I was reading a management development article the other day and
learned that if I wanted to succeed, I should look to persons who have succeeded
before me, and do what they did. Seemed easy enough. I just needed to identify
some marketing geniuses and I would be set. I pondered long and hard who
I wanted to put on my list that I would emulate. Who had stood the test
of time and was still standing?I was not getting very far, and my list
was pretty short, so I headed off to Starbucks. Maybe a grande latte, with
a double shot, would help jolt my memory. I was standing at the coffee bar
waiting for a sleeve when I saw a rather peculiar bracelet on the barista's
wrist.
WWJD was all it said.
"What the heck did WWJD stand for?" I thought. "Wine, women, and Jack
Daniels perhaps? No, probably some marketing attempt from some record shop
or something."
Noticing my trance-like stare at the bracelet, the barista whispered,
"What Would Jesus Do?" giggled, and disappeared to go find more sleeves."What
Would Jesus Do?" I wondered. "What kind of a weird question was...
"Oh my god, I mean -- gosh! Jesus was a perfect marketing genius. His
teachings are still around today and he has been dead for thousands of years.
He would be a perfect name for my list!" I realized.
Since my primary focus is Email Marketing I made up my own bracelet.
WWJE? Or What Would Jesus Email?
I wore the bracelet for a few days but did not feel any different (except
for the rash I developed from the paint I had used on the leather). I quickly
realized I did not know very much about Jesus and I needed some help or
I would never find out his marketing secrets. Who could help me find out
What Would Jesus Email?
I got out my Palm Pilot and pondered who, in my address book, could help
me. I looked at my bracelet for guidance. WWJ --E...
I looked under 'E'. The first entry was Madame Emael. Could a psychic
help me find out What Would Jesus Email?
"What the hell, I mean -- heck," I thought, I would give it a shot.
Since Madame Emael had already helped me with the 'Duplicate Freaky Email
Incident' we skipped the casual conversation. I did not even tell her why
I was visiting. I guess she already knew because before I realized what
was happening the lights went low and she started to caress her crystal
ball and hum a sweet melody.
I waited, across the dimly lit room. Surely Madame Emael would be able
to tell me, or get Jesus himself to tell me, the marketing secrets that
had stood the test of time.
"With whom do you wish to speak?" Madame Emael sung in a sweet bird-like
voice.
"The greatest marketer of all time." I said. "I thought you already knew."
Vigorously caressing her crystal ball Madame Emael whispered, "Ok, let's
see if we can find -- Cory Rudl and see what he is up to." It was really
dark but I could see the crystal ball start to flicker with sparks of light
and I was kind of mesmerized, almost in a trance. Then I realized what she
had said.
"Cory Rudl?" I exclaimed, into the darkness. No offense, but he has only
been gone a few months, I'm sure he contributed to Internet Marketing and
stuff but I want to speak to a marketer that has stood the test of time
for thousands of years. Cory would have to wait awhile before he met that
qualification. "I was wanting to speak with Jesus, you know, the guy that
Mel Gibson made that super-violent movie about," I said.
Suddenly, Madame Emael's voice changed. It was deep, kind of gravelly
and I could hear very heavy breathing. It sort of sounded like the voice
was growling.
"Oh, crap!" my mind raced. Maybe this was not such a good idea. The management
article said go read books by successful people, it did not suggest the
option of conquering up dead marketers' spirits with a psychic. Was that
Cory growling? Had I offended him? Or worse, was it Jesus and he was upset?
I knew Jesus had gotten ticked off in a temple once and threw all the furniture
around. I was just wanting some marketing advice. I held onto my chair,
just in case the furniture started moving.
The deep, gravel-like voice spoke slowly into the darkness, "Did you
say you want to speak to -- Jesus?"
I closed my eyes, too scared to imagine what was about to happen.
And with that the lights flicked on and there stood Madame Emael, or
rather some guy that looked like Madame Emael holding Madame Emael's hair
in his hand, or rather her wig.
He/she grabbed my coat, and threw it at me.
"Get out!" he yelled in a deep man's voice.
