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How Brian Halligan's Puzzle Box Turned Into the Marketing Equivalent of Pandora's Box

 

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puzzle boxHave you ever felt that you'd unintentionally opened the marketing equivalent of Pandora's box and that, when opened, all the toils and trouble of Outbound Marketing were unleashed on you relentlessly?

Recently Brian Halligan, CEO of HubSpot, received a promotional item in the mail, a puzzle box containing a $50.00 bill. A puzzle box, also called a secret or trick box, can only be opened through some obscure series of manipulations. The $50 was Brian's incentive to open it and claim the prize.

The initial interest was high and caught the team's attention. Brian and a group of his employees discussed different tactics. At this point, the promotional item (provided by an international training company we've chosen not to name) proved to be effective. The $50 incentive got people thinking about the box and spending a large amount of time trying to solve its mysteries.

Then the calls began.

The first call from the sender of the box was understandable. They wanted to know if we were successful in opening the puzzle box and also, if we were interested in their services. We told them thank you for the box, but that we did not need their services at the present time.

However, the incessant calling and other follow up messages did not stop. What began as a thought provoking experience, ended on a negative note. We now associate the puzzle box, at best, with bribery. "Have fun. Get the cash. Now, you owe us something." 


In the original telling of Pandora's box, Pandora is given a jar as a gift from Zeus who instructs her to keep it closed or pay the consequences. Pandora, who was a curious woman, decides to open the jar. When she does, it unleashes the all the ills and disease on to the world. At the bottom of the jar, however, lay hope.

The theory behind Inbound Marketing is that processes such as cold calling are no longer effective; people are tired of being interrupted with traditional outbound marketing messages. At HubSpot, our hope is that we can change the way businesses market to their prospects and help them generate more leads through Inbound marketing methods.

Had the sender stopped after initial contact, the conversation may have lead to some type of professional relationship. Now all that's left is a negative connotation.

In the end, Brian decided that the only thing to do was send the puzzle box and $50.00 back along with a request that they stop calling.

Have you ever been on the recieving end of a Pandora's Box promotion? What would you have done?

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Posted by Rebecca Garber on Thu, Jan 28, 2010 @ 01:08 PM

COMMENTS

What a Great Story. 
 
 
 
It perfectly illustrates the ill's of Inbound Marketing. 
 
 
 
I really liked the titled of "Bribery" that you tagged on he whole process.

posted on Thursday, January 28, 2010 at 1:31 PM by Jack Napoli


Nice post,A metaphorical story leading into a win-win call to action. 
Am reading the book /love it.

posted on Thursday, January 28, 2010 at 1:48 PM by Patrick Swan


The question arises in my mind about the value of this scheme. Someone sends you $50 to get you to do something. You could have pocketed the money and thrown away the puzzle box. In that case the company sending it gets no value and you have $50; good deal for you. If they created something that intrigued you and made you come back again for more information or something to help your business, they may have gotten more value. I think your bribery comment is right on, since they made you feel like you now owe them. So rather than a potential customer they now have thousands of people reading this and waiting to rat them out if they get a box.

posted on Thursday, January 28, 2010 at 2:08 PM by Ron Arden


I would have kept the box. ;)

posted on Thursday, January 28, 2010 at 2:37 PM by Lori Robinson


An interesting albeit not too surprising story. Did the company in question provide any other material? Perhaps a letter with a link to their Twitter or Facebook page? Their website or blog? Did they make any other moves to invite you into their fold or did they just use the single technique mentioned?

posted on Thursday, January 28, 2010 at 2:43 PM by Robert Dempsey


The moral of the story: learn all you can about inbound marketing before sending out boxes of money.

posted on Thursday, January 28, 2010 at 3:07 PM by Merryl Rosenthal


Wouldn't smashing the box open allow you to retrieve the $50 and honestly answer to the caller that you had opened it? It's fair play! There's more than one way to skin a cat.

posted on Thursday, January 28, 2010 at 3:30 PM by Chris


Disclaimer: my firm conducted a survey a few months ago, with CIO Magazine, on cold-calling I.T. buyers (CIOs). Bottom-line: They DESPISE it. On Feb. 10, we're conducting a teleconference, featuring some of the CIOs who were surveyed, who will explain how to best market and sell to them. Learn more: http://council.cio.com/

posted on Thursday, January 28, 2010 at 3:44 PM by Stan


@Stan, 
 
 
 
I agree 100% that CIO's DISPISE Cold Calling. The only thing I would add is that it's Not Just CIO's. It's all of us. I include my self in that group. 
 
I also consider myself a Career Salesman having spent over 31 years in high tech and 25 of those selling. 
 
What I have learned - the hard way - is that people dislike being sold.  
 
However they really enjoy making Objective and Informed Buying Decisions.  
 
That is what I find of the most Value with the Permission Based Marketing approach that is being sponsored in this Community. 
 
It is an Automated way being a Buyer Asssitant until you earn the Right to be a Trusted Advisor. 
 
By the way that is a very Good White Paper on your Web Site - Educating Vendors on how to Approach CEO's.  
 
I look forward to the Web Cast you mentioned. 
 
Thanks for the comments, insight and added value content.

posted on Thursday, January 28, 2010 at 4:06 PM by Jack Napoli


Very interesting story. This would have thoroughly annoyed me as well. It's harassment and a great lesson why inbound marketing works so well. This is the equivalent of spammy social media tactics! 
 
Thanks for the post. 
 
RMSorg

posted on Thursday, January 28, 2010 at 6:42 PM by RMSorg


It could have been so successful guerrilla marketing technique for their company if only they didn't call :))

posted on Friday, January 29, 2010 at 6:02 AM by Toni Anicic


If they knew anything about HubSpot, they would have known that type of marketing campaign would not work.  
 
 
 
I'm amazed at the money/time they invested and wonder how many companies were targeted.  
 

posted on Monday, February 01, 2010 at 2:02 PM by Jennifer Stalford


Comments have been closed for this article.