Design Thinking in Plain English

I’ve been writing about design thinking for a few weeks now. I’ve spoke of Western culture’s growing emphasis on creativity and knowledge in business and the increasing importance of design thinking.

As Cultural Creatives we use design thinking naturally. Yay!

Below is a video, created by Standford University students, explaining what design thinking is and how to apply it.

This is a great video to watch if you aren’t 100% clear on the concept of design thinking or if you’d like a better understanding of how your mind goes about solving problems.

Marketing to Innerpreneurs & Cultural Creatives

Marketing to Innerpreneurs & Cultural Creatives

What I Mean by “Marketing”

The word “marketing” can often be seen as a soulless one and one without any true meaning. In my career, I have heard people define it as many things, from “making things pretty” to “trying to sell people crap that they don’t need”. My Mac dictionary defines it: “the action or business of promoting and selling products or services, including market research and advertising.”

None of these definitions jive with me. They are too simplistic and reductionist. They don’t say a thing about the most important consideration in marketing—your client. Marketing is a big waste of time if you never bother to understand and connect with your target market. Marketing isn’t about you, it is about understanding and solving the pains (problems) of your clients.

To me, marketing is:

  • connecting with your ideal client
  • generating business
  • creating loyalty through client experience

To put it simply, it is Mindful Marketing. It is looking at marketing from a more holistic point-of-view.

We Are All Marketing to Each Other

Each of us believes that consciousness should be present in all aspects of our lives, including our business practices. As such, our business activities invariably end up appealing to clients of a similar mindset. We are all marketing to people just like us, to Cultural Creatives. We have created a new type of business, conscious commerce. Businesses created by Cultural Creatives for Cultural Creatives.

‘Modern’ techniques of marketing don’t work on us. We aren’t looking to buy “stuff” instead we are looking for things that will make our lives work better. We are looking for experiences, not products and services. We want to build businesses that will uplift spirits, educate, soothe, inspire and enlighten.

How to Market to Innerpreneurs and Cultural Creatives

  1. Be Authentic
    Innerpreneurs remaining authentic may be a growing concern as conscious commerce grows in popularity; as it may be difficult for us to connect with and hire marketing experts that practice the type of marketing we believe in. As you may already experience, finding mindful experts for all of our innerpreneurial business activities, e.g., accounting, can be difficult. This is why I feel it is important for us to begin connecting. Lets make it easier on all of us to find and work with each other.
  2. Appeal to Your Clients’ Head and Heart
    Provide your clients with all the information they need to make a decision (CC’s shop with their heads) but provide it in a way that makes them feel connected to your offering (CC’s buy with their hearts).
  3. Don’t Be Afraid to Challenge Convention
    Take your own road. Your clients will be attracted to it.
  4. Be Transparent
    Simply tell the truth. Your clients will see right through gimmicks or tricks and may quickly discount you because of it.
  5. Connect With and Challenge Your Clients’ Mind
    Cultural Creatives like to dig into the layers of ideas. Use that concept in your advertising messages. Layer them. Make them curious about you.
  6. Get Involved
    It’s been coined cause marketing. Get your business involved in causes. It could be as simple as volunteering your professional help to a non-for-profit or powering your office with renewable energy. Either way, show your clients that you walk the walk, as well as talk the talk.
  7. Get Personal
    We love hearing people’s stories. Make your personal and business story be available to your clients.
  8. Help Your Clients with Word-of-Mouth
    Make it easy for them to educate others on your offerings. Cultural Creatives love spreading good ideas. The internet is the best tool for this. To encourage word-of-mouth, make sure you have a website at the very least.

Are there other marketing strategies that connect with you?

What Does the Word ‘hippie’ Mean?

What Does the Word ‘hippie’ Mean?

photo credit: jdebner

I keep getting called a ‘hippie‘. It seems to be the only word some people can think of to describe me and my husband’s way of life and values. I know I should correct them and say that I am actually a ‘Cultural Creative‘ but I don’t.

What I’m wondering is, what do people mean when they use the word ‘hippie‘? Is it for lack of a better term? Or are they mocking?

It makes me sad to think that people feel the need to outwardly mock conscious living. What makes it so funny? And why does it make people react in a hostile way?

My Ideas on Social Media

My Ideas on Social Media

For many, social media is still a fuzzy and foreign concept. It is a new industry and it still has a lot of growing and defining to do. A few weeks ago I sat down with Danny Brown of Press Release PR and discussed what Social Media means to me.

If you’d like to hear my thoughts, I encourage you to read the article, Discussing Social Media with…Tara Joyce.

Online Conversations by Brian Solis
photo credit: b_d_solis

In the article I talk about:

  • How I would define social media
  • What my motivation for using it is
  • How I think businesses can use it better
  • What social media tools I use
  • Where I see the future of social media going