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Why Starbucks Wins
You could have made a cup of instant coffee at home for a few cents this morning. Or you could even have splashed out on a flavoured Nespresso, brewed in your kitchen at 60 cents a shot.
So why did you go to Starbucks and pay eight times that price for a commodity?
A marketer would say that what you paid extra for was ‘the experience’.
The simple truth is you did it because it felt good.
That’s the reason your customers do what they do too.
Everything that Starbucks does, from naming their drinks to the music they play in the cafe is designed to make you feel good. It’s intentional, they do it on purpose.
That’s why it works.
What are you doing on purpose to make your customers feel good?
Image by Ronald Felton.
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Return On Relevance
Have you noticed how you react lately to unsolicited email or a cold call? Our interruption tolerance threshold is decreasing at a rapid rate and businesses and advertisers know it.
In Australia we even have a do not knock register. Are people demanding one where you live?
The people you want to speak to decide what’s relevant to them. Of course it’s been obvious for a long time that the Internet, remote controls and mobile devices have caused an attention shift. But what’s happening now goes beyond finding new and different ways to capture attention. People will no longer stand for being targeted. It’s no good saying print more fliers or put out another ad campaign, because you might as well be whistling into the wind without meaning or context.
There is no shortcut to creating things people want to talk about, or to building customer relationships that endure. No easy way to reach everyone. But there are better and more rewarding ways to engage with the people who want to hear from you.
Don’t just work out how to wave your arms at the masses. Build something just for the people who matter. Relevance is the new remarkable.
Image By Aaron Webb.
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Closing The Sale
It was a mid-week afternoon and the jewellery store was empty. Three assistants, and one customer shopping for a ring. A selection of diamonds was presented. The assistant talked about size and shape, colour and clarity, and a twelve week wait when she couldn’t find a ring to fit.
The customer made to leave.
She didn’t have twelve weeks of forward ‘ring buying’ planning up her sleeve.
“When do you need it for?” the assistant asked as the customer gathered her bags.
And then came the answer to the unasked question, that would have made all the difference had it been known.
“It’s our wedding anniversary in two weeks,” said the ring shopper as she walked out the door.
People can find everything they need online in couple of clicks, they no longer need to pay you for access to products. So forget about the emergency of the logistics for a second.
Instead work out what’s scarce. Stand in their shoes and try to understand what’s driving their decision in that moment.
A sale is never an exchange of goods. It’s a transfer of emotion.
Image by Martin Jarosinski.
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The Opportunity Of The Disconnection Economy
If there’s one thing I really hate it’s queuing. You too? And we’re not alone.
Innovators are spending their time working on projects to make frustrated one-click, 21st century humans worry less about the time they might be wasting, just waiting. There are red traffic lights with countdowns that encourage drivers to be more patient, real time transit information at stations to alleviate uncertainty and automated voices that tell us we are number three in the queue.
We’re designing efficiencies. Optimizing every moment.
This week my local gym installed two electronic self-service kiosks for members who want to book into classes. Swipe. Choose. Click. Then print your own ticket. No more waiting. No more going to a desk to look a person in the eye and pass the time of day.
We’ve never had a more connected society, but as a race we are unwittingly uncoupling ourselves from real intimacy. And what are we sacrificing for the sake of all this urgency? When we strip out every bit of humanity from our lives and our businesses with automation, where will the value lie then?
The opportunity of the future might just be, that we will be falling over each other to pay a premium for a simple, “good morning”.
Image by Jorge Quinteras.
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You Don’t Need A Marketing Plan
filed in Marketing, Storytelling, Strategy
Every business has a plan.
Even if it’s written on the back of a Post-it note.
The plan talks about the idea. Who it’s for. How to bring it to market, at what cost and how to get the word out. That final piece of the puzzle is your marketing plan, and yes it’s usually tacked on at the end….when you’re done.
Marketing is seen as an activity. Something that lives on a to-do list. A marketing plan is a bunch of actions and tactics designed to get attention for products and services.
Attention guaranteed a decent level of conversion in the days of linear media and the TV Industrial Complex, but in a Googlized world attention doesn’t automatically scale.
