I misplaced my cell phone yesterday; left it in a friend's car as I ran for a plane at the airport. Fortunately my friend was able to send it back via Fed Ex and I will have it tomorrow.
What a terrible feeling. I spoke with quite a few people today and they all said the same thing; "isn't it horrible?". Yes it is, but it got me to thinking.
How would we market our business if we could not connect electronically with our market? How would we try to connect? Would we just rely on traditional forms of media or would we try to invent a new way to connect that isn't yet available? Or maybe invent a non electronic form of Twitter or Face Book.
When we were kids, we might have had a "pen pal?" That was a precursor of Face book. We sent information to people and they wrote back to us. We exchanged pictures and talked about our lives. If we were hip, we could have used it as a sales opportunity. In fact we eventually did. It was called direct response marketing.
Perhaps, being in the retail business, we could go back to our 5 mile rings of influence or 10 mile rings of influence to reach our market, either via direct mail, telemarketing, sales appointments and local or regional advertising. Shouldn't we still do that? Recent reports have stated that marketing results increase exponentially, just by adding postcards, permission based faxes and robo calls to our E marketing efforts.
While conventional wisdom states that E marketing must be a cornerstone of your total marketing effort, it doesn't say that it should be the ONLY part.
Friday, July 24, 2009
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Grins, Smiles and Laughs
As an observer of human behavior, I sometimes like to see if I can pick up patterns of behavior among people sharing a common experience; like flying on an airplane. So far I have been able to isolate various segments of fliers. There are the readers, the writers, the sleepers and the lookers. At any given time any one of these people can shift into another group; sometimes they are in two groups (segments) at the same time. And if I studied these groups long enough, I would probably find out what motivated them to be in their respective group to start with.
Now what if you could observe people having fun at your entertainment center, based upon "product usage", and then segment them by how they are experiencing fun? What would you find? Would you find "laughers, grinners and smilers"? Would you find h that each group interpreted and responded to fun differently? Would you find that there was a way to motivate each of these groups to come back more frequently? I think so.
Susan Dunn, Publisher of Self Growth, an on line self improvement magazine (www.selfgrowth.com)has recently come up with an interesting treatise on "having fun".
While she asks people what their definition of fun is, the answers she gets are surprisingly stated in the negative.
"not thinking or feeling"
"being alone"
"anywhere without decisions or arguments"
"something that doesn't end me up with a policeman, a lawyer, a doctor or a therapist."
See what I mean. Fun is expressed as "the absence of a bad thing". Shouldn't fun be expressed in terms of smiles or laughs? What if there was a happiness meter, a "laughometer" or a "smilometer"? We could then gauge how happy people were at our centers or how effective our programs were on delivering fun.
Or we could just go out there every day and try to make just 3 customers a day smile. What do you think that would do to our revenue growth?
Now what if you could observe people having fun at your entertainment center, based upon "product usage", and then segment them by how they are experiencing fun? What would you find? Would you find "laughers, grinners and smilers"? Would you find h that each group interpreted and responded to fun differently? Would you find that there was a way to motivate each of these groups to come back more frequently? I think so.
Susan Dunn, Publisher of Self Growth, an on line self improvement magazine (www.selfgrowth.com)has recently come up with an interesting treatise on "having fun".
While she asks people what their definition of fun is, the answers she gets are surprisingly stated in the negative.
"not thinking or feeling"
"being alone"
"anywhere without decisions or arguments"
"something that doesn't end me up with a policeman, a lawyer, a doctor or a therapist."
See what I mean. Fun is expressed as "the absence of a bad thing". Shouldn't fun be expressed in terms of smiles or laughs? What if there was a happiness meter, a "laughometer" or a "smilometer"? We could then gauge how happy people were at our centers or how effective our programs were on delivering fun.
Or we could just go out there every day and try to make just 3 customers a day smile. What do you think that would do to our revenue growth?
Saturday, July 18, 2009
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
The Free Ticket
As much as we talk about the three purposes of marketing, (getting new customers, getting them to come back and getting them to spend more money each time they come back) it is always surprising to see new bowling centers spend inordinate amounts of time and money on planning soft openings, grand openings and public openings to insure that the facility kicks off in high fashion. Centers that have spent a great deal of money modernizing their facilities will, unfortunately, believe that they too must undertake similar activities and implement an expensive "re grand opening." Yet these new centers, and existing centers, will spend much less time on the one factor that makes all the difference; remarkable customer service.
The first visits to the new center, or to the modernized center, is usually a free ticket. New customers will come in because of their curiosity and because of the publicity the local media, who has been covering the progress of the center, has given the facility.
