Posts Tagged ‘actionable’
Jul
13 Last post I discussed building the recipe for starting a marketing idea. This week, let's talk about the atmosphere. Where do you choose to eat when you are in a new town or want to try a new place? Is it based on proximity, food choices, service or recommendation? Or is it something else?
When I want to try something new I do it a couple of ways. I decide what kind of food I do or don't want to eat. Usually I eliminate what I don't want to eat, then decide what sounds good. Then I will check Yelp, see what is new, then take a chance.
The first experience is based on the above; my return is based on atmosphere. Atmosphere in a restaurant is a lot like marketing. You create an environment that enhances an experience, want the customers to buy-in, and most importantly creating the desire to return and voluntarily spend money.
When creating the atmosphere of your marketing program, think of what you enjoy. What are you willing to pay extra for, and what do you expect as part of your interaction? Do you anticipate smoke or aroma in a BBQ restaurant? Are you looking forward to being given chopsticks or do you have to ask for them at an Asian eatery?
Does your marketing program create the right atmosphere? Or is it based on the narrow vision of a few people unwilling to look beyond the end of the nose. Or worse, is it so broad-based that it misses everyone?
It is hard to choose the right marketing recipe, but it is sometimes harder to walk away from a mistake. Using the steps of The Confetti Project, start with the countdown to determine where to start. Most importantly, consider all options, make a choice and initiate liftoff.
POWER ON–Mark
Tags: actionable, Attention Grabbers, Confetti, confetti project, Dynamic Marketing, Marketing Knowledge, Power Tips, small business marketing, Unconventional Thinking, Yelp
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Jul
8 Salt is a common element composed of sodium and chloride, each of which have various other uses, but together they form the simple compound of salt. Why is this important? It is an example of how two elements when combined can create a wonderful outcome. This is also true when you create a marketing program. Take your knowledge and an associate’s creativity, both of you combined can create a powerful program.
Think of it as an exercise in expansion. See how much each of you can contribute to the success of a project. You cannot let the fear of the outcome block your way. Be prepared to inspire, listen and GO! Be the salt of your marketing and business success. It just starts with a sprinkle.
The hardest part is usually starting. Here is a suggestion.
- Get a piece of unlined paper, a crayon and an empty space
- Either write or draw the basics of your idea (no style points are given, and no experience necessary – I suggest drawing)
- Have someone else look at what you have done and have them add to your writing or drawing with their own crayon
- Go back and forth until both of you have the basics of the path you are going to pursue
- Hang the picture where it is visible to all involved (no explanations necessary)
Now you have the salt of your project. And a recipe to follow as you move forward.
- As for recipes, I learned one the other day for steak that was unbelievable. Take your steak, grind twice as much salt and pepper on both sides as you usually would. Cook it over a grill with hardwood as the heat source. Remove when cooked to preference, enjoy!
What recipe for your success can you start today?
POWER ON–Mark
Tags: actionable, Attention Grabbers, confetti project, Dynamic Marketing, Learning, marketing, Marketing Help, Marketing Knowledge, Power Tips, Relationships, small business marketing, Unconventional Thinking, Under-utilized Resources
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Jul
6 Bryan Waldon Pope, Founder of Marketing Success Institute, recently wrote about competing with Disney and how he observed the Disney Experience. Disney itself has a book and seminars that cover how it is done at Disney. It is a plan that plays to perfection almost every day in each Disney theme park around the world. Next time you visit, really look a little deeper and see how your interaction and experience is enhanced by the plan the Disney Corporation has put in place.
What led me to discuss Disney is a conversation with a client. When I asked what company he wanted to emulate, his immediate response was “Disneyland”. Not the rides or the food, but the experience. As I am working with him to create that experience I wanted to share a few of my observations.
- You cannot wish to create an experience without a plan. The plan starts before you answer the phone, greet the first customer or sell your first paper. The plan needs to address everything that affects the customer experience; seen, heard, smelled, felt or even tasted.
- Your plan needs to address all of the above and do so in a way that exceeds expectations and creates a better experience than expected.
- In creating an experience, look to the customers for validation – not in a survey, but in their smiles, posture and actions. If you see an issue, address it immediately.
- Give the customers more than they expect. Fireworks are always a good fallback. If you are inside, what fireworks can you create?
