By : Samir Husni | Founder and director of the Magazine Innovation
Center at the University of Mississippi’s Meek School of Journalism and
New Media. Professor and Hederman Lecturer at the School of Journalism.
First Published : Publishing Exceutive , Nov 2011 Issue
Follow Samir Husni On Twitter : https://twitter.com/MrMagazine
http://www.pubexec.com/article/dare-be-different-other-tips-success-innovative-world/1
First Published : Publishing Exceutive , Nov 2011 Issue
Follow Samir Husni On Twitter : https://twitter.com/MrMagazine
http://www.pubexec.com/article/dare-be-different-other-tips-success-innovative-world/1
I have a collection of more than 1,000 neckties, however one of them
stands apart from all the rest. It is a red tie with tens of white sheep
and one—and only one—black sheep. I wear it to class the very first day
of school mainly to remind the students about the need to be different.
Forget unique. There is nothing unique in this world. A sheep is a
sheep is sheep. However, a black sheep is different than a white sheep,
and thus the theme of the class becomes "Dare to Be Different."
➊ Dare to Be Different and Better
Almost on a daily basis I receive phone calls and e-mails from folks
who want to start a new magazine. They all start with the same opening
line, "There is nothing like it on the marketplace." My typical answer,
"Guess what? There is a reason there is nothing like on the
marketplace. It does not work." So my first tip is always to dare to be
different and better than what is out there. There is no such thing as
unique. Every publication out there has a different DNA; find out what
your DNA is and mingle with the crowds. If you are better and different
you will stand out.
➋ Romance the Customer
Being better and different means you have to know and romance your
customer, your intended audience that you are aiming to reach to sell a
different and better message. We spend so much time nowadays romancing
the technology where, in reality, it is not the technology you need, my
friend, but the customer. Falling in love with your customer requires
knowing that customer, dating that customer and partnering with that
customer. There is no better tip than falling in love with your
customer. Romancing the stone—or the technology—will take you nowhere.
➌ Serve the Demographical Divide in Your Audience
Dissect that customer based on the demographics. The last few
decades, the industry focused so much on psychographics. The challenge
today is the demographics. We are approaching a three-generational
divide in the country: those who are under 25, the ones born right after
the birth of the Mac and the desktop publishing era (remember those
years); the ones between 25 and 55, the ones who actually witnessed the
birth of the Mac and worked their way to the iPads; and those who are
over 55, many of whom spend most of their time with what we now call
"traditional media."
Guess what? Each one of those audiences consumes media in their own
way. There is no one size fits all. We need to be aware of the changing
demography of this country and adapt our media to that change. Did you
know that there are more folks over the age of 50 in the United States
of America than under 50? What are you doing for them?
➍ Focus on Who and What … Not How
Last but not least, that fictitious division between old and new
media needs to be thrown out of the window. It is something that we
create, and, in reality, it does not exist. My grandson, who is barely
four, shifts from his iPad to his books without evening thinking, or
saying, for that matter, "I am moving from the digital age to the ink on
paper age." It is part of the routine. It is us folks over 50, who make
that reference to the shift from one age to the other. To the younger
generation, every day brings in a new media, whether it is in print or
on a tablet. The absolute best tip I can leave you with is the one that I
have learned from my students at the university. Focus on whom you want to reach, with what message, and the how to reach will follow. Stop spending time on the how, but rather on the who and what.
Dare to be different …and I will say one more time, different and better.

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