women that generates hundreds of millions of dollars a year in revenue),
explains that many people believe that paid media is somehow irrelevant.
He feels that when we reject the importance of paid media we reject the
importance of consumers—a concept he finds dehumanizing. He doesn’t
know how people can expect to reach their audience without some form of
advertising.
The key to making
advertising advantageous, he shares, is being
conscious about how much you spend on it and how much you’ll get out of
it. Looking at return on investment (ROI) is the most fundamental and
important thing people forget when talking about marketing, business, and
advertising. How much money did you
spend and how much money did
you get out of that investment? That’s the only relevant question to ask.
And sometimes what you get out of it isn’t a dollar amount. Sometimes it’s
the credibility or the boost that having high social numbers and engagement
can give you. Return on investment may come in the form of getting a TV
job, into a film, a modeling contract, a record deal, or an investor for your
start-up, but you need to ask yourself how much those connections are
worth to you. What is the outcome you’re looking for? And what amount of
money or time are you willing to put in to get those results?
One of Hollywood’s most successful movie producers, media
executives, and investors, Jon Jashni backs up what Sophie Turner attested
to in the intro and explains that studios pay attention to the level of social
following and social engagement that specific actors have when making
casting decisions. It’s cheaper for studios to reach more people when actors
have grown their social presence. This is
especially true when casting
television, which moves faster and requires more noise and urgency to get
noticed. Jashni states, “If an actor’s relative attractiveness and
craftsmanship is equal, the thing that will tip
decision making will be the
social reach.”
This is true in many industries today. Think about how much value your
social numbers will provide and come up with a dollar amount from there.
Of course, my goal with anyone I work with is to spend the least amount of
money possible to yield maximum results. Even when working with high-
level clients like Katie Couric, I spend as little as possible. David Oh adds
that generally marketers should at least try for 100 percent ROI if they’re
only talking revenue cost and revenue stemming from advertising cost (but
give yourself a reasonable time frame to earn it back).
If you’re looking to get a million followers in less than thirty days, the
amount you’ll spend depends on different variables, including what market
you’re going after and what part of the world you’re looking to reach. If
you’re building a global company or a global brand, the cost efficiencies to
drive audiences in emerging markets are cheaper. In the United States or the
United Kingdom, I’ve been able to generate followers for as low as six or
seven cents. In emerging markets like India, with average to good content,
you can often get a follower for a penny or even less.
We will cover this topic in depth in
chapter seven
, “Go Global,” but
now I’d like to address those of you who are skeptical about the benefit of
building fans in emerging markets or have heard people say, “Fans from
India are fake.” Fans from foreign countries are real people. India, for
example, has the second-largest population in the world with 1.3 billion
real, live humans. Some of the smartest
investors in the world and
companies like IKEA, Netflix, MTV, the Coca-Cola Company, and PepsiCo
are investing heavily in the Indian market. Facebook just announced that
their largest user base is India, with 251 million users, and they have also
focused on growth in countries like Malaysia, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia.
When the biggest investors in the world are paying attention to foreign
markets, you’d be a fool to write them off.
You also have to consider the quality of your content. The better the
content, the better the ROI. If you have great content and can benefit from a
global
audience, you can gain one million followers in less than a month
(even as quickly as a week if you do it right) for as low as $7,500 to $8,000.
You could also take a hybrid approach—use the strategies from this chapter
to generate 250,000 to 500,000 followers quickly and then leverage the
information later in the book, such as on forming
strategic alliances in
chapter six
—to generate the remaining followers organically.
In any case, some financial investment is required. It may sound like a
lot of money, but if I came to you and said, “Your dream will be more
accessible for $7,500,” is that worth it? How much is a movie deal, model
contract, or record deal worth to you? Think
about what you can invest,
where you’re trying to go, and what you need—maybe you don’t even need
the full one million followers to build more credibility. Maybe you want
five hundred thousand or only one hundred thousand followers. Whatever
your goal is, this system can surely help you get there.
Erick Brownstein, president and chief strategy officer at Shareability, a
company that has created some of the most shareable content of all time,
agrees that, regardless of how good your content is, it’s essential to amplify
it with paid media. Brownstein says that hope is a bad strategy. No matter
how shareable a piece of content is, you have to use paid push. There’s just
too much noise and clutter out there. You have to boost your posts and pay
to ignite it. Brownstein’s team operates on the claim that “efficient paid is
the new organic.” Using paid media really well is key. You’ll go far if
you’re smart and get your fans for a fraction of the cost that others spend.
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