It is the second visit that is the real test.
What message or what impression has been made upon the new customer after his first visit? Is it a “wow, what an experience?” Is it “nice place, good time, but a bit pricey?” Or have they said “nice place, real modern, but the service was pretty bad. I’ll go back IF they straighten it out."
Moral of the story: If you concentrate on training everyone in the facility on HOW to “make happy memories” and if you consistently do that from day one, then the second visit can be a free ticket too.
What did you or your staff do to make a happy memory for just one of your customers today?
The first visits to the new center, or to the modernized center, is usually a free ticket. New customers will come in because of their curiosity and because of the publicity the local media, who has been covering the progress of the center, has given the facility.
It is the second visit that is the real test.
What message or what impression has been made upon the new customer after his first visit? Is it a “wow, what an experience?” Is it “nice place, good time, but a bit pricey?” Or have they said “nice place, real modern, but the service was pretty bad. I’ll go back IF they straighten it out."
Moral of the story: If you concentrate on training everyone in the facility on HOW to “make happy memories” and if you consistently do that from day one, then the second visit can be a free ticket too.
What did you or your staff do to make a happy memory for just one of your customers today?
Saturday, July 11, 2009
When Is Free Not So Free?
"People are making a lot of money charging nothing" writes Chris Anderson, Editor In Chief of WIRED and Author of "The Future of a Radical Price". "In an increasingly competitive marketplace, much intellectual property is often distributed free and suppliers of internet content have exploded in number", continues Anderson.
Now, if you see a lot of FREE offers on the Internet, it is because the cost of one more customer or the cost of one more pair of eyeballs is next to nothing.
If it costs next to nothing, should not marketers have something else to sell? In what Anderson describes as "freemiums", a strategy that offers a new product for sale when the first product is distributed freely, the products that are sold help to subsidize those products that are given away. But what if, instead of FREE, we gave the customer rewards for buying our product. Those rewards are then only used to buy more of our products. At what point do we take the wonder of FREE to the next level?
At what point do we create a new product for our existing customer and ask him to pay for it? At what point do we start to make money?
Now, if you see a lot of FREE offers on the Internet, it is because the cost of one more customer or the cost of one more pair of eyeballs is next to nothing.
If it costs next to nothing, should not marketers have something else to sell? In what Anderson describes as "freemiums", a strategy that offers a new product for sale when the first product is distributed freely, the products that are sold help to subsidize those products that are given away. But what if, instead of FREE, we gave the customer rewards for buying our product. Those rewards are then only used to buy more of our products. At what point do we take the wonder of FREE to the next level?
At what point do we create a new product for our existing customer and ask him to pay for it? At what point do we start to make money?
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
Good Marketing and ROI
If marketing is the battle for perception, then good marketing creates a perception that motivates people to buy a product or service. It is the perception (your personal vision of reality) therefore, that prompts action. Your perception can also create a warm and fuzzy feeling about the product, or company, that can also stimulate a purchase.
Your perception isn't formed by one advertisement or one flight of cable spots or a billboard or even the ad that you saw this month (or was it last month?) Your perceptions are cumulative. Your thoughts about a product are amassed over time and include word of mouth, first hand experience and what you believe is true about the product
So how can you measure the ROI of a recent campaign? The answer is - consumers really don't know why they buy a product at a particular time. No doubt it is a combination of all of the marketing elements. That is why all marketers preach multiple medias and multiple frequencies. Marketing effect happens over time.
Because of the difficulty in measuring ROI, some companies will be so conservative that they will virtually cease many of their marketing efforts. This is great news for those that keep marketing. In time those companies that consistently market the differentiation of their products and services will win.
Sometimes measuring marketing ROI is like watching a clock. It moves, but you just can't see it.
Your perception isn't formed by one advertisement or one flight of cable spots or a billboard or even the ad that you saw this month (or was it last month?) Your perceptions are cumulative. Your thoughts about a product are amassed over time and include word of mouth, first hand experience and what you believe is true about the product
So how can you measure the ROI of a recent campaign? The answer is - consumers really don't know why they buy a product at a particular time. No doubt it is a combination of all of the marketing elements. That is why all marketers preach multiple medias and multiple frequencies. Marketing effect happens over time.
Because of the difficulty in measuring ROI, some companies will be so conservative that they will virtually cease many of their marketing efforts. This is great news for those that keep marketing. In time those companies that consistently market the differentiation of their products and services will win.
Sometimes measuring marketing ROI is like watching a clock. It moves, but you just can't see it.
Tuesday, July 7, 2009
5 pillars of success
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