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The Importance Of Happy Endings

When we’re serving customers we tend to front-load our effort. Hotel reception staff are well-versed in making a great impression when the guest checks in. Good waiters quickly seat new diners and take orders promptly. Retailers station greeters at the store entrance to welcome and orient new customers.

The same is also true for marketing. We expend a lot of effort to attract customers, committing a significant chunk of our resources to getting them through the door.

The trouble is that customers don’t rate the quality of their overall experience by what happens moment to moment, they judge it by what happened at its peak and at the end. This is why as business leaders and marketers we need to pay attention to the peak-end rule.

How you say goodbye is just, if not more important, as how you said hello.

Image by Stijn Nieuwendijk.

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The Facts Are Overrated

Since the new Model 3 Tesla was unveiled just over two weeks ago 400,000 people (who have never test driven or sat in one) have paid $1000 to place an order. And while the price of this latest model makes it accessible to more people it’s clearly not what’s driving these organic sales.

Think about the last significant purchase you made—a car, kitchen appliance or mobile phone. How deeply did you dive into the details about the features and functionality before you decided which product to buy? When were you last persuaded by facts?

Now think about how you differentiate your products and services. Do you default to competing on features, benefits and price alone? What’s at the heart of your story?
Yes, the facts had better stack up, but they’re not what’s driving your customer’s decisions.

Image by Wendell.

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Your Story Drives Behaviour

Jackie is a gifted web designer. Her inbox is full of enquiries from people who want to work with her. She loves what she does, but she gets worn down by clients asking for a discount on her already reasonable rates. This behaviour not only affects Jackie’s bottom line and the number of clients she must take on to make a living, it also leaves her feeling demoralised.

When clients repeatedly ask for discounts.
When your boss emails every weekend.
When staff continually show up late for meetings.
When you don’t feel valued, it’s tempting to blame the people who don’t value you.

Start by looking at your actions and responses—the things that might be giving this behaviour oxygen. Think about what could be triggering the behaviour, then own the way you want people to respond. You have a responsibility to create the story that elicits the reactions and responses you want. How are you framing your scarcity?

Image by dawolf.

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From Awareness To Loyalty

The purpose of your brand story and of every piece of marketing material is to move a prospective customer from awareness to loyalty.

When we imagine the customer decision journey as a timeline it’s clear that we need to treat customers differently according to where they are on that journey.

THE CUSTOMER DECISION JOURNEY

1. Awareness -> 2. Familiarity -> 3. Consideration -> 4. Purchase -> 5. Affinity -> 6. Loyalty

It jars when we get an overseas call offering web design services for a domain purchased a week ago out of the blue. That’s because the web design company failed to see the need to start at the beginning of the customer decision journey. They don’t take us any further along that journey because they’ve skipped the first three steps. Our loyalty is forever lost to them.

It turns out that marketing isn’t just about being seen and understood.
It’s about seeing in order to understand. That takes time and care and skill.
You have the opportunity to devote all of that.
How are you making sure you don’t skip any of the important steps?

Image by Jon Baglo.

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The Power Of Promises

“You’ll have it by Friday.”
“I’ll call you tomorrow.”
“We’ll be there by 3pm.”

How many times have promises like these been made to you in the past few weeks, only to be casually broken and replaced by a fresh set soon after?

Doing what you say you’ll do is the fastest route to building credibility, trust, and loyalty.

The ability to keep the promises you make is your new competitive advantage.

Thomas Leuthard.

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Grow Your Business By Watching What People Do

I once walked the length for Bourke Street behind a young man in a hurry heading towards Southern Cross Station. His backpack was slung over one shoulder and a designer shopping bag in the other hand bumped his knee as he walked revealing the Christian Louboutin logo. When we both stopped at the lights I couldn’t resist asking him what he’d bought. The shoes, he told me were a gift for a girlfriend he was trying to “win back”. The gesture had to be unforgettable.

Christian Louboutin is one of the most successful shoe designers in the world, selling more than half a million pairs of shoes a year. A pair of Louboutin’s will set you back between $395 and $6,000, their distinctive red soles are a marketing coup.

