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Showing posts with label Branding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Branding. Show all posts

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Why Groupon Succeeds

Have you ever used Groupon? Groupon is a service that sends out a daily email with coupons for local businesses. Most of the deals are pretty good. If you don’t have any idea what I am talking about, ask around. One of your friends probably subscribes to Groupon or has used it on Facebook. Business owners that have used Groupon to promote their business have reported that doing so resulted in a lot of sales. Groupon is a new company, and it appears to be successful. According to recent speculation, Google may even be considering purchasing Groupon.

The whole concept and implementation is innovative. Even so, there must be some secret to their success. Do you wonder what it is? Do they have some sort of super-efficient way to manage their vendor and customer relationships? Could it be cutting edge technology?

Well? The answers are no and no. The secret is their attention to detail and the quality of their writing. Groupon does not rely on business offering deals for ad copy. It has a writing staff. It may not be off-the-wall like this product description I’ve added to the end of this post for a wool coat from the J. Peterman Company, but according to CEO Andrew Mason,
. . . having well-written, engaging content is a key part of convincing users to keep reading about new shops that they might never have never heard of.
Creative writing was a hallmark of J. Peterman whose ad copy was so well known that it even ended up as part of the plot line on the popular TV show Seinfeld.

Groupon works because Mason and his team understand the importance of branding and of articulating a value proposition to customers. Groupon recognizes that it has two customer groups: the vendor with the product and the customer looking for a deal, and it offers value to each group. Groupon’s brand represents good deals for consumers and an easy approach to product promotion using online coupons to for vendors, and the company avoids the trap of being another coupon clipping site.

Check out this blog article about Groupon. DEMO: The secret of Groupon’s success is … good writing?

  
J. Peterman Company product description:
North Woods Know-How
Men who wear jackets like this know things.
  • How to start a fire in the rain.
  • Measure a cord of wood.
  • Build empires.
Like Samuel Bingham. Started out as a saw-filer and eventually became “The King of the Cascades.” At 60, he was still showing the greenhorns how to untangle log jams on the Gatineau.

Or J.R. Booth. Started out as a carpenter with $9 in his pocket. Worked well into his 90s and left a railway empire estimated at $33 million.

Clearly two men worth emulating.

Wool Zip Jacket (No. 2833). Both rugged and handsome, it’s made of a 90% Melton wool blend that’s brushed so the warp and welt yarns aren’t visible. 2-button adjustable cuffs. Side slits. Front and back yokes.

The front yoke is unique in that it covers the pockets, making them the perfect place to keep maps, a deed, or your GPS unit. Extremely warm but not bulky.

Every North Woods estate should come with one of these jackets and a black lab. Imported.

Men’s sizes: S, M, L, XL, XXL.

Colors: Navy, Red.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Angie’s List and Yelp: How to make consumer sites work for you

Just when you thought that you had the Internet all figured out along comes something else for you to worry about. If you have a website, you have probably already heard about search engine optimization, also known as SEO. You may have already explored using widgets such as Add This. You’re blogging, tweeting,  and Facebooking.  You are Linked In.  What else is there to do?

How about getting back to basics? Build your reputation. You can do this by understanding and using consumer review sites. Two popular Internet services are  Angie’s List and Yelp.

Both sites provide customer reviews of merchants and service providers. Angie’s list has a small membership fee, Yelp is a free service. They are not the only review sites, but they are two of the most well known. Yelp began in San Francisco in 2004, and according to their site, subscribers have written over 10 million local reviews, and over 31 million people visited Yelp in a 30 day period. Yelp can be accessed from just about any device with Internet access, and it was listed in a Time magazine article, 10 Essential Websites.

Angie’s list has been providing reviews since it was started in Columbus, Ohio in 1995 by Angie Hicks. Angie’s List groups customer reviews by service and location. The small membership fee provides access to local reviews on AngiesList.com, live support, Angie’s List magazine, access to a complaint resolution team, and product discounts.

Why this is important to you and your business 
More and more people are using consumer review services such as Angie’s List and Yelp, and the recommendations are powerful. More than a million belong to Angie’s list, and Yelp gets more than 31 million visits a month. That is a lot of people. Word of mouth reviews have clearly moved beyond friends talking to friends. Whether you do a great job or a lousy job, people are likely to talk about you on consumer review sites.

Carpe Diem! 
If you understand the power of consumer reviews, you can make them work for you. Here’s how.
  • Don’t bother trying to game the system
  • Understand your customers and your business
  • Deliver the goods
  • Ask for referrals
Gaming the system
This is a loser’s game. The reputable consumer review sites work hard to present unbiased reviews. You can try to join the sites and review your own business, but you will probably get caught. Besides, if need to write your own review to get a good one, then you have bigger problems than a customer review site. It is a good idea to look yourself up on the sites so that you can see what your customers think of you.

Understanding your customers and your business
The key to good reviews is happy customers, and the key to happy customers is knowing what they want and giving it to them. A couple of buzzwords that you should know are “customer value” and “branding.” A customer value is simply the reason that customers buy a product. What value do customers see in your product? What are you offering? What is your "value proposition?" Branding is how you present yourself based on what you offer. Unless the goods or services you sell are inferior to others at similar price points, then the most likely cause of customer dissatisfaction is that what you say your offer, your brand, does not agree with what your customers want. Consider this extreme example.

