On Friday I wrote a piece for the Harvard Business Review called Six Marketing Mistakes at CES 2012Here is a quick summary of the six mistakes:
  1. All the focus was on features (still, in 2012!), and not nearly enough attention was paid to lifestyle.
  2. Too much matter-of-fact, borderline defensive messaging.
  3. The people working your booths are unhelpful at best, and cost you a lot of business and media coverage at worst.
  4. There are too many marketing and PR agencies doing a bad job at CES. (This is a year-round problem, but it’s especially pronounced at CES.
  5. There are too many unforced errors in your marketing at CES.
  6. There is too much ego. You must know what your market thinks. To not know and plow forth anyway is ego.

Read the complete article over at HBR.org here.

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I am a marketing consultant with clients that include TiVo, Logitech, T-Mobile, Sprint, Yelp! and ZAGG. My new book, Evangelist Marketing, has been on the market for less than a week, and is 288 pages on topics like this one.

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