
How did the
Mona Lisa
become famous?
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The Importance of the Mona Lisa Concept
There are 380,000 pieces of art in the Louvre Museum in Paris.
Of these, well over 35,000 pieces of art are for display at any
given point in the gallery complex.
Yet, most of the tourists rush past 34,999 pieces of art to see a
singular piece of art.
A painting that has a dimension of just 30 x 21 inches.
A painting that’s often known as the La Giaconda.
Yes, the other name for La Giaconda, is the Mona Lisa
Has it ever occurred to you why every visitor seems to be in a mad
rush to find the Mona Lisa? It’s not the world’s biggest painting.
It’s not the most breathtaking. In fact even three hundred and fifty
years after it was first created, it was hardly considered an
important, let alone the world’s most famous painting in the world.
So how did it become the world’s most famous artwork of all?
How did it go from a price of 4000 écus* to being valued as
priceless?
And what does La Giaconda have to do with your product or service?
The answer lies in isolation
And isolation means that you put a spotlight on one product or
service. That product or service gets the spotlight. You make sure
that the customer knows that this product/service is the most
critical of all. That without this product or service, the customer
is probably missing out on something incredibly important.
But surely there can’t be one product or service that’s more
important than all the others, you may object. And that’s true.
In fact, the Mona Lisa isn’t more important than all the 379,999
objects of art at the Louvre. It’s been made to be the most
important.
And therefore the average tourist will pay the full fare
to simply walk into the Louvre, see the Mona Lisa and go home.
So how do you go about isolating the most important product or
service?
And more importantly how do you decide which ones to put to the side
and which one in particular to highlight?
The answer is: Pick any
product or service. And then create an aura around that product or
service.
Let me give you an example with the Brain Audit.
Now at Psychotactics we have dozens of products and services (more
products than services). But we picked the Brain Audit to be
the show piece.
This means that at least 99% of all our current clients will have
read the Brain Audit, and applied it in their business.
You can’t buy any course without the Brain Audit.
You can’t attend any workshop without the Brain Audit.
You can’t get any consulting without having read the Brain Audit.
In fact, if you do buy any of our products or services, without the
Brain Audit, then you’re kindly and firmly asked to read the
concepts outlined in the Brain Audit.
And it’s not like clients
haven’t tried to bypass this step. On at least two occasions,
clients have paid thousands of dollars (one paid $8000 and the other
$2500) and the money was refunded, because they didn’t own the Brain
Audit.
By isolating the Brain Audit, we’ve made it the most important part
of our business. Which means it forms the core document for all our
clients. When they have to audit their own work, they go back to the
Brain Audit.
But what if you don’t have a product?
What if you conducted workshops instead? Or what if you were in
services?
Or what if you sold physical products?
Let’s take a quick example of each of the above.
1) Workshops: You can highlight one workshop as being the most
crucial or critical of all. And within the workshop too, you can
isolate certain components as being the most important, by simply
giving additional weight to that portion of the learning.
In
workshops or courses, we’ll often give the attendees all the
information, and then spend most of our time working on just one
portion of the entire content.
2) If you’re in services, and let’s say you help build houses for
instance. You can easily highlight the most important part of the
planning process, even though there are ten thousand things that
need to be done in any building effort.
When a contractor did our
bathroom for instance, he was quite clear about the dates he needed
all the materials. This got us focused and we made sure we had
everything ready and on time, so he could start work without delay.
3) You may run a restaurant and sell loads of delicious dishes. Yet
it’s possible to highlight a specific dish. The Indian Restaurant ‘Two Fat Indians’ in Christchurch literally rates the dish
most-ordered at the restaurant, thus bestowing a Mona-Lisa status on
the dish itself.
And there are a few reasons why this isolation is important.
1) It allows customers to focus.
2) It reduces the frustration of choice for customers.
3) It allows the customer to consume a smaller portion, yet have a
richer experience.
But don’t believe me.
Look at what the Louvre does with the Mona Lisa. It allows the
customers to blithely walk past amazing works of art, focused solely
on getting to the Mona Lisa. Instead of getting frustrated with what
to see first, the customers now have a must-do list.
And it’s this direction that makes the customers really happy,
because they have the choice, but they know what’s really important. And finally, even if the customer were to simply see the Mona Lisa
and leave, they’d feel fulfilled.
On the other hand, if they didn’t have a point of focus, they would
always feel like they missed out on something really important.
Of course it’s not hard to see how this concept applies to a
professor or trainer, as it does to a restaurant or a consultant or
service provider.
So here’s an action plan:
1) List everything you ‘sell’ (whether it’s a product/training or
service).
2) Highlight three of the most important (in your opinion).
3) Trim it down to just one (product/element of training/element of
service).
And then watch as your customers swarm to your isolated
product/service; Your own La Giaconda.
Next Step: Don't forget to look at the recommended Psychotactics Sequence Of Marketing Products and Services.
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Are you losing tons of potential business because you don't know
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Approachable
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New Zealand
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