What matters now is being believed not just noticed and a marketing plan that comes into play when you’re done building whatever you’re building isn’t going to get you there.
What every business needs now is story strategy.
You don’t need a plan to broadcast, you need a way to change how people feel in the presence of your brand. Don’t start by asking how can we get noticed. Build something worth noticing. There’s a subtle difference.
Image by Adam Fagen.
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What’s The Story They’ll Tell About You Tomorrow?
filed in Marketing, Storytelling
Don’t let anyone kid you. Telling your story, or the story of your business is hard and most people struggle with it on some level (how to write an about page is one of the most visited posts on my blog).
But there’s a trick to tapping into the heart of your story.
Start where the story ends.
Write down the words you want people to share about you tomorrow.
What did they love about your product?
What made them care about your service?
How did you blow them away?
What difference did you make?
And now that you’ve figured out what you want people to say, go and do all the things that will make them say it. You are not the only one who is telling your story.
Image by Jason Short.
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Why More Is The Wrong Place To Start
filed in Marketing, Storytelling, Strategy
The end goal of all marketing is more.
More customers or subscribers. More sales and increased profits.
This is the reason business strategy questions and answers often begin, (and end) with the ‘how to’ of getting more.
But more is the wrong place to start for two reasons.
When you begin by asking, “How can we sell more?”
You’re bypassing the question that comes before it, which is—”Why will people want more?”
And, what makes a good business a great brand isn’t just more.
It’s more of the right customers who believe in the story.
Sure aim for more. But remember it’s meaning that scales.
Image by Katia Strieck.
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7 Marketing Strategies That Work Better Than Advertising
Marketing used to mean advertising. If you wanted to sell something awareness on a mass scale was the shortcut. Remarkability or transparency didn’t have to be baked into your product. But we’ve come a long way from the days of Mad Men and the blurred line between getting noticed and being believed.
Today anyone can….
1. Make a better product.
Josh uses just two ingredients in his handmade stoneground chocolate.
The Sydney Opera House brings in a billion dollars a year to the Australian economy.
2. Reward already loyal customers. Give them a story to share.
Jamie Oliver created a free pizza giveaway on Instagram by writing the details with a black marker on a plate and posting the photo.
My friend Mark the baker impacted a whole community with his bread giveaway. The side effect for both businesses was a positive brand-building vibe, even with people who didn’t have a chance to take part.
3. Change how people feel.
Warby Parker changed how people felt about how often they should shop for new glasses and how many pairs they should own.
charity: water built transparency and trust into their interface with the 100% model and GPS, showing donors where their money was making a difference.
4. Create content people want to come back for and share.
In the past you had to have access to a printing press to publish a food magazine that people drooled over, not anymore. The same strategy works for companies big and small, check out
My Starbucks Idea and Airbnb Popular Wishlists.
5. Connect your community.
Moleskine created a marketplace for custom designed notebooks connecting one set of fans to another.
One of our local cafes which backs onto the beach sponsored a surfing event last month.
6. Frame your scarcity.
There is no substitute for Christian Loboutin red soled shoes. Loboutin has managed to attach unique meaning to his shoes using colour and design.
7. Deliver value beyond an exchange of goods or a sales transaction.
Snakes & Lattes the board game cafe charges customers for coffee but what they really sell is connection.
What could you do with zero advertising and a better story?
Image by Geoff Jones.
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The Purpose Of Data
You know things about how people interact with your business or brand that you couldn’t possibly have known just a decade ago. You know how many people visited your website, from what country last night (or even right this second!). You know who sent them, how long they stayed and what held their attention. Your database can tell you about your loyal customers, when they shop, how much they spend and what prompts them to buy more. There’s no question that data is powerful and that business intelligence can inform better decisions.
But there’s a gap between what we know and what we do, and we need to get better at closing it. Most business owners understand that data is nice to have, but they don’t have a plan for what to do with it.
Data should do three things:
- Confirm or disprove what you were already thinking.
- Make you ask more of the right questions.
- Cause you to act on what you discover.
The power of data isn’t in the information. It’s what you do with it that matters.
Image by Johannes P. Osterhoff.