Posts Tagged ‘unique selling proposition’

What Makes You Different Is Important For Your Marketing

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

I have a friend who owns a recording studio and we were discussing how he could bring more clients through the door. “Precious Gem Tuesdays,” I shouted, forgetting that he’d actually have to buy a whole mess of rubies to give away.

tripWe talked about marketing and eventually got on the topic of his unique selling proposition. “There are three or four other studios in town that do the same type of work you do,” I reminded him. “Aside from your clean bathroom, what reason does anyone have to choose yours?” He stared at me, breathing through his open mouth.

As is so often the case with business owners, he was stumped when it came to defining what he does and the way it’s different from how the guy down the street does it. So, I suggested surveying his existing clients. I composed an email with 6 or 7 questions that were designed to solicit his client’s true feelings about my pal and his studio.

The response rate was great. And by analyzing the answers, we were able to find three very strong reasons why nearly every one of his clients keeps coming back. The answers to “who are you” and “what do you do”  are his unique selling proposition, and it became clear in the replies to that short email survey. And because the feedback came from a large sample of actual clients, we were able to trust that the written USP we developed could be trusted as accurate by new and potential clients.

(Editors Note: this article was originally posted to The BusinessVoice Blog in June 2006.)

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Marketing Without The Groundhog

Monday, February 2nd, 2009

Winter has been brutal in these parts. In the month of January, we had 25 days with below-normal temperatures. On many of those days, the high temperature was 10 or even 20 degrees below normal. Nearly 31 inches of snow fell, just shy of the all-time record for the month. Needless to say, we’re ready for Spring. With the arrival of Groundhog Day, it would be an understatement to say that we want that furry rodent to predict a quick end to this most-dismal season.

The problem is the calendar. It shows that Spring begins in late March, year in and year out, regardless of the prognostications of Punxsutawney Phil. There’s no fighting it. So, rather than hoping for an early break from Old Man Winter, it makes more sense to expect the worst and plan accordingly to ride it out.

That’s the same approach you should take to your marketing during our current “economic winter.” It’s been brutal for many of us, and, despite the efforts coming out of Washington, it’s far from over. It’s no time to be doing anything but staying the course through these icy waters.

Here in “The Great Recession” (or whatever you choose to call it) customers want value, but that’s not the same as low prices. Value means getting the most for your money, and great service is a big part of that equation. Remember your unique selling proposition and promote its value. Then back it up with service that beats the competition, and you’re less likely to lose customers who are forced to make difficult decisions about spending.

Hang in there, because this “winter” is not over yet. Forget the fortunetellers — above and below ground — and keep your marketing focused on surviving the deep freeze for as long as it lasts.

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Invest In Your Brand…And More Onions

Tuesday, September 9th, 2008

I love subs. Those five-dollar footlong subs. But the last time I went to the nearby five-dollar-footlong-sub store (the one named for an underground train), they were all out of tuna fish. The last TWO times I stopped in they were out of green peppers. And during my last THREE visits there were no onions in the joint.

Frustrating? You bet! Especially when you’re a tuna / green pepper / onions sorta’ fella like yours truly. But what really toasted my bread was that, each time, the “sandwich artists” who broke the bad news to me could not have demonstrated less concern over my customer experience. In fact, they were borderline rude about it.

Now, I understand that on the list of the world’s real problems, my onion-free subs barely crack the top five. Okay, maybe the top four. But if you own a sub shop — or any other business, for that matter — it should be mighty important to you that your employees not only empathize with your customers when things go wrong, but that they’re empowered to take a step toward making things right, even if that step is merely offering a sincere apology.

This latest brush with employee apathy – and the resulting damage to the sub chain’s brand equity – reminded me of a recent blog post from Drew McLellan. The subject was “Where should business owners invest their money in 2009?”

Drew writes:

As business owners and leaders look back on ‘08 and either shudder at the memory or exhale a sigh of relief that they survived it, it’s easy to assume that the plan going forward should be to lower prices or cut the marketing budget.

The reality is, both of those are the wrong answer. Cutting prices and slashing your marketing budget will only put you deeper in the hole as the economy rights itself. So what should you do with your money for ‘09?

Spend it on your employees. Make sure they understand your brand, your brand promise and how you want them to treat your customers. Don’t hold an annual meeting where you devote 5 minutes and a PowerPoint slide to your brand.

