What is safe marketing?
I’d define it this way: it’s cheap, because you’re investing little or no money, and it breaks no new ground: it can’t offend anyone because others have already covered the
same material, and no one’s complained about it.
It’s “safe” because it’s risk-free: you won’t lose money, you won’t look “weird,” you won’t cause a fuss.
Of course you won’t get noticed, either, but… you’re “safe.”
What about buying lottery tickets?– that’s risky, isn’t it? Not if you’re only buying $1 or $2 tickets, and you can afford to lose.
Or if you only jump in and buy a $2 Powerball ticket when the jackpot hits $100 billion.
It’s a safe bet as long as you’re only spending a few bucks.
Plus, you get to be in on the action, and there’s always a chance you’ll win big.
Infinitesimal, perhaps, but it could happen.
As a long-term money-making strategy, buying lottery tickets is a losing game.
So is “safe” marketing– because “safe” content goes unnoticed.
Behavioral researcher Richard Shotton writes that brands tend to overestimate people’s interest in their products.
As a result, they create content that takes being noticed for granted. They ignore the first-step problem of grabbing people’s attention.
He adds that the best way to be noticed is to be distinctive. Mimic other people’s content, and you’ll be ignored.