A farmer went out to buy a vehicle and asks the salesman for the best he has. The farmer has a lot of money, so price is not a consideration. A few weeks later the farmer returned to the salesman complaining that he had been sold a piece of junk. When the salesman asked what was wrong with the Ferrari,  the farmer replied that it got bogged down in the field and there was no place to hook up the seed spreader.

If your customers want tractors, do not try to sell them fine Italian sports cars! A popular theme in sales is “consultative selling.” The idea is that salespeople should work with customers to identify their wants and needs and then demonstrate how the products meet those. This is different from the usual approach salespeople use when calling on customers to pitch their wares. Check out this blog post by Jill Konrath, Sales Classics: Why You Must Go Into Sales Calls Totally, Stark-Raving Naked for another take on the topic.

Deliver the goods
Assuming that you understand what your customer wants and that you have it, close the sale. Then deliver the goods. Your sale was a promise. Keep it. This means doing:
  • What you say you will do
  • When you said you would do it
  • At the price you agreed
If you read through reviews on Angie’s List, two things will become obvious fairly quickly. A lot of companies do not do what they said they would do when they said they would do it for the agreed price, and customers are actually surprised when companies do keep their promises. If you want the best reviews, you will have to do more, sooner, and for less than expected. However simply doing what they promised to do appears to yield good reviews also.

Ask for referrals
This advice has been around for a long time, and it works. Ask your customers to tell other people about you. Ask them if they belong to consumer review sites such as Angiel's List and Yelp. If they do, ask them to write about you. If you have done well by them, then they will do well by you.

So, how can you make consumer sites work for you? Find out what your customers want. Keep your promises, and ask your customers to tell their friends about you.

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Why your customers buy – Understanding the value proposition


One of the key things for businesses to understand is why their customers buy their product. Statements such as the following ones are meaningless.
  • We are the best at what we do.
  • We give great service.
  • We have a great product selection.
  • We offer a great value.
The first two are meaningless because they are vague. Your business may be the best, and it may be great, but what is it that you do? What are your customers purchasing? Another important problem is that they are focused on the business. The next two are slightly better because they begin to describe the products. Where they miss the mark is that they are not specific, and they are not focused on the customer. If this sounds familiar, it is because companies use the same concepts to develop their brand strategies.

A value proposition is a statement explaining why a customer should buy a product. Good value propositions articulate both the costs and the benefits of purchasing a product. For example, assume that you sell cars. What are you actually selling? Are your customers purchasing reliable transportation? Are they seeking a status symbol or making a statement? Do they want comfort and luxury? Are they looking for high performance? Mercedes and BMW are both German luxury that command a premium price. However, the Mercedes emphasizes luxury and the BMS emphasizes performance. Mercedes and BMW have different value propositions. At the other end of the price spectrum, Ford and General Motors both offer more affordable products, albeit without the performance features and without the luxury. This too is a different value proposition and a different set of customers. Companies that ignore their value propositions do so at their peril. Cadillac seriously damaged its brand when it introduced a small relatively inexpensive car hoping to attract economy minded buyers because buyers no longer automatically assumed that Cadillac meant large comfortable car and status.

Restaurants provide good examples of different value propositions too. Consider the difference in fine dining establishments, family restaurants, and fast food restaurants. Consider the values that customers might seek:
  • Fast, low cost
  • Family friendly, budget oriented
  • Leisurely, elegant, cozy, gourmet, price is not a big factor
Is it pretty obvious which set of values belongs to which market segment? Would McDonalds be successful if it dimmed the lights and sold $25 steaks? Would Ruth's Chris be successful if it introduced value meals?

Remember when crafting a value proposition, customer value is not just about low price or the product. Customers are buying what the product provides. For example, people shopping for jewelry can make their purchases in many places from discount stores to department stores to jewelry stores. If it was all about price, then Tiffany & Co. would not be in business. Instead, the Tiffany Blue Box is a status symbol. Tiffany & Co.'s value proposition says exactly what they do.
Since 1837, Tiffany & Co. has been the world's premier jeweler and America's house of design.
That is not to say that prices do not matter. Wal-Mart's value proposition is:
Everyday low prices
Price does matter. The trick is to figure out how it matters. If your product is a commodity, then value means low prices. If your product is status, then high prices may indicate value. This introduces another part of the value proposition. What exactly is the customer buying? Obviously if the customer is purchasing a computer, that is what the customer is buying. But what does that mean? Is the customer buying the box or the components? The customer is purchasing the ability to store and manipulate data. The customer is buying reliability. If you are selling televisions, the customer is not really interested in the device. The customer wants to watch TV. The customer is buying the ability to do that with vivid color and great sound. The customer is buying a viewing experience. If you are selling cars you are either selling transportation or you are selling a driving experience. That is why BMW advertises its value proposition as:
The ultimate driving machine
Even this blog has a value proposition. It is to help you grow your business by giving you useful information and sharing ideas. So now that you understand the idea, go write your own value proposition. Remember to answer these two important questions.
  1. What exactly is the customer purchasing? Remember, their goal is not just to own the product; their goal is to get what the product provides. That could be a lot of things.
  2. Why is the customer buying it?