What Makes Good Content? (or, Why Howard Gossage Was an Absolute Master of the Obvious).

What Makes Good Content? (or, Why Howard Gossage Was an Absolute Master of the Obvious).

To understand what makes good content today, all we have to do is look back to the ’50s and ’60s—when it was called copy. Back then, advertising’s primary focus was copy. Copy, it turns out, sold—and sells—products.

And while it has evolved into this thing we now call content, the principles that drive its creation haven’t changed:

People read what interests them, and sometimes it’s an ad.
—Howard Luck Gossage, advertising icon

You Can Keep the Clicks. (and You’re Welcome to Some of Mine.)

You Can Keep the Clicks. (and You’re Welcome to Some of Mine.)

At Red House, we sell something that just might come back into fashion soon: measurable results—and we’ve been doing it for over a decade, before it was popular. That sounds ridiculous, but it’s true: since the dawn of internet marketing, “results” have been sold as a pleasant consequence of clicks.

Strategic Hypotheses: The Benefits of a Healthy Sense of Paranoia.

Strategic Hypotheses: The Benefits of a Healthy Sense of Paranoia.

By definition, strategic marketing planning results in . . . a plan. No real surprise there. And it’s typically built around some level of research that defines the way in which the theme will be woven into your marketing approach.

At Red House, our model has an important—if occasionally painful—twist.