Thursday, August 18, 2011

The New 5 C's For Successful Marketing

The 4Ps Don't Work Well Anymore

By David Miranda

For years, the 4 Ps of marketing - product, price, place, and promotion have served the discipline well, e.g. the product offered, the selling price, the place available for purchase, and the promotion (advertising, etc) to solicit consumers to purchase.

Today, the 4Ps are no longer effective. Products abound, pricing is dynamic, locations are both online and bricks and mortar, and advertising media has fragmented into many shapes and forms. Marketers, large and small, are left scratching their heads on how to effectively and efficiently reach their target audiences.

It's time to mothball the 4Ps and embrace the 5Cs - Consumers, Context, Convenience, Convergence, and Community.

Consumers - Market power has shifted from the seller to the buyer. Consumers, using the power of the Internet, can search, shop, compare, and buy from a myriad of sources located either across the street or around the world. This has meant the erosion in the power of mass marketing and the growth in sophisticated targeting.

Context - Sophisticated targeting has led to message customization providing targeted consumers with relevant content and products/services making marketing more effective, efficient and precise than ever before.

Convenience - In an A.D.D., time poverished world, consumers seek convenience - drive-thru windows, express check-out, online shopping and banking, etc.

Convergence - Consumers want to access what they want and who they want anytime, anywhere from anyplace. This convergence of media and distribution channels is upon us.

Community - Consumers are individuals, but are also social creatures who aggregate in business and social groups both formal and informal to share ideas and experiences. This social networking trait has been powerfully enabled by new technology and platforms and will continue to have a powerful impact on marketing.

An effective marketing plan must consider the 5 Cs in its research, development, and execution.

Understand the nuances of the target audience; provide relevant and contextual offerings; provide the ability for the consumer to purchase more convenient than competitors; communicate and provide offerings across appropriate channels that the target audience frequents; and finally understand that a brand needs to "communitize" itself within the business and social groups of its target audience.

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Are Your Customers Having An Affair With Another Brand?

Never Let The Honeymoon End With Your Customers

By David Miranda

If you closed your eyes and listened to any marketing presentation, you would think you were listening to a dating consultant or marriage counselor referring to their brand, as in, the brand "personality", the brand "identity", the brand "relationship", brand "loyalty", and most recently, brand "engagement".

There is a great deal of similarity in marketing brands and marketing yourself, as in a social relationship.

As a single male or female wishing to meet that special someone, you typically get all properly groomed and attired and seek out places where you are most likely to find that special someone, say a popular watering hole on a Saturday night. Upon entering, you peruse the landscape filled with others with the same idea. If you are fortunate, you will connect with someone who meets your criteria. If first impressions are positive, contact info is exchanged and perhaps a date will follow. A successful date might lead to steady dating. Steady dating might lead to engagement and engagement might lead to a walk down the aisle and, presto, marriage.

Marketing brands is similar. Brands want to meet "that special someone" - their target audience. Brands get marketing groomed and attired and seek out places where they are most likely to find that special someone - store shelves, television, radio, print, online, direct mail, and out-of-home. Brands seek to enter into a dialogue with consumer and contact info is exchanged. If the consumer experience is positive; it may lead to a relationship with the brand and perhaps even moving to the ultimate committment - brand loyalty.

The similarities don't end at the altar or with brand loyalty, however. Strong marriages and strong brands with loyal customers have a great deal in common. Each requires efforts to keep the bonds strong and robust over time. The biggest challenge is apathy - taking the other for granted.

We're all familiar with "You don't understand me anymore"; "You don't appreciate me"; "We've lost that spark in our relationship"; or "We don't communicate like we used to". Normally attributed to personal relationships, they are just as applicable to brand relationships. Only problem is that customers don't bother to express these thoughts. They just move on to another brand who really cares about them and promises not to take them for granted.

Treat your customers today like you are wooing them for the first time. Never let the honeymoon with them end or they might decide to have an affair with a competitive suitor and eventually show you the door.

Save the brand marriage!

