Sunday, April 22, 2012

My Fair Wedding-a Great Lesson for Marketing Students









(Photo Credit “my fair wedding blogs”

I’m a girl and I like random stuff, but one of the more stereotypical girly things I like are weddings(watching them anyway) and pretty fluffy stuff and My Fair Wedding  by David Tutera provides just that. There is just something about see a distressed bride to be go, from bah to tah-da! With the touch of an expert the end result is awesome, yet  the success is just “better”/ altered  version of whatever the bride to be originally  wanted, however funky that may have seemed.

Once while watching this show (although I probably had something better to do) the thought occurred to me, how many of the “end results” could this guy actually like, I mean personally?  With such a wide variety of people  with their own personal tastes and dreams I am pretty sure as grand as many end results are, not everything is something he would really choose for himself, if he had his own wedding. To be successful as a marketing consultant I think it is very important that one separates   objectives information, such as sound principles of a plan/design from the appearances of the project. For example a dress is a dress but depending on the body type certain styles are more flattering than others (I found out the hard way if you have the figure of a string bean you don’t want to wear puffy sleeves unless you don’t mind looking like a jock). That is pretty solid, however what the dress looks likes in terms of color, besides the fairly objective clothing styles suggestions, is optional. Your success as a consultant is not measured by liking everything, as much as to knowing how to make everything thing work.  What if David decided that every detail had to match his personal taste and completely ditched everything the brides wanted? He probably  wouldn’t be on T.V, have his own business,  and might be flipping burgers somewhere, but even that would fail he didn’t care how customers wanted their burgers cooked.  He could be successful in something, if he based everything on his own taste, but that isn’t as likely.

When I first started marketing as a volunteer, I confused marketing good advice with my personal taste in design which is easy to do because visuals are very important in marketing. I found it very easy to push subjective advice on color and design, along with proven principles and not even notice which is most important. Instead of saying something like, this ____(fill in the blank) is the basic principles behind___(whatever) that you should be concerned about and  leaving “trivial” details  in the execution  details up to the person  I was talking to, as  I would give the basics and my own trivial preferences and insist on it just as much as solid proven marketing  concepts, as if how many chocolate chips or raisins someone wants  go in their cookies is as important as hot the oven is and how long the cookies stay in. Now I see the silliness, and can focus on what I should be focused on, the objectives needed to make what the boss/client or whoever wants happen well, not my personal taste (which is fine to share at times and has its place) and how to get it the plan. That is a big lesson in marketing, so as it turns out watching wedding planning isn't a waste of time after all.





2 comments:

  1. I think it's really great insight that you have learned how to distinguish your personal preferences from what a client wants and going with their wishes instead of pushing them away from them. It's so frustrating when I know what I want and someone tries to convince me I don't want it. Usually there's a major emotional component to my choices, so good luck trying to change my mind! A good consultant does just what you said- they work within the constraints of their client's vision, even if that vision is more like a hallucination than a dream!

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    1. Yes, and it is so much harder to "hold back" when you have personal/emotionally mixed up in it as well, like when it's not "just a job" and you are passionate about it and/or personally know the person and want “what's best” for them(I wasn’t even being paid in that example). But what is best is best, and that might mean their best not your best for them, know what I mean? Or maybe I should word it, as wanting the person to be at their best not your best. I like parents could learn a lot from this too, support your kids-not a mini version of yourself.

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