The impact that Oracle’s acquisition of Eloqua will have on that company’s ability to compete effectively in the marketing automation space is fodder for debate. What is more clear, based on the Webcast invitation I received this week (below), is that it hasn’t done much for Eloqua’s own email marketing. (Click the thumbnail image to view full-size.)
I’ve had kind words to say about Eloqua’s marketing creative in this space previously, but what was then an edgy, ground-breaking campaign from the likes of Joe Chernov (then Eloqua VP Content Marketing, recently named VP of Content at Hubspot) is now corporate marketing pablum at its worst.
Let me count the ways:
1. Neither the headline, subhead, nor the title of the event itself provide any kind of specific, credible idea of what I would gain from attending the Webcast. What does “Dominate Your Communications” mean? Or “Modern Marketing” for that matter? And is content marketing really news-worthy? I’m seeing a lot of buzzwords but nothing that’s different or compelling.
2. In a similar vein, the three bullet points under “What You’ll Learn” are a grab-bag of product features (and mixed tenses, just for good measure.) There’s simply no context for any of the topics listed (or any relation to Content Marketing) that would lead me to believe I’m signing up for anything more than a product pitch.
3. Who’s speaking? Marketing thought leaders abound in Silicon Valley, yet all I see here is the names of the three co-sponsors, a decision that smacks more of promotion than thought leadership. The sidebar sings the promise of “The leading innovators”. Great – who are they? (With all due respect to Direct Marketing News, even this long-time direct marketer would be hard-pressed to sell that publication as a hotbed of Modern Marketing.)
4. The sidebar copy is just plain awkward. For one, “Chatted up” would not be my first choice of adjectives. (Ask another Brit, and see what I mean.) And “Realize Modern Marketing Advantages in your real marketing world” is so generic it’s rendered meaningless.
5. If you must include social links in your email invitation (we recommend against it), don’t make them so prominent that they compete with the primary offer. Here they take up the entire footer.
6. There’s no visual interest here, nothing to grab the reader’s eye in the preview pane. If this campaign is to be a series, as billed, it’s begging for a visual theme, a brand, that ties together the different Webcasts and makes each email stand out from the pack. Here: nada.
It’s all bland, bland, bland. One hopes, for Eloqua’s sake, that their new home at Oracle affords them a brighter future for their technology. Alas, it seems to have sucked the life out of their marketing.