Business Prevention And Its Seven Deadly Sins

Proscrastination, Lethargy, Arrogance, Superstition, Myopia, Antipathy, Stupidity

By David Miranda

Before someone buys something, they first have to want it. That's what marketing does. It's supposed to create and sustain preference to "sell stuff". Sounds reasonable, right?

More often than not, however, marketing success is thwarted by the "business prevention department".

What is this "business prevention department"?

It does not appear on an official org chart, but it exists in almost every business, large and small. It is comprised of people in various positions within the company that do their part, either knowingly or unknowingly, in stifling or smothering potential business opportunities by being guilty of one or more of the seven deadly sins of business prevention. The irony is, however, is that these "business prevention specialists" honestly think they are doing their small part in contributing to the success of the enterprise. They are, of course, delusional.

The seven deadly sins of business prevention are as follows:

First, procrastination.
This refers to business preventionists who put off to tomorrow, things that needed to be done yesterday. These necessary, but belated actions eventually taken tend to be too little too late with opportunities lost as "competitive barbarians at the gate" threaten existing and future business.

Second, lethargy.
Great plans sluggishly executed causes frustration and eventual attrition of clients, customers, and key talent.

Third, arrogance.
Arrogance is the offspring of the marriage of ego and power. It assumes that business preventionists believe that they have all the right answers leaving no room for collaboration and dialogue with competing views.

Fourth, superstition.
This refers to the notion that there is a direct cause and effect between certain historical behavior and the resulting consequences as in the ridiculous example " whenever I wear a blue suit on a client pitch, I get the business." or "we've always done it this way".

Fifth, myopia.
Myopia is short-sightedness. It is the "Mr. Magoo Syndrome" where business preventionists lack "strategic corrective lenses" to see the bigger picture - the one beyond today and tomorrow. Those competitors with 20/20 strategic vision have a better view of marketplace.

Sixth, antipathy
By definition, antipathy is a feeling of intense dislike. This is the case when business preventionists have an aversion to those people and ideas who are change agents. Their antipathy causes animosity both internally and externally and stifles innovation.

Seventh, stupidity.
As a wise sage once noted "ignorance means you don't know; stupidity means you'll never know". Ignorant people can learn, stupid ones cannot. When an enterprise has "stupid" people in key positions, it is a terminal condition requiring amputation to save the patient.

Business prevention thrives in an environment where one or more of theses deadly sins are practiced.

You can, however, exorcise these business prevention demons before it its too late.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Marketing Today - The Sky Is Full Of Dogs

There's A Smarter Way To "Bag" Consumers

By David Miranda

An inexperienced bird hunter bought some prized bird dogs from a breeder for, what would be, his first ever bird hunt. After several hours of futility, he returned to the breeder quite disgruntled and demanded his money back. The stunned breeder inquired what the problem was. "Didn't get one bird!", replied the hunter, "not even close." "That's impossible," responded the breeder, "those are my best performing bird dogs." "Well," said the hunter, "perhaps I wasn't tossing the dogs up high enough."

The same can be said for a great deal of the marketing done today. There are consumers everywhere and marketers futily "toss up" marketing effort after marketing effort in hopes of bagging their prey. In fact, the marketing "sky" is full of "dogs".

To "bag" consumers today, marketers must be smarter hunters. The first step is to understand the media consumption behavior of their target audience and design a campaign accordingly. The mass market has given way to many niche markets each with its own unique characteristics. The proof can be seen in the audience erosion of traditional media such as broadcast television, newspapers, magazines, and terrestial radio and the exponential growth of the internet including social networking sites, user-generated content, and mobile.

Here is some advice to smarter hunting:

  • Zero-base your marketing. The marketing landscape is morphing very fast. New channels are emerging that can be more effective and efficient. Don't be married, therefore, to the status quo.
  • Feed what works; starve what doesn't. Set performance benchmarks for marketing efforts. Have a clear R.O.M.I. (return on marketing investment) and hold people accountable.
  • Avoid I.G.T.D.T.T. (I've Got To Do That To). This is the infamous me-too approach when a marketer observes a competitor's marketing initiative and copies it irregardless whether the initiative worked or not.
  • "Do" outside the box, not to be confused with "think" outside the box. Observe consumer trends and behavior in the marketplace and adapt accordingly and quickly. Today, preference is perishable and consumers are literally only a mouse click away from a competitor's offerings.

