Unlock the Magic in Your Story Now

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Get the Free 20 questions to Ask Before Launching Your Idea workbook when you sign up for occasional updates.

What Your Marketing Needs More Of

Think of a person you love to be around, someone you have rich and satisfying conversations with. It’s likely your conversations are a two-way exchange including acknowledgement, pauses and even moments of silence. Compare that to how we market to customers.

We know that the best conversations make room for both parties. Traditional marketing conditioned us to unlearn this. We began to try reaching the masses—’doing’ marketing that simply involved broadcasting, by buying more column inches or shelf space. And so marketing forgot to leave room for the customer to be heard. We stopped inviting our customers into the conversation in meaningful ways. We treated their feedback as a distraction at best and annoyance at worst.

Thankfully that’s changing. Today our customers have a voice and it’s our job to make them part of the conversation again. Because when we listen to and engage with customers our businesses benefit in ways we might never have imagined.

Image by Geoffrey Coelho.

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Doing Is Underrated

The customer you could follow up with.
The survey waiting to be sent.
The product you could trial.
The colleague yet to be contacted.
The copy you could test.
The important observation you might take action on.

Each one is an opportunity to learn something that could change everything.

The GoPro started as a camera wrist strap. Airbnb began with three guests on airbeds in a small apartment. Johanna Basford’s 7 million book sales were made because of a single illustration that was spotted by an editor.

All the plotting and planning in the world can’t compare to the benefits you reap and insights you gain from taking action. An imperfect first step has a better chance of getting you to where you want to go than standing still.

Pick one thing to do and start today.

Image by Steven Depolo.

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Where’s Your Magic?

The long Sunday morning croissant line at Lune moves slowly and never gets any shorter.
Not a single person in the queue complains or shoots a frustrated glance at the time that is clearly slipping by.

The servers work slowly, carefully boxing each pastry as if it were made of porcelain. All the while the bakers roll fresh croissants in full view, like performers in an open air theatre playing to the crowd.

The barista comes outside and takes coffee orders as the people further up the line exit with the distinctive custom made box (complete with steam vents in the lid) because of course if you’re going to queue for a $5.50 croissant, you don’t just buy one—you leave with a box full and a story.

My millennial sons become frustrated. They know the assistants could make the line go faster–much faster and yet they seem to deliberately stifle efficiency.

The unspoken truth is that without the twenty minute wait a Lune croissant loses its magic. That line is part of the story. If Lune was open seven days, not just on weekends and if orders weren’t limited to six per customer. If they didn’t sell out and if you could simply walk right in and get served straight way the story wouldn’t be what it is. The scarcity and the story make the product better. The team at Lune understand where the magic happens. Where is yours?

Image by Enrico Sola.

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Good To Do Vs. Right To Do

The brand new billboard spanned the four lanes of the freeway that led to the airport. The location was obviously a strategic move, given that the company being advertised was in the travel business. The gorgeous image of a lone traveller in the wilderness had likely been painstakingly chosen by the marketing department in consultation with creative, and then approved higher up the chain of command. The tagline would have worked for any other travel agency, but that fact was offset by a nod to how established the company was. Not many of their competitors could claim to have been in business since 1972. The company’s logo sat in the bottom right hand corner, hovering in the middle of an African savanna.

There’s no doubt that the creation of this campaign had been a ton of work for many people over weeks and months. Imagine the hours that went into creating it—the strategy meetings, followed by long email trails, the back and forth with all stakeholders until the company had an advert they could be proud of.

After all of that angst and effort how will the team know if it was worth it? How will they know if their billboard has worked? What exactly will be their measure of success?

There’s no doubt that any business owner will feel good as she drives under her billboard at 80km per hour, simply reaching for that feeling is what we have to be mindful of. In business it’s not enough just to do what feels good, if what feels good doesn’t impact either the customer or the business.

It’s important to think in terms of outcomes and impact, not simply tactics that help us to feel like we’re getting somewhere when we’re not. Just because it feels good to do doesn’t mean it’s the right thing to do.

Image by Louis Dallara.

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Where Your Brand Story Ends

Like the gym in my city you can invest time, energy and considerable resources into telling your story.

But the stories your customers tell are what tomorrow’s customers are paying attention to.
Your brand story ends where their stories begin.

