Last night was the season finale of the TV show Lost -
and just in case you haven't watched it and have it sitting on DVR??
waiting for you, don't worry ... there are no spoilers in this post.
Actually, though I'm an enthusiast of the show, the reason for this
post isn't to gush about how great I think it is. It is about what you
learn from how the show has been promoted. Like many recent dramas, it
is not an easy show to follow. It isn't about nothing, and you can't
just miss a few episodes and still get into it. Yet as I wrote about in PNI
(search for "Lost" with the Search Inside feature on Amazon - it is
Page 108) - the show's unique format of taking you into the backstory
of each characters builds an emotional investment from the viewer in a
way that many other shows never manage to do. You believe in the
characters because you know about the situations that make them the way
that they are.
There
is a marketing lesson in that, as there is in several other choices the
show's producers and marketing teams have made. Here are a few things
that the show does and the marketing lesson that you can learn from
them:
Share the backstory. As
I mentioned above, giving viewers a look at where the characters come
from gives each of them a sense purpose and allows you to feel more
empathy towards them. As any good screenwriter knows, the point isn't
for you to love every character - it's for you to feel something towards them. Once you do that, you're engaged in the show. Marketing Lesson: Make sure you share the story behind your brand so you can give people a reason to believe in it.
Untangle the complexity. One of the smartest things the show does is they feature a simplified 3-5 minute version of every episode untangled (see
video below in this post). These descriptions are from the outside
looking into the show, referring to a character who wears too much eye
makeup as "eyeliner" and poking fun generally at the actors in the show
and the way they portray their roles. Alongside this irreverance, Lost
Untangled explains the plotline of every episode in a way that allows
you to understand it despite the complexity of time shifting, multiple
characters and hidden clues. Marketing Lesson:If you have something complicated to sell, get creative about how you can simplify it.
React to your critics. Early in the show, the
creators were criticized because they got people emotionally invested
in the core characters of the show, and then introduced new characters
and shifted the focus. Many viewers were confused because the
characters they knew had essentially vanished. Though this was
presumably part of the broader story arc, the producers recognized that
viewers needed some connection to the characters they already loved,
and found a way to bring that back - while still progressing their
story and introducing the new characters they had planned to. Marketing Lesson: Don't ignore your critics, but don't change your strategy because of them either.
Have a finite ending. As the trailers after last
night's finale noted, next year will be the final season of Lost. For a
top rated show, it cannot have been an easy decision to let the show
end at what seems to be the height of its popularity - yet having a
finite end is important for both audiences and for the writers of the
show. Everyone knows that the show is leading toward something. There
is a sense of anticipation and excitement, as well as urgency to watch.
It's not a soap opera where people go into comas, die, wake up and go
on again. Marketing Lesson: Having an ending is important - even if it's just a campaign that ends so you can start a new one.
Rohit Bhargava
This piece was originally published on Rohit's blog, Influential Marketing, and is posted on DMW with the author's permission. Rohit's bio can be viewed here.
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