Graham, Based on the AMA's definition of marketing below, it looks like the AMA may "get" VRM in the context of Marketing Research: the "function that links the consumer, customer, and public to the marketer through information." They may be receptive to the idea that VRM re-invents the process: Instead of a top-down approach of establishing an hypothesis and validating it by "corporate" initiated information collection and analysis, VRM is a bottom-up initiated information source. Big Data claims to be "bottom-up" because it collects "naturally occurring" data. But it aggregates to be relevant to "corporate" hypothetical "personas" that they have developed products and offers for. VRM adds value to all by aggregating the data for the benefit of the consumer/customer, for example: 1) transparency - give consumers a chance to see the profile and relevant offers revealed by their behavioral data. 2) accurate representation - give consumers the power to "correct" their profile and its relative positioning. 3) freedom of speech - the consumer communicates their findings and implications to signal to the marketplace the offers which they are receptive to. 4) being heard - The consumer receives a signal from the market when their signal is received, 5) control - The consumer has the power to respond when their signal is received to opt in or out of offers. Marketers who have offers which meet or exceed the consumer's signals can benefit immediately. Others will use this data to improve their product and marketing design. Either way the ROI is predictable. AMA definition from Graham's link below: Marketing: Marketing is the activity, set of institutions, and processes for creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging offerings that have value for customers, clients, partners, and society at large. (Approved July 2013) Marketing Research: Katherine Warman Kern @comradity
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