Here's to smarter hunting!

Monday, August 15, 2011

Stratactics - The Alchemy of Strategy and Tactics

Time Compression Demands A New Methodology To Attain Sustainable Competitive Advantage

By David Miranda

Today, the business environment is like a NASCAR race.

Take a NASCAR driver vying to compete at almost 200MPH. Imagine the countless split second decisions that need to be made and the physical and mental skills required during the course of a 500 mile race. The objective? Stay in one piece and cross the finish line before anyone else. The successful driver begins with a race strategy but continually must employ tactics during the race to ultimately come out on top. Call it "stratactics" - where strategy and tactics are alchemized into a powerful "alloy".

Such is the case in today's volatile marketplace. Things are moving fast, aggressive competitors are bent on "putting you out of the race" exploiting your tiniest hesitation or miscalculation.

What is needed in business today is a "stratactical" approach.

Stratactics is the morphing of strategic vision and tactical execution. Gone are the days of having the luxury of spending weeks and months in the planning process defining strategy and then developing the tactics to be employed. It is the tyranny of the urgent.

What to do?

  1. Protect the decision-making process from bureaucracy. It robs the business of time-sensitivity.

  2. Surround yourself with wise, experienced people - smart, knowledgeable, intelligent is not enough.

  3. Find out what is working and keep doing more of it.

  4. Find out what is not working and stop doing more of it.

  5. Wanting to succeed is not enough; have an attitude of "not being afraid to fail".

  6. Live in the moment but with an eye on the horizon. Carpe diem.

  7. Communicate relentlessly with both internal and external stakeholders.
Be stratactical and win the race!

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Trusted Brands Need To Stand Up And Be Counted In A Down Economy

Customers Will Gravitate To Brands They Admire In Tough Times

By David Miranda


When times are tough, people gravitate to safe havens and there is no greater safe haven than a trusted brand that has historically delivered excellent value. Who is more qualified to help in difficult times than a brand that has been there for me in the past and will continue to earn my trust in the future?

In challenging times, it is time for trusted brands to leverage their accumulated brand equity in the marketplace. It is called brand "capital".

Let's be clear. This is not about indiscriminate price promotions. Those are just knee jerk reactions and historically have caused unintended consequences, i.e. dilution and displacement of revenue.

In challenging economic times, available demand always searches for the best value and the best place to find the best value should be with trusted brands.

What should admired and trusted brands do in times of economic uncertainty?

  1. Show leadership - Communicate quickly and effectively with the marketplace that you understand the challenging environment and empathize with the audience, i.e. "we feel your pain".

  2. Seek competitive advantage - Be first and bold with solutions that customers gravitate to rather than wait for the competition to dictate your strategy.

  3. Be "stratactical" - In a down market, people and businesses alike make decisions within a more compressed time frame. This means a brand needs to consider strategy concurrently with tactics, i.e. stratactical solutions that allow quick adjustments to volatile market conditions.

  4. "Don't take the bait" - There will be the impulse to react to competitive offerings. Urgency is the handmaiden of chaos.

  5. Steal share - The pie shrinks during downturns so getting a bigger piece of a smaller pie is key to success.

  6. Understand that great brands that do smart things during difficult times become greater.
Stand up and be counted.

The Other A.D.D. - Agnostic Decision Disorder

Engaging The "Any One Will Do" Consumer

By David Miranda


There is a popular buzz word found in most marketing presentation today - engagement, as in, "we need to engage consumers". It is a worthy objective, indeed, but one needs to understand the state of the marketplace today to put this into some perspective.

Consumers, today, suffer from two A.D.D. maladies - "attention deficit disorder" and "agnostic decision disorder" - the latter being the most troublesome to marketers since it implies that in many cases they are indifferent to brands that cannot differentiate.

