Big thanks to Wright/Hayden/Beshore/Brower family peoples. Thanks for helping Travis to become the inquisitive solution finder he is today. His love of learning, experimenting, and laughing came directly from interactions with you, Cathy Wright, Elmer Wright, Ken Brower, Rebecca Brower, Barbara Wright, Gene Hayden, Jeff Hayden, Mark Hayden, Mabel Beshore, Michael Beshore, Rachel Gamble, Jamie Gamble, Hank and Olivia Lamlech, Sarah Brower, and William Wright.
As for those in the Snook/Sorg clan, thank you for allowing Chris to be the abnormally curious and brave risk taker that he is. It is because of your solid foundation and knowing that he will be loved through failure and success alike that he has been able to repeatedly bloom where planted. Chet Snook, Ginny Snook, Palook and Sarge Snook, Gus and Barb Leconte, Corrie Snook Albrecht, Bob Albrecht, Mike Sorg, Karen Sorg, Melisa Gleason, Joe Gleason. “Hard work defines us, character separates us, and love is our legacy!”
And a special thanks to Hai Chen, as Travis and Chris never would have met if it wasn't for you, buddy!
FOREWORD
You are not a digital marketer…at least not yet.
I want to use this foreword to officially warn you. You're in for a delightful experience. Normally books that teach you so much aren't supposed to be this fun to read. But that's Travis and Chris for you. They not only share their real-world experiences in shaping the future of digital, they do so in an engaging and entertaining way that keeps you laughing and learning.
Now, with that said, let's get to work.
We live in an era of digital Darwinism, a time when technology and society evolve. The question is, how are you – or how are you not – evolving to keep up with change? It's not an easy question to answer.
There's an illusion that makes us believe that just because we are investing in new technologies and strategies, that we are ahead of the curve…that we're leading the way to the future of digital transformation because we use the same networks or apps as customers. But that doesn't make you a digital marketer. A digital marketer is someone who understands that, to engage someone digitally, it must be done in a meaningful, personalized and contextually + culturally relevant manner. Digital marketers understand the dynamics of online sites, communities, and apps individually, not in the aggregate; and more so, they understand the human on the other side of the screen based on preferences, behaviors, values, intents, lifestyles, aspirations, and so on. As such, digital is a means to reach a different breed of customers, one who's connected, informed, empowered, demanding, elusive, a bit narcissistic, and definitely in control of their online experiences.
Digital marketers, in the very least, are digitally literate and also empathetic, appreciating the extent of how people have changed and continue to do so. Only then can they design strategies, messages, content, and such that break the old chains and confines of traditional marketing and abolish the dated checklist and metric system many so-called digital, social, and mobile marketers rely upon today.
There's a reason you are reading this. It might be the same reason I wrote this. We're ready to sharpen our digital sense so we learn and, more important, unlearn, to grow and lead. In its purest form, that's digital “sense.” It's our ability to perceive outside inputs and assess new horizons and states that are driving the digital economy better than we do now. But it's also more than that. All of this is designed to help you be more in tune than your peers in grasping the gravity of change and do the things that put you ahead of your competition. And more so, you're learning how to step outside of what you think your role is in marketing to actually lead your organization into a digital-first era. This is a story that's equally about changing the future of marketing as it is a story of personal transformation.
The other reason I believe you're reading this is because you possess something that others in your organization do not…the ability to see what others can't; and as such, you're then willing to do what others won't. We can't do any of this alone. And, this is why you are part of a special group of people who share your passion for knowledge, who look for support from one another to blaze new trails, and who reassure one another in times of need.
One of the greatest challenges we all face is the difficulty in getting others to recognize the importance of digital when they don't personally live a digital lifestyle. As such, it's impossible to feel the importance of digital in the future of brand and customer experience. Without empathy and belief, you will never have the support you need.
And, that's really the heart of the matter. Most executives don't live the brand the way customers do, yet they're responsible for driving business objectives and managing resources to achieve them. If you're waiting for someone to tell you what to do next, you're on the wrong side of innovation. That's why we are here together right now. We're not waiting…we're leading the way.
Read the book. Make a plan. Let's go…
Observe: See the world differently without your personal filters. See people for their differences and let it all inspire you.
Visualize: Define where it is you need to go versus where you are and what success looks like both now and over time.
Act: Start learning and unlearning the things necessary to achieve your milestones and also help bring others on the path to transformation.
Earn: You are more than a marketer, you are a change maker; and as such, you will write the future of marketing as you evolve and earn the support and accolades you deserve.
PREFACE
A TALE OF TWO “TWEETIES”
On September 9, 2012, the Kansas City Chiefs lost to the Atlanta Falcons by a score of 40 to 24. The next evening, Travis was chatting with his buddy since fifth grade, Bryan, and they were complaining about how the Chiefs were approximately $30 million under the salary cap for the fifth year in a row.
Travis said, “You mean to tell me the Kansas City Chiefs have been approximately $100–$130 million dollars under the salary cap in the last five years? OMG, I'm sooo tweeting that.”
So he sent this one tweet: “I'm not much of a @KCChiefs fan anymore. Clark Hunt's yearly [$]30m under the [salary] cap is bullshit. Greedy bastard owners can F.O. cc @nfl”1
Figure