One thing that is lost in the creation of the experience is the price. Don’t price to beat the competition, price to make the customer feel they got more than what they paid for when the experience is complete.
In looking around your business, what can be improved immediately to enhance your customers’ experience?
POWER ON–Mark
Tags: actionable, Bryan Walden Pope, Customer Value, Disney, Dynamic Marketing, Education, Low Cost Marketing, Marketing Knowledge, Marketing Success Institute, MSI, Power Tips, small business marketing, Strategy
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Jun
24 Tony Hseih, CEO of Zappos had his book, Delivering Happiness: A Path to Profits, Passion and Purpose recently released. Here is what I learned:
I just finished this book for the second time and am wondering who this guy thinks he is? Happiness at work? Building a brand through culture, interaction, transparency and creating loyalty as well as personal relationships? Taking care of customers in a way that WOWS them and creates a reason to return?
This has got to be STOPPED! We cannot tolerate this type of behavior! Allow our employees to think and voice opinions? Making decisions and taking calculated risks? What’s next, provide a nap room and an onsite counselor?
Doesn’t he realize that we as corporate leaders know more than the cumulative brainpower of the collective?
Please help me spread the word, this has to stop, and stop now. Before you know it, the underlings will all be looking for more than a paycheck; satisfaction and a great work environment are not to be allowed. Thinking will result, and sooner or later tattoos of the corporate logo on the ass will disappear.
Join me in putting an end to this kind of thinking. If not now, when? If not you, who?
The lizard king must rise again!
(sarcasm intended)- sometimes translation is necessary.
POWER ON–Mark
Tags: actionable, Attention Grabbers, Confetti, confetti project, Dynamic Marketing, Employee Value, Marketing Knowledge, Power Tips, Relationships, Tony Hseih
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Jun
22 John Jantsch has a new book, The Referral Engine, all about building referrals without begging. What is begging? Asking your customers for the names of their friends and family who may be interested in your product or services. The customer came in to buy your product or service, not to give you more prospective customers. At a retail store I was asked for my phone number and email address after paying for my product. I probably will get a survey or call on my “satisfaction” with my purchase. I really just wanted to buy the soap that my wife wanted, not to give a life history. I believe you do your customer a disservice by asking for more and more. At some point it becomes a dissatisfier.
If the customer is happy, they will tell others, if they are not, they won’t. It’s that simple. Make your customers happy, and give them a reason to refer you. Your measure will be when you ask your customer where they heard about you in a passing manner.
Your customer is not a checklist, she is a person who made the choice to interact with you. Don’t blow the opportunity by asking more than you need to know. Begging will get you nowhere, but genuine thinking will get you everywhere.
POWER ON–Mark
Tags: actionable, confetti project, Customer Value, Dynamic Marketing, marketing, Marketing Knowledge, Power Tips, Relationships, small business marketing, Unconventional Marketing, Unconventional Thinking
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Jun
17 It worked before, it will work again. Have you ever told yourself that? It’s like trying a suicide squeeze in baseball three times in a game. If it worked for you, it has probably been noticed by the competition and they are doing something similar. If you continue to do the same thing, you move into the crowded field of marketing that you created. The same thing again and again may create a reminder for current customers, but will it attract new customers?
You can do the same thing over and over, but will it pay off? Why not reset the parameters and redefine what you are doing? Same message delivered in a different way. WOW the buying public!
Make your message memorable and fresh. You can do it if you are willing. Again and again will work to maintain.
But don’t you want to grow?
POWER ON–Mark
Tags: actionable, Attention Grabbers, Confetti, Dynamic Marketing, Low Cost Marketing, Marketing Knowledge, Power Tips, sales, Unconventional Thinking, Viral Marketing
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Jun
15 You have many choices when marketing to customers. Imagine the scenario where you have $3 left in your marketing budget. You want to reach as many prospects as possible and want to grow your business. Sounds absurd, right or wrong. As a marketer or business owner you have that decision to make every time you begin a new marketing concept.
What can that $3 buy you? Printing, postcards, a couple of banner ads? How about some goodwill and respect? Instead of marketing to the masses, market to the ONE. Who is the ONE? It is the one person who can influence others to interact with your business.
