consumers.

People who think the 2.0 world is too eggheaded for consumers to grasp are wrong. 2.0 is ALL ABOUT consumers. It empowers them. Democratizes their preferences. Lets them vote with their feet.  So naturally, it’s a threat to the 1.0 power brokers, who subsist by locking in customers and essentially putting artificial contractual limits on choice.  You don’t think consumers want a palatte of best-of-breed solutions instead of an “on-off button” of an expensive, mediocre compromise solution boiled down to the least common demoninator, like we have today with cellular data services and AT&T/Verizon? No way… Consumers are smarter than that.  They’re just too accustomed to there not being ANY OTHER OPTION than the mediocre compromise, and they settle for it.

At the core of enabling technologies like VoIP, WiFi, and other “free-to-use” technologies is the notion that the consumer, not the specialized infrastructure player, has the power.  Just look at what happened with the Web. People said consumers weren’t ready for the web, or that they were too stupid to use computers, or that hackers would destroy the web’s chances as a real business network.  Remember when Bill Gates referred to the web (and the Internet) as a passing fad?

Are we going to relent to the same unimaginative thinking, as it applies to what WE do?

80 thoughts on “Signs of marketing burnout

  1. Pingback: Wednesday Night Roundup

  2. Pingback: gendeng

  3. Pingback: Potato And Leek Soup

  4. Pingback: Memory Foam Mattress Reviews

  5. Pingback: Minecraft Texture Packs

  6. Pingback: reverse phone call lookup

  7. Pingback: herbal remedies

  8. Pingback: liberty reserve

  9. Pingback: Memory Foam Mattress Reviews

  10. Pingback: download apk

  11. Pingback: Minecraft Texture Packs

  12. Pingback: shadowgun madfinger apk

  13. Pingback: Top Truck Ace Viral apk

  14. Pingback: jlkutughk

  15. Pingback: Apple laptop

  16. Pingback: newsletter

  17. Pingback: link building

  18. Pingback: Whatman extraction thimbles

  19. Pingback: white tank tops for women

  20. Pingback: Alpha Warranty

  21. Pingback: gun app

  22. Pingback: tuxedo rental

  23. Pingback: free nba picks

  24. Pingback: hire freelance

  25. Pingback: booking hotel

  26. Pingback: Silver Spring denied social security disability

  27. Pingback: SEO Quote

  28. Pingback: Marketing SEO

  29. Pingback: Google SEO

  30. Pingback: SEO Analysis

  31. Pingback: Minnesota SEO Company

  32. Pingback: short term loans

  33. Pingback: muscle head

  34. Pingback: whiplash compensation

  35. Pingback: ROAD CONSTRUCTION

  36. Pingback: injury claims

  37. Pingback: shoulder injury

  38. Pingback: wrong diagnosis

  39. Pingback: personal injury

  40. Pingback: medical negligence

  41. Pingback: http://www.personalcashadvance.com

  42. Pingback: serotonin

  43. Pingback: medical insurance for children

  44. Pingback: Tungsten Rings

  45. Pingback: Video Clips

  46. Pingback: Bexley IN crack repair

  47. Pingback: bolsas plastico

  48. Pingback: Mirasol real estate

  49. Pingback: coupons for oil change

  50. Pingback: Top Penny Stocks

Leave a Reply