Mar
16
2009

SXSW and the Soft Sell

Ny Times reporting on the SXSW startups that are actively representing their new companies at the conference, but they are doing it in a nuanced way.

Start-up companies are aware that in-your-face marketing is a good way to scare off the kinds of people who go to South by Southwest.  JagTag, a company based in Princeton, N.J., that incorporates barcodes into marketing campaigns for the benefit of camera-phone users, decided not to attend the conference. Instead, the company sent a single employee loaded with several thousand promotional postcards bearing barcodes. “We didn’t want to do a hard sell,” said Dudley Fitzpatrick, the chief executive. “We just wanted to show it to them.”

This is interestingly taking a page out of the old revlon playbook- give a customer a free sample, and count on a certain buzz and response from those free samples.  If there is quality behind the product, this will be a sustainable strategy for acquiring new business.  In more competitive fields, however, it may not be a thoughtful one.  If there were milk companies giving away samples of their milk, for you to try – unless there was a substantial taste difference – would you really care? There are other differentiation points and marketing opportunities that are essential for moving a product into the mind of that audience (even if you use a soft sell approach).

Posted via web from OverLinked

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