What's Your Brand? Part 2
What’s Your Brand
Part 2 of 52
By Matt Plapp
Next I was visiting a locally owned retail store with a large showroom. I walked it looking to buy a specific item. I was not greeted within 50 feet of the door. In fact, I was never greeted. I had to ask a guy I guessed was an employee for help. The reason I “Guessed” is because his hair was a wreck, his shirt was un-tucked and was old and not really recognizable with their company colors or logo. I did get it right though, but since he was carrying a scan gun it was somewhat a give-away. Next I asked where this product was, to which he pointed about 10 rows down and said down in aisle 15. I wanted to smack him. YOU DON’T POINT. You walk me to the item, see what I’m buying, find an item to up-sell me to and then take me to my next item. Needless to say I got lost, got frustrated and asked 2 more people. I ended up not buying anything due to this flawed process. Again, this BRAND was out of whack.
This example comes to me from a friend in Florida who owned a car dealership in the 80‘s and 90‘s. He used this example from his dealership in a marketing training I went to in 2003. He was in the showroom watching the salesman close a deal. Everything seemed ready to go as planned, everyone was smiling, shaking hands and getting ready to sign the paperwork. As he watched from across the room he noticed the wife get up to go somewhere. Within minutes she came back, whispered in her husbands ear and off they went. The owner thought something was up. He asked the salesman what happened and he had no idea. So he hurried out to the parking lot and caught them as they got into their car. He introduced himself as the owner and said he could not help but notice something went wrong, “Can I ask what happened”. The young lady told him that when she went to the restroom it was horrible, it was dirty, old and to her a slap in the face. She said that she did not think the dealership deserved her business if they did not respect their female customers enough to spend a few dollars on a nice clean restroom. WOW, this dealership owner was floored. He was widely successful, had been in the business for 20+ years and did not know what just hit him. He apologized and wished them luck on their car shopping experience. He had never been in the ladies room at his store, so he took a stroll. Once in there, he was disappointed “How could I miss something this obvious, how could I have not trained my staff to look for these type of issues” he told me. “We had a multi-million dollar facility and a $10 ladies room”. That night he called the customer and acknowledged her concerns and agreed. He let her know it would be remodeled the next few days and thanked her for telling him about it.
So to recap we just talked about the following items:
1. Employee appearance
2. Pointing instead of showing a customer
3. Restroom appearance
I know, right now your wondering what any of these items have to do with your marketing. They have everything to do with your marketing of your business. These are all an extension of your brand. Your brand is how your company/product is perceived by your customers. In these situations, these were real life examples of how each of these businesses failed to meet the expectations on their customers, and they failed to build their brand properly.
When I ask my customers about their brand I usually get a response targeted to their advertising. When in fact, I’m looking for a statement that defines their company and how the public relates to it. Uniforms, phone-answering, sales training, clean restrooms, trained employees, consistent company colors, clearly marked showrooms, and more importantly a staff that understands exactly what your brand is and how they are to carry that out in their job EVERY DAY.
Building Strong Referral Relationships
What do you do or sell?
What do you do or sell?
I’m sure you’ve been in networking and social settings where this question has been asked a thousand times, but coming up with the correct answer is much harder than you think. If your answer is the actual product or service you provide, your answer, although correct, is actually incorrect.
For example, if you work for a chamber of commerce and you tell others that you “work at the so-and-so chamber of commerce” you are not giving insight into how you could potentially help the person who asked you the question. Instead, if you said “I create opportunities for business professionals, like yourself, to grow their business through interactions with other business professionals” you are going to grab the other persons attention and a meaningful conversation begins. This answer speaks to the emotional need of the person you are talking to (who doesn’t want to grow their business?) and if you can attach your product or service to an emotional need, you are on your way to earning their business.
(At your next networking or social gathering, ask 10 people what they do and I promise you most, if not all, will answer with the obvious.)
Think of your advertising as one gigantic social event as it gives you the opportunity to come in contact with thousands of people everyday. Is your advertising message stating the obvious or are you engaging your potential customers by tapping into an emotional need? Are you using your advertisement to talk about how long you’ve been in business? Are you listing every product you sell? Are you talking about how great your customer service is? If you answered “Yes” to any of those questions your advertisement is not going to stand out to your prospective customers because you are stating the obvious and, honestly, your potential customers don’t care.
