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Will You Add? - Saying One Thing, Doing Another...
Direct Marketing Ad: Nine Ways To Effectively Advertise Your Business In Magazines ent. Revenue was the key measure throughout the company and would remain so. Talking about being customer focussed just made everyone feel better. In fact with hindsight, in everything they did the customer came second or in some cases third!Have you ever spent hundreds or thousands of dollars placing an ad in a magazine and not have a good response? Have you been confused as to why your ad did not work like you had hoped?Here are 9 basic tips for advertising your business in magazines.1. Color ads are generally more effective than black/white ads. The exception is, if the page you are advertising is in color and your ad is black/white. The black/white ad can even be more profitable if it is done well.2. A full page ad is often thought to do better. Again there can be exceptions to the rule. Where is the customer on the agenda? Just look at your next team meeting agenda. Where is the customer satisfaction review? Is there one? I know of monthly and quarterly meetings where the customer and the customer satisfaction measure are not even spoken about? How can management then say they are focussed on the customer? You are your diary Look at your diary. How much time do you spend with Customers or working on Customer issues? Look at your bosses and senior teams - IT Consulting: Generate Income in the Beginning This week I was asked to speak at an internal conference for a bank. The subject was how to build a great customer experience. However, the reality was somewhat different to the title. I sat listening to speaker after speaker - all coming along with the same message “how can we stuff more products into our clients and achieve our targets”.If you are starting your own IT consulting business, you need to be generating demand, getting good leads and prospects, qualifying them, going out on sales appointments and following up on those.Do not get seduced by an aggressive sales person twisting your arm to join a channel program. Don’t get seduced by tech gadgets that don’t fill an immediate need with your paying clients.Avoid Channel ProgramsIn starting an IT consulting business, you need to be very careful that you don’t get sucked into joining channel programs that aren’t leading anywhere. You need to focus on finding paying clients first.Determine How You Will Be Pai As I sat there I started to think, why do people say one thing and do another? Do they really think people are that stupid that they cannot see the conflict between the words and the actions? So, as the speakers droned on and on about product X and revenue Y, I thought “what are the tell tale signs that show if your company is really customer focussed?”. I took the opportunity to make some notes……. When I visit companies, they take great pains to tell me how customer focussed they are. They show me mission statements, pretty “charters” on their wall extolling the virtue of being customer focussed and explain how the company is organised around their products! Yet the reality is that their words and their actions are different. Customer focussed is the last thing they are. Let me be very clear right up front, our people are not stupid, and your customers are not stupid, they know you are not customer focussed! One thing I have learnt over the years is… “Customers will judge you on your actions not your intentions. So what are some of the tell tale signs of people saying one thing and doing another? What do you measure? This is the easy one. I have met companies who tell me they are customer focussed and yet they have no form of Customer satisfaction measure at all! Do you measure Customer satisfaction? Ask yourself now if you know what last month’s results were? Now ask yourself if you know the company’s revenue performance last month? Normally people can tell me the latter but not the former. What does that tell me? Half the Customer Experience is about emotions. So, do you measure the emotions you’re evoking in your customers? When were your measures last reviewed to check they are still the right ones and changed if necessary? What happens to the information? Too many companies have a “tick the box” mentality. They measure Customer satisfaction as the management books say they should. But they never do anything with the results. So ask yourself, how often is your customer satisfaction measure actively used to drive improvements? How important are Customer measures to your company? Who gets paid on the results and how much? I remember when I was in corporate life; I had a stand up argument with one of my colleagues at a board meeting about this. I suggested that the bonus we paid account managers, which stood at 5% of their overall bonus, with the remaining 95% paid on revenue, should be increased to 50% of their bonus. I argued if we really believed that focussing on the customer was critical then we should “put our money where our mouth is”. Sadly I lost the argument. Revenue was the key measure throughout the company and would remain so. Talking about being customer focussed just made everyone feel better. In fact with hindsight, in everything they did the customer came second or in some cases third! Where is the customer on the agenda? Just look at your next team meeting agenda. Where is the customer satisfaction review? Is there one? I know of monthly and quarterly meetings where the customer and the customer satisfaction measure are not even spoken about? How can management then say they are focussed on the customer? You are your diary Look at your diary. How much time do you spend with Customers or working on Customer