What Do They Really Think?
When running a business, we often focus our attention and energy on the day-to-day activities. We concentrate on acquiring new customers, delivering our product or service on time, quality control, cash flow, irate customers, managing our teams, etc. We leave planning and deciding about corrective measures for the third or fourth quarter… and sometimes not at all.
To do everything better in business requires listening to what customers have to say. Unfortunately, many businesses treat this invaluable resource as an isolated ‘project’ or ‘event’ and do not engage in soliciting feedback regularly.
Collecting information routinely could help in making adjustments to every aspect of your operations in (almost) real time, and it can help with longer-term planning, too. You should be asking customers about their satisfaction level with what they purchased, the purchase experience, what else you could have done for them, their impression of your brand, what could make your offering better, and when and what will be their next purchase, just to mention a few.
Collecting this information need not be hard or complicated. It can be done in different ways and by utilizing various methodologies. Here are some examples of ways you may want to employ, depending on what you offer and sell:
- Send a simple survey to every customer after each delivery of product or service
- Conduct periodic focus groups with multiple customers (face-to-face or online)
- Schedule visits with customers for in-depth ‘voice of the customer’ conversations
- Send an annual or semi-annual detailed survey(s)
- Interview non-customers
Of course, what you do with the information you receive is very important. Collecting feedback just for the sake of doing it would be a waste of time, effort, and resources. The information must be reviewed and tabulated (when appropriate), conclusions must be drawn, and changes should be implemented, if warranted. The feedback gathered can also be very helpful for strategic planning – For example, it can help determine what should be your next product or feature release.
Lastly, positive feedback can also be utilized in marketing. Success stories and testimonials are extremely powerful tools to attract new and repeat customers. Ask permission to use the feedback received and incorporate it into your marketing efforts!
President & Chief Marketing Officer
Ad Placement That Will Make You Cringe… Or Laugh
By Ginger Mace
Sometimes the placement of marketing messages is out of a company’s control. The below examples might not have had the desired effect on sales, but what they lack in bringing in revenue, they more than make up for in laughs!
Reddit users probably audibly gasped when they saw these two things consecutively. While we can’t tell who the advertiser selling the steak is, we can guess that this ad placement underperformed.
This split screen aired on NBC during the Olympics. Call it foreshadowing or fortune telling, but either way, Google seemed to be reading the tea leaves when their ad (left) aired during then Governor Andrew Cuomo’s response to a sexual harassment report in which he was the subject of inquiry (right).
Not the time nor the place. Someone needs to edit their keywords and add some exceptions.
A devil is on one shoulder, an angel on the other. Do you choose the fast food or the healthier eating fresh start?
Wait! You forgot a few options in the answer choices. In some places, it’s called Five Finger Fillet, while the National Institutes of Health calls it mumblety-peg. No matter what you call it, the knife advertised would do a number on those digits once “hands down” is declared and the contestant tries to stab only the spaces between fingers.
Be sure to check out our two previous articles in this series: Copywriting Casualties and Awkward Acronyms and Four Questionable Marketing Moves That Missed The Mark.
What Is Fractional CMO & Marketing?
Fractional CMO & Marketing is ‘Your Outsourced Marketing Department’ when you need expert marketing leadership and marketing services to accelerate growth and improve profitability, but you’re not quite ready to hire a full-time Chief Marketing Officer or your own marketing department.
Our unique arrangement is the most efficient, innovative, and cost-effective formula for you. Click on the image to the left to watch a short video.
We Help When You Need To:
- Generate more of the right kind of leads
- Close more sales faster
- Get repeat sales
- Formulate a more effective message
- Produce powerful sales tools
- Establish brand awareness, recognition, and preference
- Differentiate your brand from the competition
- Improve customer satisfaction and loyalty
- Develop lasting relationships with customers
- Introduce new products
Marketing Lingo: Watchbait
Watchbait sensationalizes what online content is about or deliberately withholds information to give the wrong impression about the value viewers will receive if they watch or engage with the content. It can be seen in any part of the post, such as the content itself, description, caption, thumbnail, text overlay of a video, or narration. It is similar to clickbait in that the goal is to increase views, interactions (whether negative or positive), and engagement.
Watchbait is very similar to clickbait, wherein the entity posting the content uses similar deceptions in an attempt to get more clicks – and, therefore, more engagement and interaction – done basically to artificially inflate popularity and fool social media algorithms.