| | Joe, I wish I had this article (and access to the internet, for that matter) when I first read Rand back in 96.
Many good points made, I just wanted to add and expand on one idea, of learning how to promote the philosophy. I know that when I began "proseyltizing", I could be antagonistic, believing that I had a superior idea and that anyone who didn't see that was either immoral or evasive. It's funny how many people, after having one of those "this book changed my life" moments, suddenly enter the sales and advertising world as a side effect! But without knowing the principles of advertising, we'll selling ourselves short. In the advertsising field, there are supposed 22 "immutable" laws of marketing". Some of these "laws" are:If you didn't get into the prospect's mind first, don't give up hope. Find a new category you can be first in.
When you're first in a new category, promote the category.
It's better to be first in the prospect's mind than first in the marketplace.
All that exists in the world of marketing are perceptions in the minds of the customer or prospect. The perception is the reality. Everything else is an illusion.
[Re speed to market], If a bullet took five years to reach a target, very few criminals would be convicted of homicide.
If you want to be successful today, you should give something up. There are three things to sacrifice: product line, target market, and constant change.
Brilliant marketers have the ability to think like a prospect thinks. They put themselves in the shoes of the customer.
(Yes, the author of these laws said "sacrifice"...a good object lesson. Objectivists have a better, "superior" definition of sacrifice, but try to convince the author, or the "client" to replace the word or definition of sacrifice...but the traditional view is "protected" by the second rule listed! Instead of working hard to change a mind, recognize this advertising rule and learn a better strategy...)
It's essential to be honest about where your product stands in the heirarchy of introduction. Many superior products fail to sell because they simply were introduced into a crowded marketplace, and the majority of leading brands are also the first introduced (Coke, Pepsi, RC Cola...McDonals, Burger King, Wendies...try gaining a lead in the market with a superior cola, or new burger...but don't hold your breath for number one!)
There's usually room for competition, but the race for dominance is usually fought between the first two products on the market. Sometimes the "third party" candidate makes a bid to climb that heirarchy, as RC Cola once attemped to "go for the jugular." They failed miserably. Burger King, at their peak, recognized their second place status and worked to their strenghts, but slipped down again by "forgetting their place." Etc., etc.
If it's next to impossible to knock Coke or McDonald's out of the top spot, imagine what it's like to "challenge 2000 years of Christianity!" Not only that, but the marketplace of ideas is oversaturated by Judiasm, Islam, Buddhism, etc. Witness the failure of the Libertarian party to grab a significant share of the votes. One can have a superior idea, yet unfortunately, and this is hard for a new convert to O'ism to understand, successful selling is not based on the better product. That's not to say you shouldn't HAVE a superior product, it means that if you want to spread ideas on a large scale, you have to recognize that the current marketplace works on subjective perceptions. It does no good to get angry when the world at large does not budge at the efforts of the newbie to "change the world." Any salesman who thought like the newbie would simply make no money.
To successfully begin an outreach program, Objectivists would do well to remember the above rule that first usually dominates. But, having said that, change the category. Many established brands that made it first die because they don't adapt. Judaism came first, but was replaced by Christianity, the first religion to adapt to individual salvation. Objectivism is not the first system of ethics to the market, but it's the FIRST to give capitalism a moral base, the FIRST reality-based moral system, etc. And play to the competitor's weaknesses. Mcdonalds made it big with Kid's meals, and playgrounds. Burger King tried to copy this, but then switched gears, and played on the reputation of Mcdonals as "kid's stuff," putting their emphasis on serving adults and teens who don't want "the kiddie burger." Objectivism could do something similar.
Most importantly, don't come out desperate. Many eager Objectivist newbies act as if their life depended on converting the world overnight, forgetting about the need to create a demand. The potential convert may need a reality based philosophy, but they don't know that, they may be convinced that there's no need for "New Coke" and stay with "Coke classic."
Anyone remember "New Coke"? "Crystal Pepsi"? "Pepsi Kona"?
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