Content Marketing Put a Man on the Moon, What Can it Do For You?

NASA not only put the first man on the moon, but pioneered the use of brand journalism, product placement, and real-time storytelling with the epitome of transparency and authenticity. Here's what you can learn from marketing the moon.

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Date published
February 28, 2014 Categories

Content marketing is all the rage today, but did you know the greatest marketing case study in human history actually occurred in the late 1960s and early 1970s?

It began with President John F. Kennedy standing before Congress in 1961 and made it a goal to put a man on the moon before the decade was over. The end result was the historic landing of Apollo 11.

“It’s actually the greatest story never told (until now) about content as a marketing tool that helped to deliver humans to the moon,” said David Meerman Scott, most notable for writing The New Rules of Marketing and PR and coining the term newsjacking. He has just released his latest book: “Marketing the Moon: The Selling of the Apollo Lunar Program”.

Marketing Space for the United States

A departure from his usual social media and digital flight pattern, Scott’s “Marketing the Moon” tells the story of how NASA not only put the first man on the moon, but pioneered the use of brand journalism, product placement, and real-time storytelling with the epitome of transparency and authenticity.

For the space enthusiasts and sci-fi cult-followers who create and follow the GIFs and memes branded with “Star Wars”, “Space Odyssey”, and “Star Trek”, “Marketing the Moon” captures the challenges and the ultimate success of marketing one of the greatest achievements in American history as noted in the foreword written by Captain Eugene A. Cernan, the NASA astronaut who became the 11th person to walk on the Moon and “the last man on the Moon”.

Scott wrote “Marketing the Moon” with Richard Jurek, president of Inland Marketing & Communications. They share the lifelong passion of being enthusiasts and collectors of historic space artifacts from the Apollo program. It was that passion and collective dedication that allowed them to take this opportunity to curate the historical data in a time-capsule-like book filled with nostalgic marketing memorabilia.

“It’s been a blast to dig into marketing history by speaking with half the men who walked on the moon, NASA public affairs staff, the PR people from contractors like Boeing and Raytheon, and journalists from publications like The New York Post and Reuters – part of the hundreds and thousands of unsung participants from the golden age of spaceflight,” Scott said.

8 Lessons for Modern Marketers From ‘Marketing the Moon’

What’s old is new and improved. Content marketing is nothing new, but its recent popularity surge has marketers scrambling to get it right or crash and burn.

“Many marketers are over the moon about the ‘new’ concept of content marketing as a key component to SEO, few realize that content marketing has been around for 50 years in an offline world,” said Scott who attended his first Search Engine Strategies conference in 2002 and was a keynote speaker at SES New York in 2010.

“Fundamentals are important so looking back informs us how to go forward. While everybody is looking for the next big thing, I found inspiration by going back half a century,” Scott said.

5 Things Digital Marketers Need to Think About in 2014

Summary

The world watched the first man walk on the moon thanks to NASA’s pioneering brand journalism finding a voice. Today, NASA astronauts carry the torch by live tweeting from space.

“Marketing the Moon” shares the most successful marketing and public relations campaign in history, featuring heroic astronauts, press-savvy rocket scientists, enthusiastic reporters, deep-pocketed defense contractors, and the ingenuity of brand sponsorships like Tang and the brand relations of Disneyland’s Tomorrowland.

One small step for brands, one giant leap for brand kind.

Image credits: Marketing the Moon

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