The question might not always be, “how many people can we attract or make aware?”
It might be, “how can we make sure our customers are telling the story we want others to hear?”

Image by Andrey Naumov.

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Changing Minds And The Decision Timeline

When was the last time you switched brands? The reality is we mostly make decisions on autopilot and we don’t often change our minds. When change happens it doesn’t happen in an instant—however hopeful we as marketers might be that it does.

We know for example, that the transition to bottled water didn’t happen overnight and yet every day we attempt to convince potential customers to switch or choose today, by offering more proof that our brand is different and better.

Changes of opinion and in attitude and behaviour take a very long time. There’s a whole sequence of events and tiny shifts that happen along the decision timeline from brand awareness to brand affinity.

BRAND AWARENESS <————————————————> BRAND AFFINITY

DECISION TIMELINE

Our job is to look for ways to understand and influence what happens in the middle, not simply to try to make change happen at the very start.

Image by Chris Goldberg.

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Where Your Story Starts

The question we mostly try to address when we set out to tell our business or product story is what we want the customer to know about our brand.

The better place to begin is by understanding what the customer wants to believe about herself and where our brand could potentially fit into her story.

It’s tempting to want to broadcast—to be immediately noticed and understood. The irony is we get to that place by first understanding and seeing the person on the other side of the interaction.

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First Impressions Vs. Lasting Impact

“What’s that new cafe like?” asked a business colleague from out of town.

His question got me thinking about how much a negative response from a single customer could cost a business. What’s the lasting impact of a one bad experience?

We can invest time and energy and money into the things we believe will create the right first impression—professional logo design, the perfect decor or quality packaging. And yet it’s possible for one bad customer experience to taint everything for a very long time to come.

The flip side of course is that when you organise your business for lasting impact people will cross town and queue from 3am for one of your croissants because they know you will sell out in two hours.

First impressions get people through the door, what happens next is what keeps them coming back.

Image by Jerd Lngr.

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The Three Sides Of Customer Experience

As boarding time came and went, it was clear that the flight wasn’t about to depart on time. The huge crowd of expectant passengers at the gate began to get restless. By the time the first announcement was made things were getting heated and when the call to collect refreshment vouchers went out resigned passengers had a million and one questions to ask.

In the Business Lounge, things were a little uglier. Executives with important deadlines, meetings to attend or connections to make competed for the attention of the one customer service representative who was handling the situation. She tried to talk them down with as much information as possible—it didn’t help. Here’s why.

There are three elements at play in every service delivery situation:

1. Expectation.
2. Logistics.
3. Emotion.

In business we do reasonably well at framing expectations and communicating logistics. We competently communicate that this is what you paid for and this is what you will get, where and when. Where we fall down is dealing with the third and perhaps most important element—our customer’s emotions. Fear is a powerful thing and no amount of explanation, reason and logic can counteract its effect, which is why we need to train for empathy. This is hard, since the person dealing with the crisis might experience it three times every week—the customer only experiences it acutely, today and that’s why her reaction and her worldview seem unreasonable.

In any customer service situation ask yourself:

“How would I be feeling if this were me?”
“How would I be reacting right now?”
“What would I be saying and doing?”

You might find that you’re closer to your customers than you think.

Image by Rob M.

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Do Your Actions And Story Align?

Have you ever seen the somber, suited doorman at Cartier chasing a thief, searching a customer’s bag or stopping a young woman from entering the store? Me neither.
If he’s not doing that then why is he there?

Does the sales assistant at MontBlanc really need to wear a white glove to remove the pen cap before he hands it to the shopper to try?

Should the yellow sale signs at the $2 discount store really be that bright?

Why don’t Starbucks coffees come in plain old small, medium and large, instead of Tall, Grande, Venti?

Is there really any need for the velvet rope customers line up behind to buy coffee pods at Nespresso?

What difference would it make if Apple renamed the ‘Genius’ a customer service technician?

There’s a reason a hand crafted leather bag can’t be shipped in cheap plastic packaging and a drink in the bar with the best view of Hong Kong can’t cost less than $20.

Everything, from the words you use in an automated email, to colour of your packaging is your brand story. Every detail needs to be consistent with the story you want your customers to hear and believe.

Tomorrow is the last day to register for The Story Strategy Course, we start this week.

Image by Garry Knight.

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