How far would you go for marketing?

BlueSteel

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Would you do something you would normally find immoral for the sake of marketing?

How far would you go to promote a product or service? Would you spam? Would you do something worse then spam?

It’s just a thing I’ve always wondered. I often go to extremes for marketing myself but I draw the line at anything illegal.
 
Anything that is legal is fair game for me.
 
No such thing as pure spam these days.

If you want to spam, you literally need to start a whole content factory.

Hard times. You have to configure all that stuff, meanwhile other people kiss and touch. I consider it a waste of time.

I find it immoral to use the internet for marketing. It feels like using cheat codes.
 
I wouldn’t do something I genuinely considered immoral, but I’m definitely willing to make people uncomfortable or piss them off if there’s a good reason behind it.

A few years ago, we wanted to promote a crypto broker, so we printed a ton of paper wallets, loaded each one with $2-3 worth of BTC, and handed them out on the street.

We gave away around $20K in total. Within a few days, we had already made it back through commissions attributed to those users. Not 100% accurately, of course, and this wasn’t LTV. It was just based on purchases they made during those first few days.

The campaign also got a lot of press, which led to a big jump in new users. Years later, we found that the users who joined during that period ended up being much more valuable than average. I’m not entirely sure why. My guess is that their first interaction with us was unusually positive, but your guess is as good as mine.

Another cool thing we did recently was for an animal welfare nonprofit. We wanted to encourage people to consider adopting dogs from shelters instead of buying purebred dogs from breeders.

We partnered with a major retailer and launched a new “purebred dogs” category on their ecommerce store. We listed several dogs there at well below market price.

Naturally, it pissed a lot of people off. But anyone who actually added a dog to their cart saw a message saying:

“Dogs aren’t something you should buy. They’re something you should adopt.”

The message also included a link to our shelters.

The campaign received a lot of press, and we’ve seen a huge spike in adoptions over the past couple of weeks. It’s still ongoing, so we don’t have the final numbers yet.

We’re a digital agency, so we don’t get many chances to do this kind of thing, but it’s always a lot of fun when we do.
 
I wouldn’t do something I genuinely considered immoral, but I’m definitely willing to make people uncomfortable or piss them off if there’s a good reason behind it.

A few years ago, we wanted to promote a crypto broker, so we printed a ton of paper wallets, loaded each one with $2-3 worth of BTC, and handed them out on the street.

We gave away around $20K in total. Within a few days, we had already made it back through commissions attributed to those users. Not 100% accurately, of course, and this wasn’t LTV. It was just based on purchases they made during those first few days.

The campaign also got a lot of press, which led to a big jump in new users. Years later, we found that the users who joined during that period ended up being much more valuable than average. I’m not entirely sure why. My guess is that their first interaction with us was unusually positive, but your guess is as good as mine.

Another cool thing we did recently was for an animal welfare nonprofit. We wanted to encourage people to consider adopting dogs from shelters instead of buying purebred dogs from breeders.

We partnered with a major retailer and launched a new “purebred dogs” category on their ecommerce store. We listed several dogs there at well below market price.

Naturally, it pissed a lot of people off. But anyone who actually added a dog to their cart saw a message saying:

“Dogs aren’t something you should buy. They’re something you should adopt.”

The message also included a link to our shelters.

The campaign received a lot of press, and we’ve seen a huge spike in adoptions over the past couple of weeks. It’s still ongoing, so we don’t have the final numbers yet.

We’re a digital agency, so we don’t get many chances to do this kind of thing, but it’s always a lot of fun when we do.
This guy right here is a top tier marketer and a good person.

Amazing. Absolutely amazing bro.
 
This guy right here is a top tier marketer and a good person.

Amazing. Absolutely amazing bro.
What!!
He just runs an agency and is supported by a big group of people who brainstorm with him.
He's just lucky.

Just like those exec vips on BHW.

I spoke to them after 2 years again.

And now I see they're quite damaged people who live in some fairytale in their head rejecting all TRUE problems of the world.

They're just lucky to have it.

Ask them for practical advice and they're gonna block you.

They speak of having some "ego issues". I don't know what that means as I'm not a psychology expert, but I think it's what they have.

Fck millionaires. Many of them have the same set ideas as someone broke.

They just did something during good market conditions. Right now it's terrible and I don't think it's worth starting anything else than some high authority sites or social media pages.
 
Nah that’s not just luck the guy’s got the right stuff for the job too.
It's really not him.

It's him in absolutely good conditions.

Nobody can copy paste what he does.

Reading it just creates more pain than pleasure.

This knowledge isn't transferrable unless you're literally 1 to 1 copy of him.

I read their tutorials and it doesn't really work. You have to invent your own guides and tutorials and warn people THIS SHIT WILL NOT WORK FOR YOU, IT'S JUST AN EXAMPLE.

For example, they tell you to reject everyone and focus on one thing that works for them. But if you replicate it, you'll become extremely miserable.

So just don't fcking try to copy those rich people. It's nonsense. Invent your own framework.
 
It's really not him.

It's him in absolutely good conditions.

Nobody can copy paste what he does.

Reading it just creates more pain than pleasure.

This knowledge isn't transferrable unless you're literally 1 to 1 copy of him.

I read their tutorials and it doesn't really work. You have to invent your own guides and tutorials and warn people THIS SHIT WILL NOT WORK FOR YOU, IT'S JUST AN EXAMPLE.

For example, they tell you to reject everyone and focus on one thing that works for them. But if you replicate it, you'll become extremely miserable.

So just don't fcking try to copy those rich people. It's nonsense. Invent your own framework.
If you’re reading someone else’s method, then you’re the method, bro.:ROFLMAO:
 
He just runs an agency and is supported by a big group of people who brainstorm with him.
Who are these people, if I may ask?

I just run an agency, that's true.
 
I don't mind thinking outside the box or taking a few risks when it comes to marketing, but I wouldn't do anything that hurts other people or damages someone else's business.
 
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