What's your market? Hire a consultant to help you with your Web-business
problems and one of the first questions he or she will ask is, what's
your market? How about eighteen to thirty-four year old, single male
college graduates with a dog named Spot; or maybe forty-five to
fifty-nine year old married women, who hate their husbands and can't get
their adult children to move out of the house. Maybe, just maybe,
they're asking the wrong question.
The Web isn't about markets, it's about audiences. Audiences need to be
entertained, enlightened, and engaged, and if your website doesn't,
you're never going to achieve what you want.
Time to rethink how you're delivering your marketing message. Start
treating Web-visitors like an audience not a market, and you might just
find what it takes to be successful on the Web.
2. Think People Not Customers
You know all those visitors you attract to your website with your
brilliant search engine optimization schemes, how many actually purchase
anything? Stop treating visitors as if they are already customers and
start treating them like what they are - people. That's right, people.
You know the two-legged funny creatures with wants, needs, desires, and
maybe even a few bucks to spend.
Customers are always looking for a deal and they're leery of websites
that only want to take their hard earned cash. Treat your Web-visitors
like people who can satisfy their wants, needs, and desires with your
assistance and guess what? Maybe it will make a difference: one small
step for Web-credibility, one giant leap for Web-success.
3. Think Experiences Not Features
Bought any good features lately? Didn't think so. You would think the
way business pushes the whole feature-frenzy thing that features are
exactly what people are looking for, but nobody buys features, they
don't even buy solutions - boy doesn't that whole solution provider
nonsense really get to you after a while.
What people really buy are experiences, hopefully positive ones. Whether
it's soft ice cream or a new accounting program, what people are paying
for is the experience your product or service provides.
Does your website offer an experience? Does it explain the experience
your product or service delivers? If it doesn't, then you really haven't
got anything anybody wants.
4. Think Emotion Not Logic
Think you're a logical person, always making rational decisions based on
practical criteria, and bottom line results. So tell me what was the
functional thinking that went into the purchase of those leather pants
you bought last year, or that sixty inch plasma television you bought
just to watch the big game?
Let's get real. You make purchasing decisions based on what you want,
and then justify them with seemingly sensible rationalizations, just
like everybody else. So stop trying to appeal only to the practical,
logical, aspects of bean-counter sales, and start pushing the feel good
aspects of emotional marketing.
If you're trying to appeal to an audience that gets its only
satisfaction out of acquiring the most features for the least cost, then
your marketing to the wrong audience.
5. Think Memories Not Promotions
Most animals live in the moment, whereas human beings live in the past.
Our here and now and our plans for the future are based on our
experiences, our histories, and our memories.
We take pictures of our kids, holidays, and special events; we
commemorate birthdays, anniversaries, promotions, and milestones of all
kinds. Even the significance of our prized possessions is centered on
the fact that those mere objects represent memories of the people,
places, and events that shaped our lives.
Real marketing, the kind that creates long-term clients and customer
relationships, is not about coupons, sale promotions, or deep discounts;
it's about delivering memories.
6. Think Marketing Not S.E.O.
Okay, here's one you've heard from us before: think marketing not search
engine optimization. Sure you've got to drive as many people to your
website as possible, but if your marketing message is so confused,
unfocused, and hard to comprehend because of all the keyword density and
S.E.O. tricks, then what have you really accomplished other than wasting
people's time? And people really get upset when you waste their time.
7. Think Stickiness Not Hits
It's not about how many hits you get on your website, it's about how
long people stay. If visitors remain on your site long enough to get
your marketing message then you must have said something worth listening
to, and if visitors get the message, your site has done its job.
If your website delivers the message, then you can expect the email
inquiries and phone calls to start flowing, but it's still up to you and
your sales staff to close the sale: people close sales not websites.
8. Think Stories Not Pitches
Did you hear the one about the farmer's daughter and the search engine
optimizer ... Stories, everyone loves stories. In fact before the
invention of the Gutenberg press, oral story telling was the way
knowledge got passed down from one generation to the next, and how news
was sent from one region to another.
Now that we have this multimedia Web-environment, we can continue the
tradition of real people delivering creative audio and video
presentations that capture the imagination and drive home the marketing
message so your audience won't forget who you are. Nothing informs,
engages, and entertains, like a good story: sounds to me like one heck
of a way to sell to an audience desperate for meaningful communication.
9. Think Focus Not Confusion
There you go again, telling everyone who will listen all the wonderful
things you and your company can do. Trouble is, telling them all those
things just confuses them.
What is the product or service that is most important to your company,
the one you are determined to sell to your audience? That's the one you
want to talk about. That's the one you want to devote your marketing
effort to promoting. That's the one you want people to think about when
they hear your name or see your logo. Focus your communication or your
message will just be a forgettable, incomprehensible blur.
