Friday, November 21, 2008

Marketing MapQuest

Last issue’s editorial, about how to “NOT” sell things to customers in need set a record. It achieved the highest click through rate of any editorial in 2008. (If you don’t know about “click through rate” it has nothing to do with how fast Dorothy and her Ruby Slippers get back to Kansas. Nothing.)

Why do I tell you this?
  1. To brag. Look, I’m a marketer; we live for stuff like this.
  2. To let you know that your customer’s response is a vital measurement of your message relevance.
  3. Measure anything you want to improve.

None of the above affected the story’s popularity of course. (Read here if you were one of the 3 people who missed it.) The above list is merely the outcome, the result, and the trailing indicator of what to do next.

Wall Street is full of trailing indicators that give forecasters the upper hand (and lower GI issues) in picking what to do next with the money... if anything. Equally in marketing, trailing indicators help you spot rising trends, products on plateau, those in decline.

Trailing, Forecasting, Surprising Results

In these pages and in coaching groups, we’ve long been pushing “down” in YP expenditures. Seems illogical since we design ads for a fee, indicating either business idiocy or inability to cite profit as a sole reason to recommend.

Results are generally a huge savings, with either no discernable lead drop (provided the ad is improved) or an increase in lead count.

Though certainly not due to contractor’s insistence for better cost per lead, yesterday’s Wall Street Journal cited that the Yellow Pages print and online are in serious financial straits. Shares of R.H. Donnelley and Idearc (top publishers) have plummeted 99% in the past year. Looks like the world realized the decline of relevance all at once.

Though there are a couple dogs in this next media, we’ve pushed way “up” in targeted direct mail, meaning a higher quality list at a lesser quantity of mailing. Our real push started in June 07 as the new construction fallout was apparent and markets were poised to be flooded with low-cost competitors. The higher- than-expected results help launch what we now call “Cluster Control” (Entire Seminar devoted to this winning strategy at the ACCA National Conference, February 24-26 in Fort Worth, Texas.)

Conversely, we’ve advised “down” for broad mailings – Card decks, blind “occupant” mailings, and others chosen primarily for volume. Bad idea. Let your competition be fooled after a huge mailing has him saying, “Why isn’t the phone ringing?” Hear me: Frequency over reach.

As the economy worsened through Spring 08, contractors began reporting better than average returns on a proven cash producer.

Customer Retention got a large, unintended boost this year. Seems if “asset protection” is wise in a downturn, it’s hard to name an asset more valuable than customers. (If you shout “Money!” please recall the source of that money.)

What’s Working Now

When you read the above, you can sense the leading indicators. Though I’m a little shy to project too far out, there’s broad insight from contractors who’ve shared healthy results.

Example from Real contractors…

Bill Stribling at Sullivan Service Company is a great guy. Very well-liked by customers; but, like many contractors, sort of “overlooked” Customer Retention. He got more serious about it last year. He said, “To say things have been slow is putting it mildly – we were almost to the point of calling our own numbers just to make sure the phone still rings! Then the newsletter you did for us went out. Suddenly it’s all anyone is talking about – church members, friends, and thankfully, customers!”

Jimmy Eanes, another contractor friend of ours told us “I sent out 6800 issues to my customer base and during the next 4 weeks, over 124 calls came in. Some of them we hadn’t spoken to in 3 years! We sold $169 tune-ups (great idea) yet normally have trouble selling them at $79! Plus we sold 12 complete systems for $62,728. Basically, my customers love the newsletter… and we do too!”

Juan Cardona in West Virginia noted, “Though I sure don’t tell my wailing competitors, we just had our best October ever. It feels good to be able to serve more people.” Main factors: Good hire from summer; Fleet-wide truck wrap; “Clustered” Direct Response; Newsletter.

What’s clear from the above – Decisiveness. Action (largely resistant to over analysis or needing approval), Willingness to change and track. Not easy in turbulent times. Maybe you need.…

Your Marketing Map for the Next 90 Days

To help all of you move forward, we’ve launched the most ambitious schedule of our lives, with 2 upcoming events in December, another TBA in January -
  1. Marketing Map – Webinar on December 3 hosted by ACCA for ComfortU members. Go here to join or register.
  2. First Time Ever. No plans to repeat. Coaching Club Bonus Meeting – December 10. Six of this nation’s hottest (and most expensive!) contractor consultants will be in my office visiting. I figured, “Why not put ‘em to work!” Basically, there’ll be $35,000 a day worth of talent on the phone for those who register soon. Sales, Hiring, Customer Service, and Marketing topics covered. Require each expert to “GIVE AWAY” a tool or idea worth a minimum of $10,000 on the call. Thought about making you pay for this one ($1000? $500?) but it’s a no-cost event. Limited to 500 lines. Am not buying any more than that. Register or miss out, your choice. A surprise announcement may be made.

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