email us at amarts@artifact3.com

Name: Amin Marts. No worries if you mispronounce the first name, I’ll correct you.

What I’m interested in: Simply, finding solutions for problems, excuse me, challenges.

What I bring to the table: Big picture thinking. Ruthless execution. The ability to distill complex topics into bite-sized and easy to digest contextual stories.

Turn On’s: Smart design. Simple solutions to complex problems. Billboards that make me stop, think, and take a picture to share with you. Jargon. Most of all, flowy singletrack.

Turn Off’s: Jargon. Overly complex solutions that don’t scale. Ambiguous messages. Unintelligible handwriting. Skiers who wear Starter jackets.

My Favorite Tools: iPad, Keynote, Mindmeister, DropBox, old skool whiteboards, OmniFocus, Glenn Beck.

Things I (admit) I read: HBR, Economist, anything Seth Godin writes, WSJ, on occasion the International Herald, when feeling snarky The New Yorker.

January’s Wish: To lose the twang I’ve developed from watching too much CMT during Christmas.

Best way to contact me: Through my twitter or email. I’m easy to find.

Twitter (Marketing) Gets Learning

Marketing works when it’s accompanied by elements of learning. Twitter recently unveiled Twitter101, which answers the question:

How can your business use Twitter?

Does it get any simpler than that? I think not. Contemporary business speak is maligned with jargon, fancy words and phrases that frankly, mean nothing. Anamitra Banerji has distilled this message to its core.

Mr. Banerji opens the piece with a concise explanation of what Twitter is and how it works. This opening, positions the tactical capabilities of Twitter front and center. The real value of the piece is in the business stories that impart how the tool is used to:

Share information
Gather real-time market data and feedback
Build relationships with the customers, employees and partners

Providing this type of focused, real world use case information creates a buzz which; reinforces Twitter’s focus on ‘real’ business challenges and sets the stage for bundled services that will be unveiled at a later date.

So, where’s the learning activity?
It’s all around you, stupid.

Twitter101 educates and emphasizes

Who Twitter is.
Why Twitter is relevant.
What Twitter does for the individual.
What Twitter does for the organization.

Isn’t that marketing? Yes
Isn’t that learning, too? Yes

There isn’t an associated quiz. There’s no form to fill out. There’s no portal to log into either. Quizzes, forms and portals don’t transform marketing activities into learning activities. Whether or not you learned something makes it a learning activity. In short good marketing is founded in learning and compelling learning has its basis in smart marketing.

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