issues? Look at your bosses and senior teams - t Why Choose Promotional T-Shirts To Get Your Message Across? n I visit companies, they take great pains to tell me how customer focussed they are. They show me mission statements, pretty “charters” on their wall extolling the virtue of being customer focussed and explain how the company is organised around their products! Yet the reality is that their words and their actions are different. Customer focussed is the last thing they are. Let me be very clear right up front, our people are not stupid, and your customers are not stupid, they know you are not customer focussed! One thing I have learnt over the years is… “Customers will judge you on your actions not your intentions.Promotional t-shirts are among the most popular promotional items given away by companies in the UK. Custom t-shirts have a long and colorful history. Since the 1950s when James Dean wore a white t-shirt under a leather jacket, t-shirts have been outspoken in their attitudes – but it wasn’t until the mid-sixties that they began to be used to deliver messages loud and clear. Disney was one of the first companies to use promotional t-shirts for their business, but they started a trend that is still growing and snowballing.In the late sixties and early seventies, rock and roll concert promoters jumped on the bandwagon with t-shirts printed with the tour So what are some of the tell tale signs of people saying one thing and doing another? What do you measure? This is the easy one. I have met companies who tell me they are customer focussed and yet they have no form of Customer satisfaction measure at all! Do you measure Customer satisfaction? Ask yourself now if you know what last month’s results were? Now ask yourself if you know the company’s revenue performance last month? Normally people can tell me the latter but not the former. What does that tell me? Half the Customer Experience is about emotions. So, do you measure the emotions you’re evoking in your customers? When were your measures last reviewed to check they are still the right ones and changed if necessary? What happens to the information? Too many companies have a “tick the box” mentality. They measure Customer satisfaction as the management books say they should. But they never do anything with the results. So ask yourself, how often is your customer satisfaction measure actively used to drive improvements? How important are Customer measures to your company? Who gets paid on the results and how much? I remember when I was in corporate life; I had a stand up argument with one of my colleagues at a board meeting about this. I suggested that the bonus we paid account managers, which stood at 5% of their overall bonus, with the remaining 95% paid on revenue, should be increased to 50% of their bonus. I argued if we really believed that focussing on the customer was critical then we should “put our money where our mouth is”. Sadly I lost the argument. Revenue was the key measure throughout the company and would remain so. Talking about being customer focussed just made everyone feel better. In fact with hindsight, in everything they did the customer came second or in some cases third! Where is the customer on the agenda? Just look at your next team meeting agenda. Where is the customer satisfaction review? Is there one? I know of monthly and quarterly meetings where the customer and the customer satisfaction measure are not even spoken about? How can management then say they are focussed on the customer? You are your diary Look at your diary. How much time do you spend with Customers or working on Customer issues? Look at your bosses and senior teams - 9 Secrets Mark Twain Taught Me About Advertising s is the easy one. I have met companies who tell me they are customer focussed and yet they have no form of Customer satisfaction measure at all! Do you measure Customer satisfaction? Ask yourself now if you know what last month’s results were? Now ask yourself if you know the company’s revenue performance last month? Normally people can tell me the latter but not the former. What does that tell me?“Many a small thing has been made large by the right kind of advertising.”Advertising is life made to look larger than life, through images and words that promise a wish fulfilled, a dream come true, a problem solved. Even Viagra follows Mark Twain’s keen observation about advertising. The worst kind of advertising exaggerates to get your attention, the best, gets your attention without exaggeration. It simply states a fact or reveals an emotional need, then lets you make the leap from “small to large.” Examples of the worst: before-and-after photos for weight loss products and cosmetic surgery—both descend to almost comic dis Half the Customer Experience is about emotions. So, do you measure the emotions you’re evoking in your customers? When were your measures last reviewed to check they are still the right ones and changed if necessary? What happens to the information? Too many companies have a “tick the box” mentality. They measure Customer satisfaction as the management books say they should. But they never do anything with the results. So ask yourself, how often is your customer satisfaction measure actively used to drive improvements? How important are Customer measures to your company? Who gets paid on the results and how much? I remember when I was in corporate life; I had a stand up argument with one of my colleagues at a board meeting about this. I suggested that the bonus we paid account managers, which stood at 5% of their overall bonus, with the remaining 95% paid on revenue, should be increased to 50% of their bonus. I argued if we really believed that focussing on the customer was critical then we should “put our money where our mouth is”. Sadly I lost the argument. Revenue was the key measure throughout the company and would remain so. Talking about being customer focussed just made everyone feel better. In fact with hindsight, in everything they did the customer came second or in some cases third! Where is the customer on the agenda? Just look at your next team meeting agenda. Where is the customer satisfaction review? Is there one? I know of monthly and quarterly meetings where the customer and the customer satisfaction measure are not even spoken about? How can management then say they are focussed on the customer? You are your diary Look at your diary. How much time do you spend with Customers or working on Customer issues? Look at your bosses and senior teams - Premium Laminated Business Cards ction as the management books say they should. But they never do anything with the results. So ask yourself, how often is your customer satisfaction measure actively used to drive improvements?It is often said that business cards are the most important marketing tool. Because of this fact, it is essential to invest in high quality, colorful and laminated business cards. Everyone you meet is a potential customer and you you’re your business card to serve as a miniature billboard that advertise your products or services.Some great ideas to stand out from the crowd would be to select an unusual color, typeface, or message. Make certain that your business card contains all the information necessary for people to remember it. The information you want to include is your name and company name, your company logo, a short catchphrase sentence How important are Customer measures to your company? Who gets paid on the results and how much? I remember when I was in corporate life; I had a stand up argument with one of my colleagues at a board meeting about this. I suggested that the bonus we paid account managers, which stood at 5% of their overall bonus, with the remaining 95% paid on revenue, should be increased to 50% of their bonus. I argued if we really believed that focussing on the customer was critical then we should “put our money where our mouth is”. Sadly I lost the argument. Revenue was the key measure throughout the company and would remain so. Talking about being customer focussed just made everyone feel better. In fact with hindsight, in everything they did the customer came second or in some cases third! Where is the customer on the agenda? Just look at your next team meeting agenda. Where is the customer satisfaction review? Is there one? I know of monthly and quarterly meetings where the customer and the customer satisfaction measure are not even spoken about? How can management then say they are focussed on the customer? You are your diary Look at your diary. How much time do you spend with Customers or working on Customer issues? Look at your bosses and senior teams - Why Fundraising Is The Same As Friendraising ent. Revenue was the key measure throughout the company and would remain so. Talking about being customer focussed just made everyone feel better. In fact with hindsight, in everything they did the customer came second or in some cases third!We all know that people give money to people, not to organizations. That is why it is so important for nonprofits to target their potential large donors and figure out ways to draw them into the community that is the organization. When a large donor feels comfortable with the people involved, they will feel comfortable contributing to the success of those people.That is why everyone needs to understand the urgency of sharing their enthusiasm with their networks. There are a number of ways this can be done. Here are just a few:1. Invite your prospects to various functions. These can be annual meetings, lectures, workshops, or any other public e Where is the customer on the agenda? Just look at your next team meeting agenda. Where is the customer satisfaction review? Is there one? I know of monthly and quarterly meetings where the customer and the customer satisfaction measure are not even spoken about? How can management then say they are focussed on the customer? You are your diary Look at your diary. How much time do you spend with Customers or working on Customer issues? Look at your bosses and senior teams - this will tell you the difference between the actions and the intentions. Customer complaints Are they a good thing or a bad thing? Customer complaints should be encouraged - they are free consultancy and feedback from your customers. Too many companies treat them as something they shouldn’t have? “Inside out or Outside in” A couple of weeks ago I was involved in a meeting where there was a heated debate about what the customer wanted. Retail put their view, Customer service put their view, sales put their view and it all got a bit strained. I sat there and, at an opportune moment, asked the simple question. “Can someone tell me what the customer thinks?…..”Where is your customer data to back up what you are saying, because without that these are just opinions”. The most important thing is what the customer thinks. So in summary these are the main areas which show the difference between words and actions. Look at your colleagues and bosses and then ask yourself, are you truly customer focussed? Finally, I would be fascinated to learn of any other “tell tale signs” you have observed; we are considering using them in our next book. Perhaps email them to me at colin.shaw@beyondphilosophy.com. If they are new and we use them in the book then we will acknowledge your contribution in print! Colin Shaw Founding Partner, Beyond Philosophy. colin.shaw@beyondphilosophy.com
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