Showing posts with label customer service. Show all posts
Showing posts with label customer service. Show all posts

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Microwave Marketing










 



If you want this you can't have that. Life is a perpetual trade-off. And with the introduction of the microwave we were introduced to yet another one of these trade-offs. Fast versus tasty.

We may prefer tasty but we settle for fast.

A microwave meal may lack the taste of something that has been lovingly prepared for hours in a slow cooker or on the grill. But it's fast.

It may lack the forethought, the creative inspiration, and the complex combinations of herbs and spices that tickle the palate and induce groans of total culinary satisfaction. But it's fast.

It may reduce the time we spend thinking about quality ingredients that provide us nutrients, vitality, energy, and pleasure. But it's fast. 

The microwave has taught us terrible habits. And these habits are killing us and our businesses too. Wait, how does this affect our businesses?

Because we've begun thinking fast. We've begun thinking that marketing is advertising and nothing more. We've begun plotting how to make sales, meet quotas, and serve the shareholders rather than plotting on how to build lifelong relationships with our clients.

We've begun thinking about the quickest path to our success rather than the longer, more laborious path to building trust.

We build businesses like microwaves. We want the fastest way to a bad meal without making us actually do any work. This is why you call any large company and you get recorded robot voices telling you how much they care about you.

Liars. Stop advertising to me. Start serving me.

Oh, and to all you shareholders out there holding your little pieces of the pie - stop talking out of both sides of your mouth. You willingly push for short-term gain and ignore the long-term inevitability of hitting the iceberg and sinking. P/E ratios are less important than the philosophy of the company.

Deep down you know this. Start buying Crock Pots and get some time perspective.

Stop acting like a selfish 5 year-old - it's not all about you. 

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

The Philosophy of a Billion

This is Tony Hsieh, the CEO of Zappos - an online retailer that mostly sells shoes but has also branched out into apparel, etc. They do over one billion in revenue a year.

Golly gee wilikers - that's a lot of shoes!

Eh, who cares, they sell a lot of shoes. But what is absolutely fascinating is WHY they sell that many feet enclosures. Their philosophy. I'll bullet point a few key points so you can see what I'm talking about. Then I'd encourage you to check out the link below to see the CEO talk about his company.
  • they spend most of the money they would normally spend on marketing to instead to improve the customer experience.
  • because of this, 75% of their sales are from repeat customers.
  • rather than burying their 800 number (like most companies websites), they put it at the top of every page because they want to talk to their customers.
  • they encourage their phone reps to spend as much time as they think necessary talking to each customer to make sure they have a "Wow!" experience.
  • they frequently do surprise shipping upgrades to delight their customers (I ordered a pair of shoes and they arrived the next day - even though I hadn't chosen that option!)
  • if they don't have the size that you need in stock, they will research at least 3 different competitor's sites for you and then direct you to them if they have what you need.
Here's what Tony said regarding sending those customers somewhere else to buy their shoes. 

"Yes, we lose that transaction. But we're not trying to maximize every transaction. We're trying to build a lifelong relationship with each of our customers one call at a time."

"Wow!" Surprise, Awe and Delight.

 Tony speaking at SXSW