Determine the emotional need attached to your product or service and then hammer that point home in your advertisements. If you can attach your product or service to an emotional need of your prospects, you are on your way to earning a customer. (Don’t believe me? You may laugh at a commercial that claims you can get great abs by working out only 3 minutes a day, but the only one really laughing is that company….all the way to the bank.) Like I stated earlier, people don’t join a chamber of commerce to kill time, they join because they want to grow their business.
So, let me ask you again…….what do you do or sell? I hope your answer is different from the one you had two minutes ago.
Doug Smith is a Senior Account Executive for WREW Rewind 94.9 and www.cincysavers.com in Cincinnati & Northern Kentucky. You can contact Doug at (513) 535-9123 or dosmith@hubbardinteractive.com
What's Your Brand? Part 1
What’s Your Brand
Part 1 of 52
By Matt Plapp
As a marketing consultant I call on 100 + businesses per week. After most phone calls and visits I can’t help but wonder “What’s their brand”? Most people think about radio ads and tv ads when I say that. But I’m not talking about advertising, I’m talking about your companies brand. I’m talking about what defines your business to consumers when they think of you, if they actually do think of you. Here are a few examples of what I mean.
I recently had a customer tell me they don’t advertise when I spoke with her on the phone. I told the business owner it was a good thing she didn’t. Confused she asked what I meant. I told her it took me 4 different phone calls to get someone to answer the phone. On the 4th time when someone finally answered I could barely hear what they said when they answered the phone. Once I figured out I had the correct business after having the young lady repeat the name 3 times (maybe it was an issue with a tongue ring) I was put on hold. Once on-hold there was no message selling their business, just SILENCE, oh and I was on hold for 10 minutes. This I told the owner is why they should not be advertising, not because she thinks they have enough business or a great customer database. I don’t care how great of an advertising campaign you have, if you don’t answer the phones, put people on hold without ever checking back and don’t attempt to spend a few hundred dollars for an on-hold phone system (The Original On Hold Company, www.omghq.com) then it will won’t matter. Those experiences will define your brand to your potential customers and you will feel that pain in a few years.
Next I visited a client to see how the experience was in-store. This was a Jewelry store with a few locations. No-one at this particular location knows me so I figured I‘d get the normal treatment. This particular client told me in prior conversations that “I don’t think the advertising is working”. I always get a kick out of clients telling me this, WHY, because most have no idea. I ran a decent size local retail store for 10 years. We did every type of advertising available, I knew my marketing mix was working due to the increase in traffic and sales around our flights. But I never had proof that our cable, radio or magazine ads weren’t specifically working. It’s just too hard to gauge that for most retail businesses. OK, back to the jewelry store, I was actually in the market for a gift for my wife. I was dressed nice and I had my wife and kids with me. My wife looked at 3-4 rings and found the one she wanted. We got the price ($2,500) and I even TOOK A PICTURE of the ring with my apple iphone (for a good sales person an easy sign I don‘t mind spending money). I even told the salesman, who I later found out was the GM of that store, this was so I could come back the next day and buy the correct ring. This is where their BRAND fell apart. The GM never asked for my name, phone number or any other contact information. He didn’t give me his card or try and set up a follow-up appointment. He didn’t offer some kind of discount or reason to closee me. How about some sense of urgency “There’s only 1 left” to try and close me. HE NEVER TRIED TO SELL ME. Consumers want to be sold, especially salesman like me. Again, it does not matter how slick your radio ad is, how great the newspaper coupon offer is, if your staff can’t sell then you just wasted your money.
So to recap we just talked about the following items:
1. Answering the Phone
2. Clear Speaking when talking on the phone
3. On-Hold Systems
4. Getting a prospects contact info
5. Setting up a appointment
6. Closing a retail customer
So many times business owners think about their advertising when they hear someone say “Brand”, but it’s much more than just advertising. Stay tuned, each week I’m going to update this series with good and bad ways that companies Brands are being represented.
Phone Numbers…In your ads?
535-9123
Phone numbers are everywhere. You see them on billboards, television commercials, and you hear them on radio commercials.
Every business wants you to remember their phone number, but do you? Without looking, what is the phone number at the top of this page? Chances are you couldn’t remember and had to look. The reason? It’s hard to remember a phone number. But if it’s hard to remember, then why do so many businesses put their phone number in their advertisements?
Of course, there is always an exception to the rule and the exception for this is if you are fortunate enough to have a catchy phone number. (My Taekwondo instructor’s phone number is 450-KICK). Having a number like this is no guarantee someone will remember it, but it does increase your chances. Even with that said, why take up precious space in your advertisement with something people likely will not remember.