10. Think Campaigns Not Ads
Isolated one-time advertisements are like one-night-stands: exciting for
a while but ultimately unfulfilling and devoid of meaning. Your audience
is looking to get married, not a short-term fling. Your marketing has to
woo your visitors with long-term campaigns that tell your story and
deliver your focused message; audiences expect to be courted and
counseled with meaningful communication. And that takes time and
commitment.
If you're spending money on just ads, you might as well be throwing that
money down the drain. There is a better way. So if you're looking for a
long-term relationship with your audience, think campaigns not ads.
11. Think Message Not Hype
What message are you delivering to your online visitors? Are you telling
them you've got the best product, at the best price, with the best
staff, and world-class customer service? Is that what you saying? Guess
what? Nobody cares, because nobody believes you.
There is only one way to show people you're the best and that is to
prove it, but here's the catch, you can't prove it until they become
customers. Whoops. Okay, so what's the solution? How about a real
marketing message that speaks to what your audience really wants. It's
not about you it's about them.
12. Think Personality Not Banality
Does your website just lie there like a lox; you know that cold, dead
fish that often comes with a bagel? No personality, just more of the
same tedious, dull, dreary, mind-numbing, tiresome, lackluster,
monotonous, stuff everybody else has. Boring! This is the new Web, so if
you can't get with it, you'd better get out because you're wasting your
time and everybody else's.
You're so worried about downloading times that you forgot to put
anything on your site worth seeing or hearing. Check your logs. If
people are jumping ship faster than rats on a burning ship, it's time to
try something new; like, maybe some compelling content.
13. Think Branding Not Copyrights
Hay, I love the Beatles. I grew up with them, and I have all their
records - ya records, like vinyl dude, not CDs. And guess what, I've
also got a Mac, in fact I've got a bunch of them, not to mention iPods
and other assorted Apple gizmos and gadgets. And you know something,
I've never once got John, Paul, George, or Ringo confused with Steve
Jobs. Amazing!
Worry just a little less about all that small print stuff and more on
building a memorable brand that people will remember, and that nobody
will mistake for some johnny-come-lately imposter.
14. Think Positioning Not Slogan
It's funny how people have a position on almost everything: you name the
issue and people will have a definite opinion on what they think, except
when it comes to their businesses. Just because you have a cute slogan
that you print under your logo, doesn't mean you own a position in your
audience's minds.
It seems businesses can't stand to make a definitive statement about who
they are and what they do. Why is that? Afraid they'll lose a customer I
guess, but if people don't understand exactly what you do, and why they
should be doing business with you, then they're never going to be
customers anyway.
No company can be all things to all people and companies that try, never
go anywhere. Tell people who you are and what you do and forget about
all the other stuff, it just gets in the way.
15. Think Sensory Appeal Not Cents Appeal
Do you want people to sit-up and take notice of what you have to say? Do
you want people to actually remember what you're telling them? While if
that's the case, you better appeal to their senses, and we're talking
about sights and sounds.
Deliver all your juicy, got-to-have content in an audio and video
presentation that will stick in people's heads.
If all you're doing is appealing to their desire to spend less, then
maybe they aren't the customers you're looking for anyway. Nobody can
afford to sell for less all the time, every time.
16. Think Identity Not Logos
Is your company the equivalent of the invisible man? You're on the Web,
but nobody cares because you're not saying anything worth listening to,
and if they do see you, you are instantly forgettable.
You've got to have an identity, a personality, an image, and there is no
better way to create that identity than with a video of a real person
delivering your marketing message in an entertaining, memorable manner.
17. Think Entertainment Not Biz-speak
Speaking of entertaining, you cannot engage, enlighten, or entertain if
everything you present sounds and looks like it came from some b-school
text book, or from one of those self-help courses on direct marketing
guaranteed to make you a millionaire in only three weeks.
Every business has a story to tell and they can all be presented in a
compelling way with a little imagination and creativity. And yes, even
b-to-b businesses can rise above the mundane and deadly boring, if only
they take the time and make the effort.
18. Think Communication Not Copy
Last but not least, let's all remember, that websites are about
communication. If you've got nothing to say, nothing to offer, or are
afraid to say what you can do for your audience, then how do you expect
to be successful.
Filling your Web pages with keyword density prose and instantly
forgettable sale's copy is not going to win the day.
Whether you are presenting your case in text, audio, or video, it better
be interesting and enlightening - even text can be entertaining if
written with style and attitude.
When websites fail, they fail because they do not communicate a
realistic, believable, convincing marketing message.
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