"What are you doing, Madame Emael? Hey, you're a guy!" I yelled as I
was shoved out the door.
Madame Emael, or Monsieur Emael quickly explained to me, as he was pushing
me out the front entrance, that Jesus and all the great spiritual leaders
where off limits and if he tried to contact them he would lose his state
license. He said I should go and confess right away because going to a physic
to speak to Jesus was border lining on some word that sounded a lot like
hearsay but I could not make out what he was saying because I was too busy
trying to find my car keys so I could get the heck out of there.
I sped out of the parking lot. "What a wonky experience," I thought.
I looked at my wrist. I was still wearing my WWJE bracelet. I wondered if
I would ever find out What Would Jesus Email.
I was feeling like that silly giggling Starbucks barista had really sent
me down a rabbit trail. And that management article was really starting
to bug me. Where could I find out more about this Jesus guy? Mel's movie
was not an option. It was in Aramaic and I hated subtitles.
I heard Madame Emael's voice in my ear: "Go to confessional," so I drove
around and found the first Catholic Church I could find with free parking.
The priest greeted me with a warm welcome and explained that all the
regular priests had the day off, as it was Monday. He was semi-retired and
came in and covered the off-days and holidays. He told me I could call him
Father Eudora. He seemed really nice, though somehow I got the sense he
was outdated.
I explained I wanted to confess, but was not Catholic. He said it didn't
matter and took me through the chapel to the booth. We got all set up and
I told him about the Starbucks barista, the WWJD bracelet, my session with
Madame Emael and how she was really a guy and how I had made my own WWJE
bracelet in my quest to find out What Would Jesus Email...but when I got
to the part of my story about how I had noticed that I was acquiring a rash
from the bracelet the curtain slowly inched opened.
I saw Father Eudora squinting through the window looking at me like I
was a leper.
"You are not religious are you?" he asked through the window.
"No," I said. "My parents had me in the 60's, you know, beads, knitted
ponchos, love-ins, The Mamas & the Papas..." He got out of his side of the
booth, and raised his hand to stop me.
"Come with me," he said as he led me back into the chapel. "Let me tell
you about Jesus."
"Finally I'm getting somewhere!" I thought, and eagerly followed him.
I stayed the rest of the day and learned a lot about Jesus. Did you know
he had twelve regular guys on his marketing team? One was more interested
in being a rich jerk but the other eleven really went to work after Jesus
left. They took his message door-to-door, neighbor-to-neighbor and friend-to-friend.
Jesus' marketing approach sounded a lot like viral marketing. Seems like
he may have even invented it. His disciples passed his message on from person
to person and the message's influence grew and grew and grew. Thousands
of years later the 'tell a friend' campaign continues.
I've stopped wearing my WWJE bracelet because the paint rash wasn't getting
any better. Oh, and I made up with Madame Emael. She, or rather he, seemed
a little more sane after I told him everything Father Eudora had taught
me about Jesus and his marketing campaign.
Seems Madame Emael is just an out-of-work dot com executive picking up
some work with this psychic gig. He tried to explain, at great length, and
in great detail, why he chose to be a cross-dressing psychic. I stopped
him, explaining I was in marketing so stuff like that didn't bother me.
I put my WWJE bracelet by my computer so I see it when I send my weekly
e-newsletters. I never paid that much attention to the 'forward this email
to a friend' section before. Oh sure I always made sure it was there --
I just never realized the potential.
***********************************************
I hope you enjoyed my account of how I found out What Would Jesus Email.
Now, whether you agree with Jesus and his teachings is not the point. Jesus
has been gone for thousands of years but his message continues. If email
had been around back then I am sure Jesus would have used it to spread 'the
gospel' door-to-door, neighbor-to-neighbor and friend-to-friend. So how
do we hope to get the kind of response that a dead prophet is still getting
thousands of years later?
Use a tiny phrase in your email messages to get your subscribers to take
action. Some people call it 'Tell A Friend' or 'Forward This Email To A
Friend'.
Regardless of the label get creative and encourage your readers to forward
your email newsletters around. Who knows maybe your e-zine will be forwarded
about thousands of years from now carrying on your message.