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Stacey Cornelius
I'm a raving idealist, idea junkie, and creative entrepreneur with a Fine Art degree. I have professional experience in retail, theatre, and the IT industry. I'm here to show you how to make marketing part of your creative process. Contact Me

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Beware the business guru

October 26, 2009

How do you shape your marketing efforts and sales techniques? Do you adopt a popular standard? Mimic someone you know and admire? Make it up as you go? Or do you follow popular marketing and business experts, scrambling to keep up with everything they say you should do?

Obviously, ignoring the experts altogether isn’t a smart business strategy. There are intelligent people out there who are genuinely interested in buying trends, demographics and customer psychology. You can benefit greatly from their work.

On the other hand, chasing their advice like a tweenage groupie panting over the Jonas Brothers isn’t much of a plan, either.

You have to know why you’re following someone’s advice. You have to think carefully about whether or not it applies to you. When you ask a question, you need to make sure the right person answers it.

I once attended a workshop given by someone who was touted as an expert in my field. I paid the fee, took a day out of my studio schedule, and got exactly the wrong information. The expert operated at a completely different level, and (as I only discovered months later) didn’t understand my business at all. Eventually I got the right information by way of a customer. I found someone with the right information—the solution came in a five word sentence.

That, I suppose, would be irony.

There’s nothing wrong with following business gurus, or for that matter, gurus of any kind. You run into problems when you follow blindly.

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Comments (5)

So….How does one determine which “expert” is giving useful advice? I’ve been mulling over the popular wisdom (of “experts”)that one must have a Facebook fan page, participate on Twitter, and generally spend hours a day networking and chatting on forums. I’ve observed that it seems to work for people, too.
However, it all seems kind of circus-like and repellent to me. You have to market. But does really require all this?
Any suggestions?

[Reply]

Stacey Cornelius Reply:

The short answer is, “It depends.”

I’m not trying to be flip.

Where are your customers? By customers, I mean the nice people who want to give you money. That’s where you need to focus your energy.

[Reply]

[...] case you were wondering, I made that myth up about 10 minutes ago. I’m an aspiring guru. I have a fancy cushion and everything, now I just have to find a mountain to sit [...]

[...] response to my post about the hazards of business gurus, Linda posted a comment asking how you know who to trust among the crowd of self-proclaimed [...]

[...] there. I don’t want to add to it. I don’t want to be a make-believe, self-appointed guru. I want to help people for [...]

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