Posts Tagged ‘marketing strategy’

The importance of access and trust.

By Andy Reierson, May 24, 2010

3434414425_bc814b8a35By granting your agency access to any and all information it needs to be successful, you will most likely achieve better results. Why? It allows them the ability to truly measure the effectiveness of their efforts, make tweaks and changes to marketing activities as they need, and most importantly, have a clear idea of how your marketing objectives relate to the long-term goals of your organization. All the while, building trust that you are going to let them do the job you hired them to do, and not treat them like a vendor.

I realize that every business has some information they don’t want to share. Be sure you are forthcoming with what is off limits early, and clearly explain why it’s not available. Likewise, if your agency asks you for information that doesn’t seem relevant, ask them why they value it. Remember, agencies are just trying to do their job, and the more information they have, the better they can do their job. The better they can do their job, the better off you will be.

What information are you not willing to share with your agency? Why?

Photo by notsogoodphotography.

Are you ignoring your easiest sell?

By Andy Reierson, May 4, 2010

The hardest thing to do as a business is to obtain new customers. It requires a huge financial investment, a great marketing strategy, time and effort. So why would you pour a majority or all of your money into this at the expense of ignoring those who already know you – and more importantly, like you?

Know what you want to accomplish
Once you have acquired a new customer you need to have a plan in place to deepen that relationship. After all, they’ve made an investment in you or your product and they should get your attention.

Consider the following:

  • How do you plan to welcome/thank them?
  • How can you add value to their purchase?
  • What related products/services can you inform them about?
  • Are there any added benefits to the product/service they bought that they might not know about?
  • What can you learn from their experiences with your product/service?
  • Do you plan to connect them with other customers?

The Holy Grail of marketing
Ultimately you need to figure out a plan to get them from a one-purchase customer to a loyal customer. If you can figure out that process, you will soon create a network of customers that will market your company for you.

What companies do you know that do this well? What can you learn from them?

Image by icathing

Don’t Let Your Marketing Fall Down… in the Last Four Feet

By Colin N. Clarke, February 22, 2010

Marketing communications, in simplest terms, helps put a customer or prospect in the right frame of mind to buy. It can educate, inform, advise, recommend, encourage, scare and influence a prospect, but it cannot make them buy. At some point someone or something (e-commerce for example) has to close the sale. A recent presentation by Datacore Marketing describes this as “The Last Four Feet.”

The Last Four Feet represents the final steps that a customer takes as they approach the sales counter (or online checkout). Without question this is the most important part of the process. Can you close the sale?avoidance300

Marketers place great emphasis on campaigns to the end-user or customer. Significant, sometimes huge budgets are invested to help put the target audience in the right frame of mind to buy. But too often, after marketing communications has done its job with the customer, the process falls down at the sales counter.

Picture a customer who receives direct communications on your product, investigates online, reads the reviews, talks to their friends and decides “I want to buy.” They enter the “store” to purchase, approach the checkout, and the salesperson (or process) says, “Have you seen the features on alternative product #2 over here?” At that point, in the last four feet, all of your marketing communications efforts are shot down by one missed communication.

So how do you avoid losing your customer at the sales counter? Here are four sure-fire steps that will help with “the last four feet.”

1)      Educate your sales channel first – before any external customer communications begin. Be sure products and processes are easily understood (this applies to e-commerce too).

2)      Let the channel in on the process early, ask for feedback and implement suggestions that will strengthen the relationship with the channel. If using e-commerce, be sure to test the checkout process to make sure it is intuitive and without distraction.

3)       Involve the channel in the product or campaign  roll out. Give the channel an active stake in the process that encourages their engagement. A kickoff event, an incentive, an interesting (but not burdensome) program.

4)      Reinforce the sales process within your marketing communications. Suggest to the customer in your messaging the easiest route to purchase while reinforcing the same “easy route” to the channel audience.

Marketing communications can put the customer in the right frame of mind, but it can’t ring the till by itself. Include a solid channel strategy to make sure your marketing investment isn’t lost at the sales counter.

Have you ever dropped out of a sale at the counter? If so, what could the marketer have done differently?

Colin is a senior strategist for AadlandFlint and the Flint Group. Follow him on Twitter @colinnclarke or on Facebook at Facebook.com/cnclarke.