Marketing, therefore, has two parallel objectives - getting a consumer's attention and giving them a reason to actually buy your product or service over those offered by your competitors. To do this a marketer must have a compelling "story" - a "brief" compelling story to communicate.

In marketing, everything communicates, but more often than not, marketers "bore the hell out of" consumers. Imagine Starbucks communicating to consumers "we sell coffee" or Apple communicating "we sell hardware and software" or Prada communicating "we sell clothes and accessories". Yet everyday marketers communicate boring stories and expect consumers to pay attention, get excited, and buy. Not going to happen.

Give consumers a reason to pay attention - a reason to buy and do it relentlessly by giving them more reasons to buy your product or services. Just like personal relationships, you have to relentlessly work at it.

Agnosticism is the enemy of a successful brand. Differentiate of die.

Some Pearls Of Wisdom On Getting A Better R.O.T.I - (Return On Time Invested)

Working Smart Is Doing Smart

By David Miranda


Early in my career, I had the pleasure of working for a rather unique individual. Although he had the responsibility for a large marketing enterprise, his genius was his R.O.T.I (Return On Time Invested). In short, he was a very productive individual and seemed to do it with ease. I figured I could learn a thing or two from him. I requested a meeting to pick his brain, and needless to say, what I learned was invaluable.

These are some of the pearls of wisdom he offered.
  • Seek out people smarter than yourself and do more listening than talking. Sometimes these people will be superiors, sometimes peers, sometimes subordinates, sometimes friends, sometimes competitors, sometimes complete strangers. Smart has no gender, racial, ethnic, religious, or political bias. Smart is smart.

  • If you want me to pay attention to you, tell me something I don't know but should know otherwise, I have better things to do with my time. So does everyone else.

  • If you have a point to make, make it and support it with facts. Everyone is entitled to develop their own opinion, but not their own facts.

  • If you are wrong, admit it quickly and get on with things. Excuses waste time and have no value to anyone.

  • Everything within a company are costs. All revenue resides outside the business. That's where time and resources should be invested.

  • A question needs to be asked only once. If you ask the same question to the same people more than that, you have a problem that needs fixing.

  • Information means little if it does not provide insights. Insights lead to action. Information leads to the need for more information.

  • Face-to-face or voice-to-voice communication is most effective and efficient than all other forms of communication whether it be with colleagues or customers. It provides insights that is impossible to get any other way.

  • Never be too busy to speak with someone who needs to speak to you. You never know.

  • Be visible and approachable. The opposite has nothing but negative consequences.

  • Meetings are for an exchange of ideas and decision-making for the future. They are not history classes.

  • Success is the convergence of great preparation, timing, and a little luck.

In summary, from my own perspective, these pearls of wisdom have greatly influenced my perspective and behavior in the business world - including my R.O.T. I.

Friday, August 12, 2011

Avoid Taking A Haircut, First Recognize The Real Problem

Chinese Proverb: A Problem Is An Opportunity In Disquise



Too often we confuse symptoms of a problem with the real problem. The owner of a successful upscale hair salon was confronted with a new discount chain hair salon which had recently opened directly across the street. The new competitor literally barraged the surrounding business and residential locale with direct mail, newspaper advertising, and couponing promoting $9.99 haircuts. The upscale salon owner immediately experienced an impact on her business. She decided to launch a counterattack.

She called in two marketing consultants for help. She asked each to submit a proposal on what to do including budgets. She made it clear to both that she had limited funds which had to be invested prudently. Soon both consultants submitted their plans.

One consultant suggested she needed to a) reduce her prices to compete; and b) invest her entire budget in direct mail, newspapers, and couponing to counter her competitor.

The other consultant suggested something completely different. He had noticed there was a large outdoor billboard available positioned directly between the two competitors. He suggested that this billboard be leased immediately. Nothing else was required. No direct mail, no newspaper ads, no coupons, and more importantly, no reduction in prices.

Curious about the second proposal, she called the consultant in for an explanation. "How is it possible that leasing just one billboard will solve my problem?" "It's simple", related the consultant, "I have done some quick personal research on the market, your clientele, and the clientele of your competitor. You are an upscale salon in a predominantly upscale market. Your loss of business is temporary. If you reduce your prices, coupon, heavily advertise, you are playing into your competitor's hands."