In my opinion, there is only one place that requires your phone number. Any guesses? Your website!
If you said Yellow Pages, answer this question: When was the last time you went to the yellow pages instead of the Internet to look up a business? Oh sure, you may crack open the yellow pages once in a great while, but the majority of your searches involve the Internet. (What is your yellow pages to Google/Yahoo ratio?) Plus, with today’s smart phones, people can find you online while on the go.
The ultimate goal of advertising is to make your business the one people think about when they are in the market for the product or service you sell. Don’t jumble up your message with a bunch of stuff people won’t remember. Typically you have 2 to 3 seconds to give your message with a billboard, 15 or 30 seconds on television, and 30 or 60 seconds on radio. Come up with a creative way for people to remember your name and your message. If your message resonates with your prospective customers, they will remember your name. Once they know who you are, they will find you when they need you.
So, what is the phone number at the top of the page? Still can’t remember? It’s my cell phone…..535-9123. I’m not lucky enough to have a catchy phone number.
Doug Smith is a Senior Account Executive for WREW Rewind 94.9 and www.cincysavers.com in Cincinnati & Northern Kentucky. You can contact Doug at (513) 535-9123 or dosmith@hubbardinteractive.com
This is how Social Media is done!
Toyota’s new “Swagger Wagon” Social Media Video
Business ownership is on the rise.
Every time you turn on the television or pick up a newspaper, you hear new reports on record unemployment or corporate downsizing. The economy has impacted almost everyone from high-level corporate executives to middle managers to recent college graduates. If you are affected, the traditional approach has been to immediately send your resume to multiple employers in hopes of landing your next job.
Instead of hoping for that call from a potential employer, many Americans have made the decision to become business owners. So you if that’s you, the big question is “Is it really for me?” First ask yourself these questions: 1) Am I self-motivated; 2) Do I enjoy customer service and sales; 3) Am I responsible, organized and persistent and 4) What is my tolerance for risk?
There’s a great feeling of satisfaction generated from starting a business, but it also comes with its share of responsibility and risk. Many individuals who have taken that leap of faith have enjoyed great financial security, work-life balance and professional success.
A September 2009 USA Today article stated that starting a business from scratch or buying a franchise has been the way to economic recovery for many Americans. The author writes, “Job seekers who gained employment in the second quarter of 2009, nearly one in 10 — did so by launching their own businesses.”
One popular method of business ownership is purchasing a franchise. There are unique differences between buying a franchise and starting a business from scratch. Franchise owners receive a proven business model, an established brand name and a built-in support system in exchange for paying the franchise company a monthly royalty. When starting a business from scratch, those capabilities must be built over time.
Due to the current economic climate people are forced to reevaluate their career. Establishing a franchise has become a popular choice that has allowed people to achieve financial, professional, and personal success.
Banks are beginning to lend again and additional governmental incentives are becoming available. Whether purchasing an established franchise model or starting your own business, becoming a business owner gives you control over your career, provides personal satisfaction and financial security. 2010 is shaping up to be an exciting time for prospective business owners. You’ll probably work longer and harder than you ever have before, but you’ll enjoy it more…because it’s yours
by Darian Richardson
RMC Franchise Connect
The Challenge
by John Kieffer
The Results Group
– There is never enough time to get done what I want.
Networking is a Business Decision
• Creating and developing relationships: While networking, the goal is to find something in common and exchange ideas with the purpose of creating a relationship. Once the networking is over, be proactive in developing that relationship by arranging a follow up meeting tofigure out how the two of you can grow each other’s business.
• Networking with professionals who can refer you business. Create a referral partner. Seek out people who can refer other people who use your product or services. Referrals are better quality business for you to increase your revenues.
• Network with professionals who have a need for your product or service. This makes the sales process easier and creates a more loyal customer or client.
• Network with people who can enhance your business. Create relationships with people who can give you greater exposure. These people will be connected and have great visibility. This will provide more visibility and credibility.
1. Have your networking tools with you (business cards, literature, etc)
3. Act like a host.
4. Listen and ask the W questions: Who What Where When and Why.
5. Give a lead or referral whenever possible.
6. Describe your product or service in 60 seconds.
7. Exchange business cards.
8 Spend 10 minutes with each person.
9. Write comments on back of business card.
10. Follow up with people you meet.