Excellence University Blog

A Note to Student Interested in Marketing Excellence

by John Spence

October 21st, 2007

I recently had a student email me with some questions about how to be an outstanding marketer. Here was my response:

Here are some things off the top of my head:

  1. Do you truly understand exactly who your target customer is in great detail? You have to have a very clear and detailed picture of specifically who you are trying to entice. Age, race, attitude, income, hobbies, TV and reading preferences, where do they get their info, which media do they trust, how do they make their buying decisions… everything you can possibly understand.
  2. What are the top 2 or 3 logical and emotional reasons for these people to be involved in your organization. You have to answer the question: So What? Or another way marketers put it is you have to be able to explain to them…WIIFM = What’s In It for Me. You need to be able to get in their head and look at the situation from their POV — then deliver an offer that is so incredibly focused and compelling that they jump off the couch and come
    running to be involved.   Along with that — you also have to understand who you are competing against for mind share and share of wallet (and it is not just other similar products and services — Harley Davidson motorcycles are
    the number one competitor to the swimming pool industry… think about it – a Harley and a pool both cost about $15,000!)
  3. Typically when you have a small budget and a tightly defined market — you go after the “Key Influencers” who are the upper 1% of the people that set the trends for the rest. Who is everybody listening to? Rather than
    trying to get to 1,000 people — get to the top 10 who are incredibly well connected — and get them to tell 100 friends each — and you have your 1,000. Also — most people are getting sick of marketing and
    advertising — I suggest that the future of marketing is going to rest strongly on “WOM” — word-of-mouth — you do not believe an ad — but you do believe your friends.
  4. Lastly — they message needs to be very easy to understand and 100% congruent across all media. You want to send a clear, compelling and concise message — to exactly the right people — over and over again (over a long
    time period) — from multiple sources. That is how you make every marketing dollar count.

Hope that helps!

Article Filed under: I. WATER (Team/Group Excellence)

1 Comment Add your own

  • 1. Jonathan  |  October 30th, 2007 at 10:24 pm

    True that people do believe there friends and it is a quick cost effective to market by wom. The only thing I can think of is that people are starting to become more and more secluded from each other. In turn people may end up not believing that friend for what ever reason. I think maybe the next way of advertising maybe the internet. I don’t mean web banners and pop-ups I mean actual websites about the product. Many people use Wikipidea as a source of true factual information. But basically Wikipidea is a giant blog about specific subjects ranging from rap music to the dinosaurs. I believe creating blogs about a product, making it seem like it is coming from an actual person, maybe what will happen in the future. By doing this people are able to find out what they need at a convenient place (there computer) right when they need it. Advertising products on the side like banners can be similar to a commercial, but the person searching is not looking for that banner, but the blog about the product. Wikipidea or blog places like this I believe will be the future of advertising and consumer informing.

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