"I understand", the owner responded, "but what, then, will the billboard say?"

The consultant smiled and said, "It will say 'We Fix $9.99 Haircuts!'".

Needless to say which consultant won the business.

The moral of the story: Recognize the problem as an opportunity or risk taking a financial haircut.

Idea "Identity Theft" - Stealing "Credit" For Success

Who Really Is Responsible For The Touted Work?

By David Miranda

I've never hired a person solely on their resume' and I've never retained a company solely on "examples of their past work".

I have, however, hired talented people and retained companies with talented people.

There is a big difference.

Today's currency is ideas - big ideas from talented people. It is critical, therefore, to interview people and companies for talent. Too often, prospects are guilty of idea identify theft, e.g. taking credit for the ideas and accomplishments of others. Was the candidate for hire really responsible for his or her resume' claims? When a company presents its work done for others, are those people still with the firm and, if so, will they be working on your businesss?

Resume's are glorified bios putting the subjects who composed them in the best possible light. What do they tell you about the individual and his or her talents. The answer is very little. They don't tell you if they are likable or despicable, arrogant or collaborative; shepherds or sheep; self-motivated or heavy maintenance; ethical or amoral; or a potential asset or liabilty. Finding the right "needle in the haystack" requires face-to-face dialogue by an experienced "talent scout" asking questions like "why did you move from this job to this job?"; "would these companies hire you back or would you even want to?"; "if you get this job, what is the first thing you would do?"; "I can hire anyone, why you?"; In other words, find out what makes this person tick.

Too often, companies present and tout stuff they did for other clients as in "here are examples of our previous work". Here you need to ask questions like "how many of the people that produced this work are still with your firm?"; "will the people who are on the pitch for my business really be working on my business"; "will you take these people off my business if you get new accounts and will you advise me in advance?"; "have you lost any business lately, and if so, why?; "how successful are you at recruiting and retaining talent?".

Asking the right questions and getting the right answers will save you a great deal of time, money, and frustration up front.

Hire or retain the real talent, not those who seek to claim the credit.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Accept, Adapt, Adopt, Analyze, Adjust - Repeat As Often As Necesary

A Marketing Formula For Succeeding In A Dynamic Marketplace


We are witnessing a new age for marketing. The evidence is overwhelming. Reliable mass marketing vehicles (broadcast television, terrestial radio, daily newspapers, national magazines) have seen erosion of their audiences. DVR's, iPods, the Internet, cable, and mobile are some of the new technologies and channels that have enabled consumers to dictate their own personal media consumption patterns. New insurgent brands are challenging, and sometimes, winning their battles with major incumbents as is depicted in Seth Godin's new book, "Small Is The New Big."

Whether you are an incumbent or insurgent brand, the formula for success is the same. Successful participants must be smart, agile, fearless and relentless in their marketing. In this new age, marketing is a verb.

The formula for success can be described in the following steps:
  1. Accept - The first step is to accept the reality of what is happening in your respective industry. What forces are at work? What are the implications moving forward? Bricks and mortar book retailers, for example, could not and did not accept the fact that the internet would be a viable distribution channel until it was too late.

  2. Adapt - After accepting what is happening in the marketplace, a brand must adapt to the change. This is challenging in a larger organization where the status quo creates resistance to change. Adapting means understanding the brand's core competencies and determining how they can be adapted to new thinking and methods.

  3. Adopt - Adoption is committment to change. This is the most challenging for an organization because the tendency is to gravitate back to the old status quo. Adoption means that the entire organization must walk the walk.

  4. Analyze - In a hyperactive business environment, circumstances will relentless change. It is imperative, therefore, that marketing plans be continually analyzed to ensure the desired goals are being realized.

  5. Adjust - In any dynamic situation, course corrections will be required. It is critical that these adjustments be implemented without delay.

These steps are circuitous - a continuum for success. Brands must always be accepting of what is going on in the market; adapting to change; adopting new methods; analyzing performance; and adjusting as required.






Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Who's Minding The Store?

You Have To See Things For Yourself

By David Miranda

Corporate America is blessed with many highly educated executives whose resumes' are filled with post-secondary degrees and certifications. A considerable number, however, lack the common sense, empathy, and practical experience to run a successful department, division, or company. They have graduated from the classroom to the meeting room without "rolling up their sleeves" or "getting their hands dirty" on the shop floor, behind the counter, on the phone bank, in the warehouse, or wherever else the business is really done. And for these businesses, it shows. Regardless of what is learned in a classroom, there is no substitute for getting on the front lines of the enterprise and seeing it for yourself.

Ray Kroc, the legendary founder of McDonald's would visit his stores, cook a few burgers, work the counter, and, yes, pick up trash in the parking lot. When asked the secret of McDonald's success, he said "We take the hamburger business more serious than anyone else".

Norman Brinker, the founder of Brinker International, would require new corporate management to work a week in a one of his restaurants washing dishes, bussing and waiting tables, prepping, cooking, and bartending as a prerequisite for a desk job. He also required them to pull a restaurant management shift visiting each and every table to thank guests and solicit first-hand feedback.

Bernie Marcus and Arthur Blank, the co-founders of Home Depot, were reknown for putting on the famous orange aprons and touring their stores to get "up close and personal" with their business. The company, during their tenure, was a perennial top performer as a most admired company by their customers and employees.

If you are cloistered in your office, shackled to your desk, held hostage at meetings, rely on second or third hand information on "how things are going", chances are you are out of touch and have abdicated your responsibility of "minding the business".

Get out, get out often and introduce yourself to your business.

See what's happening!

Monday, August 8, 2011

Marketing Perfect Storm - The Impact Of Consumer A.D.D., Time Poverty. And Clutter

No Time, Short Attention Span, And Clutter Build Case For Brand-Building

By David Miranda

Three major phenomena have converged today in a perfect storm that challenge marketers to find the best strategies for success.

First, time poverty. Time is today's most precious commodity for consumers and 24 hours never seems to be enough to get everything done. Never enough time. Consumers are constantly playing King Solomon in attempting to balance the demands of work and home. Juggling, shuffling, rushing, and rescheduling are more the norm than the exception in day to day life. To cope, consumers have to prioritize. Tending to those things that are most important. Back burner the things that can wait. Time-saving products and services have become necessities in our lives - the drive-thru window, express check-out, the ATM, the cell phone, and the Internet, for example.

Second, consumer A.D.D.. With time poverty comes less time to spend on watching, reading, listening, surfing, researching, eating, shopping, and communicating. Consumers browse through the newspaper; surf the Internet; channel surf the television; flip through magazines; sort through email, voice mail, and snail mail; get frustrated waiting and impatient with anything that wastes time - people, bureaucracy, incompetence.

Third, clutter. Depending on one's perspective, consumers are either the beneficiaries or victims of abundance - hyper-choice of products and services and hyper-solicitations for those products and services from everywhere - television, radio, print, the Internet, outdoor, direct mail, coupons, flyers, brochures, and sales people to name a few.

What are marketers to do?

Invest in branding. Here are some reasons why and suggestions for dealing with the perfect storm:

  1. To combat time poverty; clearly distinguish your brand from others. Brands save people time. They shouldn't have to guess what they're buying and why. Brands are short hand for the senses.
  2. To combat A.D.D; keep the marketing message simple. People don't have time to listen or read lengthy copy whether it be on TV, the radio, print ads, brochures, direct mail, social networks, or Internet sites. Don't say in 3o seconds what you can say in 15. Just because you bought a half-page ad, doesn't mean you have to fill it with copy. Twitterize your brand messaging.
  3. To combat clutter; seek media opportunities where your brand is not just a part of the noise integrated with a strong public relations plan. Don't be an "marketing litterbug" where your marketing is strewn across the marketplace in hopes of someone noticing it.

In summary, in developing your marketing plan, it is important that you deal with the impact of the perfect storm or your brand's "ship won't come in".

