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Music as a weapon of mass distractionMusic can play an important role at marketing functions but be careful, it can also be a brand killer. For instance, doesn't it make you mad when you go out to a restaurant to have a quiet evening chatting to friends or family and the background music is so loud you can't hear yourself eat? And worse, when you go to a business cocktail party, presentation or awards function where the whole idea is for everyone to do some networking and some idiot organiser brings in a band with a sound system big enough for a capacity crowd at Ellis Park? What is it about so many of those people who run restaurants, department stores or organise corporate functions that makes them so singularly stupid and spectacularly vindictive? Why can they not understand the very simple meaning of the word "background" when they're told to provide background music? Frankly, if I were a captain of industry having to fork out a couple of hundred thousand bucks on a corporate lunch or dinner event, I would want to get my money's worth by making absolutely sure that all my executives were able to network with invited guests. That's the marketing rationale behind any corporate cocktail party, awards function, launch or relationship building event. The idea is to get everyone talking to each other. Normal conversation is almost impossible, unless you put your mouth up against the ear of the person next to you and bellow at about the same level army instructors use on raw recruits who persist in calling them "boet". It was a laugh a minute with masses of open space all over the place and everyone crammed into a corner like a rugby scrum. One only has to spend a minute or two talking to specialists in the field of musical motivation and they will tell you that music can be a magnificent marketing tool. Trouble is, it is also deadly dangerous in unskilled hands. Background is fine. In your face is futile. Basically, one has a single simple choice in terms of organising a corporate function. Either its networking or its entertainment. About Chris MoerdykApart from being a corporate marketing analyst, advisor and media commentator, Chris Moerdyk is a former chairman of Bizcommunity. He was head of strategic planning and public affairs for BMW South Africa and spent 16 years in the creative and client service departments of ad agencies, ending up as resident director of Lindsay Smithers-FCB in KwaZulu-Natal. Email Chris on moerdykc@gmail.com and follow him on Twitter at @chrismoerdyk. View my profile and articles... |