MrMind comments on Open Thread March 21 - March 27, 2016 - Less Wrong

3 Post author: Gunnar_Zarncke 20 March 2016 07:54PM

You are viewing a comment permalink. View the original post to see all comments and the full post content.

Comments (160)

You are viewing a single comment's thread. Show more comments above.

Comment author: MrMind 24 March 2016 08:20:26AM 0 points [-]

Maybe I'm cynic, but it's pretty commonplace for business to hire fake social supporters. Considering that we do not have certainty that those are of that kind, and that it is plausible that LW gets attended from all over the world, what is your suggested course of action?
What would you suggest that people do?

Comment author: Lumifer 24 March 2016 02:30:19PM 4 points [-]

it's pretty commonplace for business to hire fake social supporters

So, is InIn a business that hires fake social supporters? And is LessWrong one of those "social media channels" that they "manage"? Inquiring minds want to know.

Comment author: gjm 24 March 2016 10:50:02AM 4 points [-]

what is your suggested course of action?

I wasn't suggesting any particular course of action, unless you interpret "action" broadly enough to include this: I suggest that LW participants who encounter newcomers raving about how great Intentional Insights is or how wonderful Gleb's articles are should be aware that they may be raving only because they've been paid to do so, in which case their ravings give pretty much exactly zero evidence of anything either effective or appealing in II's material or Gleb's articles here.

Comment author: Lumifer 24 March 2016 06:37:51PM *  4 points [-]

in which case their ravings give pretty much exactly zero evidence

Au contraire, they do give evidence.

To quote Maggie, "it's like being a lady... if you have to tell people you are, you aren't." And if you have to hire people to shout at street corners that you're a lady... X-)

Comment author: johnlawrenceaspden 25 March 2016 05:48:18PM 0 points [-]

Hmmm.... Only the true messiah denies his divinity?

I've got a visceral contempt for advertising, but I also think that's me being irrational. Plenty of good stuff needs paid promotion to get noticed. There are good ideas that spread on their own, but I don't think that spreadiness <=> good.

Comment author: ChristianKl 27 March 2016 08:53:04PM 3 points [-]

Good marketing isn't about saying: "Hey look at me I'm the greatest."

Comment author: johnlawrenceaspden 30 March 2016 11:16:14PM 0 points [-]

What about 'Coke is it!', or Muhammed Ali?

I'm sure there are more. I know nothing about marketing, but these seem to have worked.

Comment author: ChristianKl 04 April 2016 10:40:00PM 2 points [-]

'Coke is it

That statement doesn't contain any direct value judgement about Coke. It's about making Coke a default.

Simon Anholt recounts in one of his talks about how Nike's "Just do it" brand is a tool for Nike to spend less time in meetings to discuss puchasing decisions for office furniture. It allows any manager to just buy the "Just do it"-desk, so they don't have to hold a meeting about whether to buy a more classy or a more hip desk.

Muhammed Ali is a special case. When he says "I'm the greatest" people might think that's he's an arrogant asshole but he's an arrogant asshole that can beat up everyone. That's a persona that's interesting for the media to talk about. He was antifragile against journalists considering him to be an arrogant asshole.

In the case of Intentional Insights there no reason to polarize people the way Muhammed Ali polarized by claiming he's the greatest and generally doing his own press interviews instead of letting his managers do them.

Comment author: gjm 31 March 2016 10:52:25AM *  0 points [-]

I have never drunk Coke or watched a boxing match, but my impression is that Coke's and Ali's slogans were only able to be effective because (1) lots of people already really liked drinking Coke and (2) Muhammed Ali was in fact a really good boxer.

I think the "real thing" / "Coke is it" slogans were adopted exactly because other companies were making their own competing products that were intended to be like Coca-Cola. So they were aimed at people who already liked Coca-Cola, or who at least knew that Coca-Cola was a drink lots of people liked, saying "That thing you admire? It's our product, not any of those inferior imitations".

So perhaps we can amend CK's comment to something like this: Good marketing isn't about saying "look at me, I'm the greatest" except in some special cases where people are already looking at you and at least considering the possibility that you might be the greatest.

I still don't know whether it's right, though. I would be entirely unsurprised to hear of a product that had a lot of success by going in with a we're-the-best marketing campaign very early in its life.

[EDITED to remove superfluous parentheses.]

Comment author: Lumifer 28 March 2016 12:54:28AM *  2 points [-]

Plenty of good stuff needs paid promotion to get noticed.

The critical difference here is between good promotion and bad promotion. It is quite possible to promote the idea that you're a lady, it's just that it does not involve hiring people to shout at street corners.

Comment author: Gleb_Tsipursky 24 March 2016 03:32:02PM *  0 points [-]

Just to clarify, I have no interest in marketing InIn content to Less Wrong. That would be stupid, everyone on LW but the newbies would benefit much more from more complex writings than InIn content. InIn is an outward-facing branch of the rationality movement, not a (mostly) inward-facing one like CFAR. I'm trying to get InIn participants involved in LW to help them grow more rational after they already got familiarity with InIn content and can go beyond that, to venues such as ClearerThinking, CFAR, and LW itself.

It's not surprising that folks who come to LW from InIn would appreciate both InIn content and stuff that looks like InIn content, namely beginner-oriented materials. However, as I mentioned above, due to Eliot's suggestion, I will wait to get more InIn audience members involved in LW until it has a newbie thread.