Thursday, August 4, 2011

What Is Your Job? How Someone Answers Can Be Telling

Recognition Of The Person Behind The Title Is Critical For A Marketing Organization's Success



Once I was having a late dinner meeting was with a friend who was a senior marketing executive with Fortune 500 company. We were discussing his plans to reorganize his marketing department and he wanted some feedback. He brought an existing org chart and began describing his thoughts on the new reorg. Both the old and new charts had boxes filled with many names with lofty titles like VP of Interactive Marketing, VP of Relationship Marketing, VP of Strategic Partnerships, etc. etc. Connecting these many boxes were lots of solid and dotted lines representing the various interrelationships and who reports to who. He said the old chart wasn't working and he wanted to shake things up.

I asked about the people in these boxes. As I pointed to each box, he would respond in terms of the job description as in, "That's Jack Smith. He is the VP of Advertising. This position is responsible for liasing with our ad agencies for all our broadcast, cable, radio, and print media. We recruited him from a major agency." As I pointed to each box, I got similar replies. During our meeting it seemed to me that the reorg was not really the solution. A reorg would be like having people change seats around a conference table. Same people. Different seats.

While we were exchanging ideas, our waiter came over to check on us. The service, by the way, that evening was superb. From the moment we sat down, we were in the hands of master. He was going to get a considerable tip for his performance.

Here was an opportunity to make a point.

I asked the waiter what his job was. I knew, of course, he was a waiter, but I was interested to hear his response. He looked at both of us and realized it wasn't a flippant or trick question. He smiled and said, "My job is taking personal care of all my guests. My job is to predict what they may need or want before they ask for it. My job is to make sure the kitchen prepares the food to my guests liking as soon as my guests are ready and that the bar gets your drinks out just as you requested. My job is to be your personal host during your experience and if I am successful, I want you to come back and ask for me. And if I have done my job well I hope you will recommend me and the restaurant to your friends. How's that? That's what my job is."

"Couldn't have said it better myself. Thank you." I looked over to my friend and said that is what you need to do. This restaurant doesn't need a new org chart. It needs more people like this young man to understand what their real job is which has little to do, by the way, with lofty titles.

If you asked each current member of your organization what his or her job is, what would they say? If they respond with the obvious, i.e. "I am the VP of Interactive Marketing and I am responsible for online, mobile, etc.", you have a problem. If, however, this person responds, "My job is to ensure that new media will integrate with other marketing assets of the company to insure we achieve our budgeted financial goals. My job will be to proactively work with my colleagues to ensure our mutual success." Now you are getting somewhere.

In other words, don't change org charts - change hearts and minds. The next time you meet with your colleagues, staff, friends, or perfect strangers, ask them what they do. How they answer will be enlightening. By the way, I have visited many restaurants since and in every case I ask the server the same question, "What is your job?" In each and every case, the answer has been "I am your waiter". Enough said.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

The Sold Experience Must Exceed The Marketed Expectation

The Customer Satisfaction Formula



By David Miranda
During a Q&A session after a marketing presentation to a university audience, I was asked what the difference was between marketing and sales since the terms were used interchangebly in business at times. The question is a good one and deserved a good answer.

There is a symbiotic relationship between marketing and sales. One relies on the other for ultimate success - a ying to the other's yang. Some have used the adage "everyone in marketing and sales must sing off the same song sheet", but to really understand the relationship, one must go further. Marketing and sales must "must make music".

Marketing, simply put, is getting someone to "want to buy" what you have to sell - creating the expectation. Sales is actually "getting them to buy" - selling the experience, not just the germane product or service. Starbucks, for example, doesn't sell coffee, it sells the Starbucks experience. Altoids doesn't sell mints, they sell prevention. And so on.

When the experience exceeds the expectation, there is strong customer satisfaction and positive word of mouth. When the expectation, on the other hand, exceeds the experience, customers are not happy and this creates negative word of mouth. When the experience meets expectation, customer get what they expect, but "just okay" does not generate word of mouth.

So the relentless goal should be to exceed customer expectations. This is the characteristic of all great brands.

Remember, before someone buys something (sales), they have to want it (marketing).