I’m talking make an investment. A real investment.

Talk about how you want your brand to come alive every week. In managers’ meetings, on all staff retreats, in your HR reviews. Make it a part of your interview process, your exit interviews and everything in between. How much time do you spend on how each and every employee delivers on the brand promise in your new employee orientation?

At Disney, no matter what position you are hired for, from street sweeper to a manager of a division, the first thing you’d do is attend a 3-day orientation that talks about absolutely nothing except the Disney brand and how you, the new recruit, are expected to carry on that tradition.

Think about it. Who interacts with your customers? When your customer has a concern or a complaint, who deals with them?

Especially in an economic time when every client matters and you can’t afford to lose any ground, isn’t this the year you should earmark some of your marketing dollars for the very people who deliver your brand every day?”

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All Marketers Are Liars

Tuesday, August 26th, 2008

No, this isn’t a rant about ethics. The provocative title is that of a fascinating book by Seth Godin that offers a different approach to success in marketing. Simply stated, Godin thinks that the best marketing tells the right story about a product or service to fit the consumer’s view of life. You’re not being untruthful, just very subjective about how you position yourself. He calls this kind of storytelling “lying,” but he smiles when he says it.

In a companion piece to the 2005 serialization of the book in Fortune Small Business Magazine, Godin says the best marketers use compelling stories that are authentic and original:

Marketers (and all human beings) are well trained to follow the leader. The natural instinct is to figure out what’s working for the competition and then try to outdo it–to be cheaper than your competitor who competes on price, or faster than the competitor who competes on speed. The problem is that once a consumer has bought someone else’s story and believes that lie, persuading the consumer to switch is the same as persuading him to admit he was wrong. And people hate admitting that they’re wrong.

Instead, you must tell a different story and persuade listeners that your story is more important than the story they currently believe. If your competition is faster, you must be cheaper. If they sell the story of health, you must sell the story of convenience. Not just the positioning x/y axis sort of “We are cheaper” claim, but a real story that is completely different from the story that’s already being told.

When it comes to your marketing, are you simply following the lead of others in your field? Could you create a unique story about why customers or clients need and want your product or service? Marketing like this can help you stand out from the competition — and that’s no lie.

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The Best Of “The Worst?”

Tuesday, December 18th, 2007

A local blog has posted a great discussion question that could work in any town – “What’s the worst locally produced TV commercial you’ve ever seen?”

They got lots of nominees, including this one that may take the top prize for mind-numbing repetition in the quest for name awareness (Think “Head On” for teenboy button-mashers.) Still, you’ll probably remember the name for a long while after you see the spot.

Which brings me to my question: what do you want your viewers, readers and listeners to remember about you and your business? Is it a name, a slogan, a particular product or service? Just as we see here, you can make a strong impression in 30 seconds or less when you focus your message. Pick a target — such as your Unique Selling Proposition (here’s our USP) — and then zero in on it in your marketing. Hopefully, your effort won’t make any “Worst Ever” list, but you will be remembered.

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Dial Up Better Customer Service With A Strong USP

Friday, August 17th, 2007

There’s a huge battle underway between Netflix and Blockbuster Video for subscribers who rent their DVD’s by mail. Netflix pioneered the concept and has 6.7 million customers. Blockbuster with 3.6 million customers is now experiencing faster growth with their Total Access plan that lets you get an extra DVD in addition to the mail delivery by exchanging it in the store. (An offer that is cannibalizing Blockbuster’s store sales in order to boost the mail program.)

Still, it’s advantage Blockbuster, right? Well, Netflix has decided to change the rules too — for customer service. According to the New York Times, Netflix shut down its e-mail customer service and opened a 24/7 toll-free call center, choosing live voices over keystrokes. This is no offshore outsourcing either; the call center is located in Portland, Oregon and staffed by lots of friendly people who are directed to take as much time as they need on the phone to handle customer concerns. Experts say it’s the exact opposite of what everyone else is doing in customer service.

And that’s good, because it’s a Unique Selling Proposition (USP) that differentiates Netflix from Blockbuster. This battle is far from over, but there’s a lesson here for all of us. Having a USP that focuses on superior customer service may be a great defense against a competitor who’s willing to lose money in order to beat you.

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