Motorola's Marketing Follies Don't Help Its Story 2 comments
-
Font Size:
-
Print
- TweetThis
Motorola's going to own Seamless Mobility, where today's hottest technology is converging -- where the Mobile Me lives -- where mobile broadband means everything everywhere and anything anywhere.
If that isn't blah-blah, I don't know what is.
To be fair, though, Zander probably is suffering from the "Curse of knowledge", a malady nicely articulated in the book, Made to Stick by Chip and Dan Heath. They define it after describing a psychology experiment where "listeners" struggled to guess songs whose rhythms were tapped out on a table by "tappers". The problem: the tappers already had the tune in their head and the listeners didn't. And CEO's have the same problem:
Once we know something, we find it hard to imagine what it was like not to know it. Our knowledge has "cursed" us. And it becomes difficult for us to share our knowledge with others, because we can't readily re-create our listeners' state of mind.
The tapper/listener experiment is re-enacted every day across the world. The tappers and listeners are CEOs and frontline employees, teachers and students, politicians and voters, marketers and customers, writers and readers. All of these groups rely on ongoing communication, but, like the tappers and listeners, they suffer from enormous information imbalances. When a CEO discusses "unlocking shareholder value" [or "where the Mobile Me lives"], there is a tune playing in her head that the employees can't hear.
It's this curse of knowledge that makes communicating hard. Let's hope Motorola gains a little more knowledge -- namely that they need help to communicate their story better -- before the shareholders stop listening at all.
Related Articles
|




























This article has 2 comments: