If marketing is
about changing people’s attitudes, perceptions and ultimately buying behavior
it stands to reason that in order to be effective, the first question, as marketers, we have to ask is:
Whose Mind Do We Really
Want To Change?
Is it the open play
bowler to get him or her to increase frequency of visits? Is it a 12 year old league bowler that we
want to come back next year? Is it Sylvia
Smith who runs the daycare center down the street?
If you can’t be
really specific and can only tell me 18 to 34 yr olds, then you have already
started the process at a disadvantage.
Tell me more information like:
is it 18 to 34 yr olds with a median income of $_______+ who work in gray
collar jobs, who are predominantly single, who go out three to four nights a week to drink, meet ,members
of the opposite sex and share one trait in common, to have fun, fun, fun every
night.” And finally is there definition of fun about hooking up, getting drunk or just hanging out with their friends?
“Well jeez Fred”, I
hear you saying, “How am I supposed to know that?”
My answer to that
is, “You Ask Them.”
You ask different
questions, try different offers, measure and categorize who responded. Find out what they do for a living, find out
what other activities they like to do. You can also test different offers and measure results against your existing data base, but you have to be really understand analysis and measurement techniques here, so you may need some professional help
“Who has the time
for that?” I hear you saying.
And I say…”people
who have to learn about the new marketing who want to be successful.”
When mass media
was king we could saturate the airwaves and target, you guessed it, “EVERYBODY”
which was really no target at all. But
now you have as much power in your 140 character twitter account as IBM or
Procter & Gamble or McDonald's to get your message to the specific person
you want.
Think about that. Doesn't that blow your mind?
YOUR 8, 12 or 16 lane center in rural Nebraska has as much power to communicate
in 140 characters as any Fortune 100 company but you need information to make valuable decisions, not some BS idea that "sounds good."
OK, if you can get
past the “WHO” question, you now have to answer questions like:
1.
What does this person think about bowling now?
2. What
does he think he wants from bowling?
3. What
do we want him to think about bowling
a. what
action do we want him to take
i. do
we want him to take that action now or
to wait
ii. is
there a sense of urgency
iii. sometimes
its not even to buy something, but rather to become a member of an exclusive
club
iv. to
get more information
b. Maybe
its nothing, now what?
4. What
does he really want from bowling?
a. Maybe
its nothing, now what?
5. Are
there any stories, programs that have motivated this person in the past?
6. Who
are his heroes?
a. Aaron
Rodgers, JZ, Willie Nelson, Nelson Mandela, Adele, LeBron James,
b. Who
does this person look up to and WHY?
7. What is this person's relationship with money??
a. Does
he have discretionary money that he freely spends every night and is he an ATM junkie
b. Is
he a tightwad that doesn't spend unless he absolutely has to?
Once
you get the answers to these questions, you can design a program that matches
the information you have and be way more efficient in your conversion process than
you ever thought possible.
If
you’re serious about wanting to do this, give me a call and I will help get you
started, give you some time on the phone and then have at it…no selling here, I'll just give you some friendly helpful hints.
But if you want me to really help, we will (We're not opposed to being hired :)
Or
you can ignore this process and just do what YOU THINK the customer, prospect, former
customer wants.
"And you may be right or you may be crazy" said Billy Joel
"And you may be right or you may be crazy" said Billy Joel
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