The root of the designer’s success is twofold. Firstly he knows who his customer is, and importantly who she is not, he doesn’t make shoes for “women who play bridge in the afternoon”. Secondly, he watches what she does and understands the role of his product in shaping her perception of herself.

Louboutin once said, “When a woman buys a pair of shoes, she never looks at the shoe. She stands up and looks in the mirror, she looks at the breast, the ass, from the front, from the side, blah blah blah. If she likes herself, then she considers the shoe.”

The opportunity to go deeper and gain valuable insights into our customers behaviour is open to each and every business. Those insights we observe can transform innovation, service and marketing.

How much time are you devoting to understanding how your customer’s actions drive their buying decisions?

Image by Adrain Scottow

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What Do Your Customers Really Want?

There’s an Italian Cafe in our neighbourhood serving good coffee and speciality cakes. It’s jam-packed every single evening—not because people are hungry for cake, but because they are hungry for the feeling of being connected. They seek out the place that makes them feel that way.

Howard Schultz recognised the power of people’s aspirations thirty years ago, when he transformed Starbucks from a coffee roaster into ‘the third place’ by grounding the brand’s value proposition in a story about ritual and community.

Just as a successful cafe isn’t ever just about the coffee, the products and services you sell create meaning for your customers beyond their utility. The truth is that as marketers, we often miss the opportunity to acknowledge and reflect that story back to them.

Does your story align with the story your customers really want to believe?

Image by Niall Kennedy.

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The Cost Of Interruption

The web design firm can access thousands of contact details for newly registered domains each day. It’s easy from there to hire a bunch of poorly trained phone operatives (who are overqualified to do soulless work but need the money) to interrupt people.

It’s possible to scrape, buy, trawl and interrupt a thousand people for next to nothing. What are we losing the opportunity to work on doing better by reaching for the lowest hanging fruit?

We count the cost of converting a prospect to a customer.

We rarely count the cost of treating people like ‘prospects’.

Image by Sullivan Gardner.

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The Importance Of A Responsive Business Mindset

The beauty salon owner has a limited number of available appointments. Every day she encounters the same problem—zero availability and several last minute cancellations or no-shows. This situation is frustrating and it’s losing her money. She thinks she might solve the problem by implementing a cancellation fee, charging clients who cancel within 24 hours of their appointment, but she knows that this move could alienate her customers.

When you encounter a problem it’s natural to be reactive. That’s useful in some situations—if a bucket is leaking water the obvious solution is to plug the hole. The reactive solution comes from questioning how to stop something happening.

But the reactive approach doesn’t always serve us long term. Far better to adopt a responsive business mindset that prompts us to dig deeper and uncover what’s causing the problem. Questioning why something is happening and how we might change the situation will deliver far more creative solutions than shooting from the hip ever will.

The quick fix isn’t always the right one.

Image by Thomas Leuthard.

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The Importance Of Customer Cues

Ira’s cafe is tucked away at the bottom of a narrow city centre laneway. Without regulars who live close by Ira’s place is dependent on converting tourists and weekend shoppers into diners. Every neighbouring cafe stations a host in the small doorway waiting for passers-by to make a decision. Ira takes up his post in the cafe doorway too, but he approaches the problem a little differently.

Because his cafe is at the end of the laneway he can watch people approaching. He sees them stopping to look at how busy a cafe is or to glance at the menu only to move on in search of a better option. Ira knows that once they hit his place they are running out of choices and also beginning to question their original decision to wait or walk on. As each group approaches he watches their cues, makes an assessment, then acts. Families fearful of not finding room are asked if they’d like a table for four, and shown that there is more room inside. Couples are asked if they’d like to see the breakfast menu. Lone tourists wheeling suitcases on the way to the station are offered takeaways.

At every turn, Ira comes across as empathetic, in contrast to the usual way sales conversations are handled on the street in a ‘can I have a few moments of your time?’ fashion because he is constantly assessing the prospective customer’s cues and anticipating their internal narrative.

If we want to become better marketers and brand storytellers we need to pay attention to what people want but quite possibly haven’t yet articulated. When we do our actions are seen as good service and not an inconvenient interruption.

Image by Linh Nguyen.

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