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ILL-ADVISED MARKETING
by Jay Conrad Levinson
www.gmarketing.com
What’s
nearly as bad a no marketing at all? It’s ill-advised marketing.
Guerrillas market like crazy, but none of it is ill-advised.
Many a
hard-working, well-meaning, marketing-minded business owner will
sabotage their business with ill-advised marketing. That’s even worse
than no marketing because bad marketing is incredibly expensive.
Ill-advised marketing is usually the result of a personality flaw in
the business owner. The most common flaw by far is impatience. So many
entrepreneurs are dazzled at the prospect of instant gratification
that when they don’t get it they begin again their marketing campaign,
never giving it a chance to take hold and soar.
Another
all-to-common personality hang-up is an ego the size of Alaska.
Business owners figure that they know finance and they know
management, therefore they also know marketing. Not true. They may
know marketing as it existed when they embarked upon the road of
individual enterprise, but you and I know how much marketing has
changed since then.
Often,
their humungous egos motivate them to write their own marketing copy,
design their ads and websites, select media based upon their own
personal tastes rather than the tastes of their prospects and
customers. Those egos often beckon them to become their own pitchmen
in the mass media. Sometimes that works. Usually, it blows up in their
kisser.
Another
personality blemish that puts marketing on self-destruct is the
ridiculous notion that word-of-mouth will do the trick all by itself.
And then there’s the crazy companion notion that everybody already
knows all the reasons why they should do business with you.
Want
another nutty personality defect possessed by the losers? It’s
thinking that they simply can’t render better customer service than
they’re providing right now. Don’t ever think that thought. There is
always room for improvement. Just ask any customer. Ask them, perhaps
with your questionnaire, how an ideal business such as yours would be
run. Be ready for true enlightenment when they tell you.
Of course,
conceit ranks high on the list of personality blotches — the conceit
to think that people want to know all about you right off the bat,
that they care about you more than they care about themselves, that
their time is your time and that they don’t know the amateurishness
when they see it. And still another impediment to marketing success is
being too good a consumer. Such business owners fall prey to lots of
fast-talking media reps and buy things they don’t really need. Or they
spend too much on the production of their marketing materials. Have
the insight to remember always that there is no marketing strategy
strong enough to withstand the personality of a clueless business
owner.
There’s an
old adage that says that it’s better to know something about your
spouse than everything about marriage. Same is true for marketing.
Guerrillas have gobs of information about their customers because if
they didn’t, their marketing wisdom would be for naught.
Marketing
is a pipe with you on one end and your customers on the other. It does
not exist in a vacuum and it does have a goal. To reach that goal,
personal data about each customer is mandatory. Knowing them as a
group helps a little but not nearly as much as knowing them
individually.
Gain that
information by talking with them, listening to what they say, sending
them customer questionnaires, visiting their websites, meeting them at
community events and trade shows, and making yourself available to
them for any dialogue they wish to initiate.
An
important guerrillas insight is that the more you know about
individual customers, the better you are able to custom-tailor your
marketing. As you custom-tailor it, the marketing becomes more
effective and economical at the same time. Instead of doing a mailing
to all of your customers, you mail to only those customers who you
know will be interested in what you’re now offering. That cuts down on
your cost while increasing your response rate.
When you
know specific customers are interested in baseball or opera, you can
send them tickets to such events — or gifts that connect with their
interest. When you read of them or one of their family achieving
something that’s worth publicity, you acknowledge the achievement with
a call or a note. How many huge companies can do that? That’s one of
your advantages as a small, customer-centered business.
Knowing
details about your customers enables you to connect closer with them,
adapt your conversations with them to their own personality types. If
they are Type A people, always in a hurry, that’s your cue to keep it
short and do it quickly. If they are deliberate, studious, now you
know to give them all the facts they need and not speed through your
presentation.
Personal
knowledge about individual customers enriches your customer list
exponentially. You know what they like, what they read, what they
watch, what excites them, what turns them off, where they shop, how
they perceive your business, tiny details that make the difference
between a one-time buyer and a lifelong customers. Best of all,
guerrillas have fun learning that information, connecting with other
people with the goal of mutual satisfaction. |