There’s always something to howl about.

Marketing Is Religion

“He’s Catholic but he’s awfully nice” was a comment you might have heard, in the 50’s. Now, I picked Catholicism but I could have picked Judaism, Evangelical Christianity, Islam… whatever. I’m using this as an example of how high the passions run when talk about a belief system. People are awfully defensive of their “mind-turf” and can be inflexible when it comes to considering a different school of thought.

Consider the RE.net. Do you like oranges or tomatoes? Did you cheer for Brady or Luther? Push versus pull? Will you call a lead a “lead”? It’s all seems stoopid yet it is ALL extremely important. Marketing is the new religion and sometimes our discussions escalate to the level of jihad.

…and that’s really okay. We’ll all get through it. Jew or Christian, push or pull, we’ll all achieve nirvana if we open our ears and listen…and be bold enough to act upon what we learn from each other.

I am a Real Estate Radio USA junkie. The Barrys are natural interviewers with just the right blend of doubt and enthusiasm. They are snaring some tremendous guests. Today, they interviewed Craig Proctor.

The Cliff Notes of what Craig Proctor said were:

1- Marketing trumps prospecting. AMEN

2- Marketing should be automated. Done properly, marketing automation allows us to spend 70% of our time doing our job rather than chasing business- AMEN

3- Direct response advertising trumps image advertising. AMEN, Brother.

4- Blogging is good to the extent that it produces leads and not to the extent that it (and I quote) “entertains or educates”. OUCH! Kinda stings, doesn’t it?

5- Marketing should produce so many leads that you should be able to pick and choose your clients. In fact, the most important thing in your real estate or mortgage brokerage practice IS lead generation. (We’ve heard that before). That is not to say that you should spend all your time on it but you must be OBSESSED with lead generation so that you CAN do your job effectively.

If you’re a member of the cult, it kind of sounds like one of the revival meetings, doesn’t it? That’s because Craig is one of his faithful followers, like I am.

Alas, not everyone thinks like me. One of Craig’s competitors incited a riot with this criticism. 195 comments, over seven months, before they closed down the comment thread to the chagrin of the faithful. If marketing ain’t religion to us real estate folk, I don’t know what is.

Please don’t mistake my commentary for blasphemy. The point I’m trying to make is that we subscribe to certain marketing philosophies like we would faith formation. Marketing is the life-blood of our practices so it is only natural we’d be passionate about the systems we use, the strategies we develop, and the tactics we deploy. Nobody wants to be the emperor with no clothes so we all vehemently defend the systems we use.

BloodhoundBlog is the church of real estate marketing (at least we’re trying to get to such a holy state). It’s a unitarian church, though, with divergent ideas. Greg Swann scoffs at the Chokepoint Charlies and Brian Brady worships at the altar of Keller & Jenks. Jeff Brown will beg you to evangelize while Sean Purcell encourages a more holistic approach to connect with more people. It’s the Pontiff in the Synangogue at BloodhoundBlog.

The participatory internet has created an ideas explosion not seen since the days of the industrial revolution. Zillow created a revolutionary marketplace but the believers still look in the newspaper to get their mortgage. The enlightened call out the unwashed while the Luddites want the enlightened ones to show them the money. All of this is happening while the devil creates chaos.

We’re obsessed with this stuff. We’re zealots. Marketing is religion, at least in our little world. The big world is changing dramatically with every rotation of the earth but the more things change, the more they stay the same. We’re all different in our practice but in the end we’re all trying to find that state of grace;

kismet with the consumer.

My ears are wide open. Grab a pew and pass the plate.