Does your marketing campaign tend to go suddenly quiet? |
The Customer Stampede: How can you harness it?Does your marketing campaign tend to go suddenly quiet? The phone should be ringing off the hook, your web server should be crashing with the number of orders, yet all you hear is the sound of silence. One psychological factor could throw your entire marketing campaign
out of whack. What is that factor? And how can it make your campaign
come alive again? Read this article to solve the puzzle. You're looking at beachwear, I'm looking at some shirts and we're not even remotely thinking about jeans. We're not even thinking of buying anything. Then suddenly there's an announcement. "Attention, K-Mart shoppers. We have a Blue Light Special in the Men's department: Levi's jeans for only $19.95. Hurry, this sale ends when the blue light stops spinning." You hear it before you see it. It's a low rumble. Then seconds later like an army of wildebeest on the move, a multitude of shoppers seem to roar ahead. And God help you if you're in their way! Mild mannered grandmas turn into menacing Indy 500 racecar drivers. Housewives push, shove and jostle to avail of the bargain as soon as they can. Teenagers bent on stretching their allowances join the fray. Shopping carts tumble, angry words fly. And while the blue light flashes, it sounds like a zoo with a hundred angry wildebeest. Which psychological factor creates such a level of pandemonium? Could it possibly be the bargain factor? You'd be quick to jump to that conclusion wouldn't you? I mean a bargain is a bargain is a bargain. What else is there to consider? What you may have missed in the thunderous stampede is the fact that the blue light has stopped after a duration of about 15 minutes. Suddenly there's a kind of hush. Notice how the buying euphoria has died down. The shoppers go back to their fitting rooms. They window shop, perhaps buy a few things. Perhaps not. You still think it's the bargain price, don't
you? It's Friday, December 22, 2000. Parents across the United States were going bananas in their attempt to get the mother of all Christmas gifts: The Playstation 2. For some parents, the Bambi look of their five year old, coupled with the emotional guilt is just too much to handle. Look what happened next. - In Georgia, parents rented Playstations at video stores
and never returned them. As you can see, there were no bargains to be had. In fact, it was quite the opposite. People would have gladly paid a premium to get what they wanted. So the psychological factor certainly didn't hinge on price.
But the words *blue light* and *Christmas* should
give you a clue. It's urgency that drives people bonkers. People? Did I say people? Well your customers are people aren't they? So if it works for K-Mart (God bless their soul) and Sony (and theirs too!) why wouldn't it work for you? And why aren't you implementing it in your business? Because you don't have products, right? If you're dealing with small business...phew! So go ahead, offer them the goodies. Turn on the pressure by offering a whole series of services that would no longer be available after a certain date. Throw in the email support, drop in the add-on training and lay before them a smorgasbord of yummy stuff for their business. Hey, they need your service anyway. They don't really want to think about it, they just want to put it off till the last possible second. If you fail to put an urgency factor on the product or service you're offering to a small business, something else will take precedence and your offer will be buried under the paperwork, possibly never to see the light again. Workshops and training use this urgency tactic extremely well. By restricting the seats and dates, they pummel our little brains with the need to improve and grow our businesses. Research has shown that the maximum numbers of signups are in the second last or last week of a workshop. The scarcity factor kicks in and the seats get filled. How to deal with the dinosaurs called Big Business... However you've got to remember a big business is only a small business with lots of people. People with their own agendas, their own little private victories to be won. Aha! There's le loophole. Focus your efforts on an individual's issues, instead of trying to take on the entire company's problems. The key is to tie your service offering to some external compelling event. Something that is compelling to the buyer. Their fiscal year-
'Do it now so you can charge it to this year's budget' or results
before the next board meeting-'Be a hero at the meeting!' Now don't forget to look before you cross the
road... Where's the urgency in your communication? And eliminate that sound of silence for good! Next Step: Don't forget to look at the recommended Psychotactics Sequence Of Marketing Products and Services. |
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