56 DC VELOCITY JANUARY 2018 www.dcvelocity.com
THE BUSINESS WORLD IS CHANGING FASTER THAN EVER.
Yes, we’ve been hearing that for decades, but as we enter 2018, it
is really true.
Technologies designed to revolutionize logistics and supply
chain management seemingly come online every day. Some do
portend a significant change in our future. Some, on the other
hand, are destined for the scrap heap of overhyped applications
that never fulfilled their initial promise.
The business media field is by no means insulated from this
dynamic. Traditional means of developing and delivering content remain in place, but they’ve been joined by an array of new
across myriad streams like LinkedIn, Twitter,
Snapchat, mobile apps, webcasts, and video
feeds.
And, of course, in order to pay its bills,
a media company must monetize all those
streams by attracting viewers for each one,
securing the audiences’ interest and trust, and
then allowing advertisers and sponsors to ride
along on those streams and get their marketing
messages in front of those viewers. In a sense,
the fundamental precept of using content to
create a conduit between buyers and sellers
is as old as, well, Gutenberg’s moveable-type
press. What’s different today is the vast number
of microchannels through which that content
must travel.
While we’re on the subject of marketing, an old media business
truism has it that some of the best advertising your brands (and
your content streams) could ever receive comes from the mouths
of the competition. That might sound counterintuitive, but consider the unspoken message: By “bad mouthing” competitive brands,
you’re making it clear to the media buyer that your competition
has you worried. Otherwise, in a world where you might be lucky
to get 30 minutes a year to pitch an advertising prospect, why
would you waste even one of those precious minutes putting your
competition front and center on your prospects’ radar screens?
For our part at AGiLE Business Media (publisher of DC
VELOCITY and other business media brands), we have always maintained a strict policy of marketing ourselves and not our competition. Our sales directors focus on the strengths and virtues of our
brands. We let the competition talk about their brands, and if along
the way they want to bring up our brands, we love it!
So, why bore you with all this media business
“inside baseball”? Because so many companies in
recent years have fallen into this trap, and in so
doing, they are helping their competitors and quite
likely hurting themselves. And it’s because of just
one company. One we all seem to talk about ad
nauseam. You may have heard of it—it’s called
Amazon.com.
The little online bookseller that opened its doors
on the World Wide Web in 1995 has mushroomed
into a retail force of nature and a tech-enabled conglomerate, with business units
that now include cloud services,
video streaming, fulfillment services, B2B (business-to-business)
procurement, Web services, and
mobile device manufacturing. It
also seems it is what nearly everyone is talking about, nearly all of
the time.
We have even adopted a new
term for how Amazon is changing the way we conduct busi-every time Amazon announces a new venture or
expansion. Yet while all the attention is certainly
understandable and may well be justifiable, it may
not be the best thing.
If you’re fixated on Amazon and its potential
“effect” on your business, perhaps the best thing to
do is stop talking about it. Talk instead about your
business, your logistics operations, your strategy,
and your path. Amazon will still be there, but there
are other things in the world that are important and
that are driving change. They deserve some share of
mind as well.
Group Editorial Director
BY MITCH MAC DONALD, GROUP EDITORIAL DIRECTOR outbound
The United States of Amazon