Marketing and Advertising with Chris Newton: retail marketing
Showing posts with label retail marketing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label retail marketing. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

World's Most Successful Business for his Industry

Sometimes in our rapid pace technology driven world, we miss the most obvious basics that can create a competitive leap.  Now I know you’re NOT in the dry cleaning industry.  But when someone in a crowded industry with 8% of the outlets has 40% of the business, maybe the ‘basics’ have something to teach us ...

Mel Shapiro was a superstar in the crowded US dry cleaning industry (he had 126 competitors across the country!). Even though he had just 8% of the outlets, he managed to secure 40% of the business. 

In fact, his main location did more business than any other single outlet in the WORLD!

So what's the secret to his extraordinary SUCCESS?  It's not the way his factories are run.  It's all about his customer interaction.

Some brief examples. His competitors have their management desk out the back. He places his IN FRONT of the counter. On the CUSTOMER’S side! His competitors' teams make do with casual clothes (consistent with the industry). He wears a suit. 

It's his mindset, and the mindset of his team, that creates success, and it can work for any industry.  He gives four rules of success:

No. 1 KEEP A SMILE ON YOUR FACE.

“Happy people work better. They convey that message to the public. (It’s as if) you are the conductor of an orchestra… What are you conducting? Is it a funeral march? Or is it a happy tune? You must have a positive morale and everything you do must give that feeling…”

No. 2 KEEP YOUR PROMISE.

There’s that “DO-WHAT-YOU-PROMISED-YOU-WOULD-DO” again. Yes, there’s that “DO-WHAT-YOU-PROMISED-YOU-WOULD-DO” again.  By the way, not only should you ‘deliver’ as promised, make sure your clients KNOW you delivered.  That’s a key distinction.  TELL them or how can they value what you’ve done for them?

No. 3 MAKE A GOOD PRESENTATION.

“What does that mean? You have to clean up your stores or office. Your sign programs have to be good. Get rid of that cluttered look. Develop a 'distinctive' look. Hire a graphic artist, and be prepared to PAY for quality…”

No. 4 DO GOOD QUALITY WORK.

“Yes, it’s important,” stresses Shapiro. “But, the difference between one supplier and the next isn’t THAT great. The secret is to capitalise where you can project a dramatic difference.”

What are the messages in all of this?

From an advertising perspective, it’s clear that until ALL these things are in place, the advertising proper can’t do its long term job. As well, it’s evident that, unless you have a particular flair in the area, it pays to call in professionals to look at your image… décor, signature, uniforms… and staff training.

Wouldn’t it be nice to steal the march on your competitors… suddenly appearing one day with a brand new “packaged image and marketing thrust” that’s ten years ahead of them? I don’t know about you. But the idea is irresistible to me.

Monday, June 13, 2011

The Concept of ‘Soft Dollar’

The concept of ‘soft dollar’ is a simple concept. But hardly any businesses harness it effectively. 

It allows you to value add to existing clients. It allows you to develop strategic alliance relationships that get you endorsed into other client databases ... and it gives you the tools to take away the focus from price and minimise the need to discount. 

So what IS ‘soft dollar’? 

In a nutshell, ‘soft dollar’ is something you have, or can create, that has a HIGH PERCEIVED VALUE, but costs little to produce or source. 

Take a pizza store. That’s an obvious one we’re all familiar with. 
The first pizza they sell a customer is encumbered with all the overheads ... wages, rent, power, insurance, advertising, etc. 
However, if they were to offer a SECOND Pizza FREE ... what’s the ‘hard cost’ to provide that second pizza? Some flour, water, cheese and a few extra ingredients. Maybe $3. Yet the perceived value is the same as the first ... Let’s say $12.
This is a classic example. That $3 pizza, positioned as a $12 bonus, can be (and has been) harnessed as a potent marketing tool.
In a similar vein, a beauty salon may offer a $20 hair styling as a gift. Perceived value, $20. Yet, the delivery cost of that service may be $2.
We’ve helped countless clients ... in beauty salons, fitness centres, health care, retail, automotive, financial services, real estate, design and construction, travel ... to rapidly acquire new customers through this concept. It is a concept you must constantly seek to apply. Because it IS so powerful.
Let’s have a look at a few more examples. Take the situation of a professional services provider.
Virtually any professional may use this same strategy. Naturally it has to be ‘packaged’ in a professional and appropriate way, depending on the profession. But the concept is equally as potent.
Take an interior designer. This person may charge out their time at say $150 an hour. It’s VALUED at $150. But it doesn’t cost $150.
The positioning of this offer is critical. If the consultant is seen to be promiscuously giving their time away freely without positioning it correctly, then it loses much of its value.
On the other hand, if this professional ...
  • positions the hour as an exploratory consultation, valued at $150 and ...
  • dimensionalises the value to the prospect of what they’ll be doing in that hour to analyse, advise and recommend, AND they ...
  • give reasons WHY they’re prepared to invest that time with the prospective client, an ‘investment’ in the prospect to that the prospect can fully understand the depth and breadth of the designers services and expertise ...
THEN ... this becomes a classic harnessing of ‘soft dollar’ strategy.   The consultant could launch a whole campaign around this strategy, aimed at highly targeted prospective clients.
Every business can harness this very powerful strategy. Apart from positioning an hour of your time in this way, your ‘soft dollar’ could be: 
  •  one of your own low cost high perceived value products that is related to, or enhances your main product offering in some way. An extended warranty perhaps.
  • a complementary product you source from someone else. You supply fitness memberships, you ‘package in’ a $55 voucher from a local massage therapist or beauty salon.
  • information you ‘package’ into a special report. This one is SO powerful, and so few businesses really harnesses it effectively. (For more great tips, grab a copy of our e-book '21 Tips to Creating an Effective White Paper' ... you'll need to put "21 Tips E-Book" in the comments field)
  • an audio tape of a seminar you’ve presented to prospects an interview you’ve scripted to give solutions to hot issues of the moment
The possibilities for ‘soft dollar’ are endless. If you don’t feel you’ve got the expertise to do the packaging, don’t let that be a reason NOT to do it! Find someone who can record a seminar, or a marketing professional who CAN put together a report of packaged information. 
 
Offering packaged information has been recorded to produce up to a 3,000% increase in leads. So it is worth doing.

We'll be really delving into white papers soon, so sign up to this blog to make sure you don't miss that series of blog entries.