Friday, August 19, 2011

Movin' On


Many of you.....well, some of you, actually one of you asked about my blog.
I realize I haven't been posting much lately. 
But I have been working. I have been putting together a new website / blog on wordpress. Check it out at www.strategicallysound.com, like it on facebook and save it to your favorites in your browser. You will be glad that you did!
I am also working on my Road To The Customer Marketing Videos. There is a page on the new site that is still under development. 
The new site has a long way to go, but I am going to go ahead and start blogging there now, so come see me. (I also imported all of the old posts to the new site!)
See ya' down the road!

Monday, August 8, 2011

I Hate To Copy And Paste.....

But, this is one that needs to be read by everyone!

I got this in the Monday Morning Memo by Roy H. Williams this morning. I have referenced the memo before and anyone that reads my writing knows that I consider Roy to be the best in the business when it comes to small business advertising and marketing. I strongly advise EVERYONE to subscribe at www.mondaymorningmemo.com


How Soon Will My Ads Start Working?


These are the 5 questions you must answer before you can know how soon your ads will start working:



Q. 1: What percentage of the noise made in your category – in all the different media combined - is being made by you? This is your Share of Voice.


Q. 2: What percentage of the population will actively be in the market for your product or service this week? This is your Product Purchase Cycle.



Food has a very short Product Purchase Cycle. The shorter the Product Purchase Cycle, the quicker your ad campaign will reach maximum ROI.



Cars have a medium-length Product Purchase Cycle. The average American trades cars every 180 weeks (42 months.) Consequently, 0.55 percent of us will buy or lease a car this week. (Does this mean that anyone who advertises cars is wasting 99.45 percent of his investment?)



That’s right; 180 weeks (42 months) is a medium-length product purchase cycle. What do you suppose is the Product Purchase Cycle for HVAC system replacement? Engagement rings? Furniture? Products with longer purchase cycles require more time for their ad campaigns to ramp up to their full potential.  These campaigns usually show poor results during the first 90 to 150 days then begin to deliver increasingly good results until the growth curve begins to flatten out about halfway through the Purchase Cycle. If the purchase cycle is 10 years, the campaign will start slow, then generate increasingly good results until it levels off in about 5 years. You will then have to continue advertising just to maintain the market share you’ve achieved. If relevant new information is not injected into the campaign at this time, the advertiser will become frustrated and disgruntled and begin to say things like, “Our ads aren’t as good as they used to be,” or “I don’t think we’re reaching the right people.”



Q. 3: How many people will ever be in the market for this product or service?  What percentage of the public will ever consider this product to be relevant? A high percentage of the public will someday need a refrigerator, furniture, HVAC system replacement and an engagement ring. The best strategy for advertisers such as these is for them to use relevance and repetition to become the provider the customer thinks of first and feels the best about.



But what about fine formal china, such as Royal Doulton at $100 per place setting and the solid silver tableware that accompanies it? What percentage of today’s public will ever be in the market for these?



Q. 4:  What degree of credible urgency does your ad contain? Is there any reason for the customer to take action now? You can shorten a Product Purchase Cycle by making a strong offer that is time-limited or quantity-limited. If you create a once-in-a-lifetime offer for a product with a long purchase cycle, you’ll likely move a number of people into the market who would otherwise have purchased at a later date. If your offer is powerful and credible, you’ll see great success. But don’t take a good thing too far; the more often you do this, the less well it will work. Sadly, the success of this “urgency” technique makes it highly addictive. Almost without exception, the advertiser who makes a once-in-a-lifetime offer will choose to make a similar, once-in-a-lifetime offer within a year. Soon his "sale" ads lose all credibility and his customers will begin to ask, “When does this go on sale?” God help us. We pushed a good thing too far and we’ve trained the customer NOT to buy unless we’re promoting a massive discount.



Marketing is tricky. It almost makes you want to hit yourself in the head with a hammer sometimes, doesn’t it?



Q. 5: What is your Competitive Environment? In other words, how well are your competitors known? How good are they at what you do? Your ads are not the only ads your customer will see and hear.  Is a competitor making a more powerful offer than you? 



Share of Voice can be purchased. 
Share of Mind must be earned.



Share of Voice is the percentage of noise in the marketplace that is yours. Share of Mind is the mental real estate you have purchased in consciousness of your customer.



Share of Voice times Relevance equals Share of Mind.



Frequent repetition of your ads will earn you a higher Share of Voice. But a big Share of Voice times zero Relevance equals zero Share of Mind and zero results.



Most advertisers talk in their ads about what the customer should care about, what they ought to care about, instead of what they actually care about.



If you remember nothing else from today’s memo, remember these two things and you’ll do well:



1. Clarity is more important than creativity.



2. Relevance is more important than repetition.

      NOTE:  I did NOT say that creativity and repetition don't count.
 


Sell on.


Roy H. Williams

Thursday, August 4, 2011

The Lost Art Of Listening

I mean REALLY listening.

I see it every day.

In all types of transactions.

The potential buyer talks and the seller nods his/her head.

Nodding and biding time until they can offer to sell the potential buyer what they have already decided they need. Regardless of what the potential buyer just said.

Do I need to use the square peg, round hole reference here? Nah, you get it.

No matter what business you are in, your close ratio will go up dramatically if you listen intently to what the customer really wants and show them how you have the perfect product to help them attain it.

Your customers don't always know what they need to buy. What they do know is what they hope to accomplish by making a purchase. All that you have to do is tie the two together in a neat little bundle and .......VIOLA!

Sale made. Customer happy. Seller happy.

More money in the bank.

Sounds simple.

But it only works if you REALLY listen and then EXECUTE!