Your $3 can buy a cup of coffee or a piece of pie. Make the interaction special, memorable and personal. A cup of coffee by itself is just a cup, but the conversation and interaction will make or break the deal. Discuss what is important to the ONE. Family, sports, cars, world peace. It is your money but her time. The whole idea is to gain the trust of the ONE. If you do, the ONE can be your gateway to your future. Not only in customers, but in VC, media, alliances.
$3 and an hour of your time. It’s worth the investment.
POWER ON–Mark
Tags: actionable, Attention Grabbers, confetti project, Customer Value, Dynamic Marketing, Low Cost Marketing, Marketing Knowledge, Power Tips, Relationships, small business marketing, Unconventional Marketing, Unconventional Thinking, Under-utilized Resources
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Jun
8 A School World Fair, 40-50 countries represented by 200 15 year olds saying the same thing. The objective was to discuss the flag, food culture, geography and native dress. Each display also usually had a native food and possibly music. If this criteria was met, the teen had the adult sign a card, and after ten adults signed the card, the assignment was complete.
After listening to many presentations, the words of Seth Godin came back to me, reinforcing that learning is not being done in our school system. These kids did a great job of memorizing and regurgitating facts. I do not believe that many of these students learned anything. Ask them today about the country they presented and I would guess you get a blank stare.
What does this have to do with marketing? In marketing we are taught the 5 P’s: Price, Product, Placement, Promotion and People. A traditional formula that doesn’t always fit into today’s marketing culture. If an item is given away, there is no traditional price point. Or if a product sells just by word of mouth or spreads virally via the web, there is no traditional placement. Both of theses, price and promotion can be planned and managed, however they can also take on a life of their own. Let them spread, and manage the resulting sales. Don’t manage the spread. This is the new world of marketing. Unlearn what you know, don’t become locked in to any one measure or marketing process. Start with a goal in mind, but while using the plan as a guide, make it flexible and changeable. Your public will guide you, you can no longer guide them.
Get used to it or get out of the way.
POWER ON–Mark
Tags: actionable, confetti project, Dynamic Marketing, Education, Learning, marketing, Marketing Knowledge, seth godin
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May
25 Yesterday, I heard a father say to his son, “Dude, if you just listen to me, your life will be so much easier”. I found this statement to be interesting as it applies to business and marketing.
On one hand if you listen and act, you tend to do the same thing over and over and fail to learn or explore beyond what you know. This perpetuates the status quo and locks you into a life of following instructions. This can lead to comfort but not much innovation. While everyone is happy that the “norm” is kept in check, what is learned?
On the other hand, if nothing changes, what is the point? Can we learn by listening and following? While it may lead others to be uncomfortable, you may discard wisom to find a new path. This can lead to amazing discoveries and innovation. Letting discovery happen, whether by a child or an employee, lets you become the tipping point to a new adventure.
The hardest thing is to let something different happen. Let your followers fail, learn and possibly fail again. Failure by itself can be frustrating, but failure coupled with effort can lead to amazing things.
Are you willing to let that happen, or are you afraid of allowing others to grow? Your choice.
POWER ON–Mark
Tags: actionable, confetti project, Dynamic Marketing, Generating Ideas, Marketing Help, Power Tips, Unconventional Marketing, Unconventional Thinking
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Apr
20 On Monday, the Boston Marathon was run for the 114th time. If you watch any news coverage of the event, be sure to look closely at what the runners are wearing. Not the shoes, socks or even shorts. Look to see if they are carrying a message on their shirts. Also look to see if they are carrying a smile.

Why the shirts? It is more than a marathon, it is a cause, a hope a challenge. It is something many of them do to prove they are alive and well, other to remember or honor someone who has passed, or if fighting the good fight. I was not at the Boston Marathon, but at the Salt Lake City Marathon on Saturday and saw the contingent “Running For Michael“. They are even highlighted in a local news story.
Think of this from a marketing perspective. These runners and those cheering for them are all spreaders. Spreading Confetti, to all those that saw them run. What a great way to spread a message of hope or hype: “It will all work out.” How are you going to spread your message?
POWER ON–MarK
Tags: actionable, Boston Marathon, charity, Confetti, Customer Value, Dynamic Marketing, Low Cost Marketing, marathon, marketing, Power Tips, Salt Lake City Marathon, Unconventional Marketing
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