Posts Tagged ‘Fast Company’

Girl Power Fuels WhateverLife.com

Tuesday, September 25th, 2007

Entrepreneurship is great because there are no limits.

Ashley Qualls, just 17, has built one of the top websites in the world, attracting over 7 million unique visitors each month. That’s better than CBS.com, Britannica.com, and AmericanIdol.com!

Even better, she’s already earning about $100,000 per month!

In a classic case of providing a useful solution to a problem experienced by millions, Ashley has figured out how to cash-in on the Internet. This month, Ashley’s story was featured in Fast Company. That’s just the beginning of the publicity that she’s sure to get as her trendy site, www.whateverlife.com continues to take flight.

She had the right idea at the right time. Chuck Salter of Fast Company explains what the site is all about, “Eager to customize their MySpace profiles, girls cut and past the HTML code for whateverlife layouts featuring hearts, flowers, celebrities, and so on onto their personal page and–presto– a new look. Think of it as MySpace clothes; some kids change their clothes nearly as frequently. ‘It’s all about giving girls what they want,’ Ashley says.”

Timing, a great idea and a focused marketplace (12 to 19 year old girls with an estimated buying power of $87 billion) layed the foundation for this site to succeed. Add in the necessary ingredients of a well designed and tightly packaged website with a smart, determined young entrepreneur, and voila! another great company is born.

Check out these great posts for more information about this topic:

Being a Young Entrepreneur

Diary of a Young Entrepreneur - Filaments and Fame

“rel=”nofollow”Teenager Let The Internet help You Become A Young Entrepreneur”

Make Your Marketing Message Polarizing

Saturday, April 7th, 2007

Most marketers are afraid to do anything risky, bold, controversial, or polarizing. That’s why most marketing efforts go unnoticed.

Pay attention to the ads, offers, and promotions that catch your attention. They are almost always risky, bold, controversial or polarizing. Until you’re willing to “go there,” expect mediocre marketing campaigns.


An excerpt of a excellent new book by Dan and Chip Heath, Made to Stick (Random House, 2007) is featured in the April, 2007 edition of Fast Company, and focuses on the concept of polarizing your marketing message—here’s a summary of the article:


Polarize Me: If you want people to like you, first decide who needs to hate you.

We
examined more than 1,000 Match.com ads—from men and women, old and
young. Our search yielded headlines like this one:  “Hey,” Folks, if
your opening line is “Hey,” you better be hot.

Another
said “Looking for love,” Well, duh, you’re on Match.com. At least
two-thirds of the headlines said nothing—and did it poorly.

Why
do these headlines suck so much? Fear. Fear of saying too much. Fear of
saying something clever that someone might think is stupid. Fear of
saying something revealing that might turn someone off. The headlines
try desperately not to exclude anyone. In doing so, they succeed at
boring everyone…

…Consider
Honest Tea, a fast-growing indie beverage expected to hit $25 million
in sales this year. Its tagline? “Real Tea. Real Taste. Honest.” In
other words, “Hey”.


If
anything, the fear of being disliked afflicts marketers more acutely
than daters, because the stakes are higher. “Most marketers feel that
if they make a bold statement, they risk not just alienating
customers—but also their boss, and their boss’s boss,” says Charles
Rosen, founding partner of Alalgamated ad agency. “That fear takes the
edge off of all communications.”

Amalgamated put a stake in the ground with its campaign for Svedka vodka, which is
set in the year 2033 and features a “sexy” fembot spokesperson…Svedka
knows who it wants to date: irreverent urban party people who are out
until 3a.m. three times a week. If that’s not you, Svedka doesn’t care.
Its attitude helped it fetch $384 million…

Honest
Tea, though, wants everybody to like it, and that’s a shame because it
is a distinctive product—namely, it isn’t stiflingly sweet like some of
its competitors…it should say, “If ‘high-fructose corn syrup’ on the
label doesn’t make you cringe, we don’t want you.”

Concrete images and language, like Svedka’s, make it easier for like-minded people (and companies) to find one another.

Some
singles have figured this out. Here’s a brilliant example: “Athletic
math nerd seeks someone to hum Seinfeld intro music with.” While
excluding, he’s simultaneously becoming more interesting to potential
soul mates. Another appropriately polarizing headline reads, “I might
just Bite!” Well done.

(For reprints of the entire article contact Fast Company at Reprint Management Services, 717-399-1900 Ext. 158)

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