Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

The Power Of Positioning

April 21, 2007

Entire books have been written about this, including Ries & Trout’s POSITIONING: THE BATTLE FOR YOUR MIND, which I suggest you read or re-read at least once a year.

My keys to Positioning are:

 Focus
 Congruency
 Consistence
 Advantage
 Fulfillment

By FOCUS, I mean that your position is clear and easily understandable. “Hertz is #1″ is about as clear as you can get. And surveys of business travelers indicate everybody knows the deal; Hertz is usually more expensive than anybody else, but they out-service everybody else by an even bigger margin. (Although my experience in recent years says they’re slipping.) In contrast, most people are not clear at all about their primary position; they are very unfocused about who and what they are and who their market is.

By CONGRUENCY, I mean that you establish positioning you can carry out through everything you do. If, for example, you wanted to put your rental car lots way off airport, to save fortunes on real estate, then you can’t try on Hertz’ positioning of maximum convenience and service. Here in town, we have a Cadillac dealer who drops people off at home or work while their cars are in for service, and that’s good; it’s in keeping with what you’d expect as a Cadillac owner; but they use Buicks to do the dropping off, and that’s stupid because it’s incongruent. This “little” incongruency undoubtedly costs them repeat sales and second car sales – I can envision somebody saying to himself: “If this Buick is good enough for this Cadillac dealer, it’s certainly good enough for our second car, so I’ll save $10,000.00 and get one.”

Recently, a friend of mine stayed at Caesar’s Palace in Las Vegas, was served morning coffee in a styrofoam cup instead of the glass cup he had always gotten on previous visits, and he has yet to get over it. I’ve heard him gripe to at least a dozen people about this. And he’s booked into another hotel on his next visit. Not because he has a bias against styrofoam, but because, for Caesars; in his mind, the “cream” of Las Vegas; it was jarringly incongruent.
By CONSISTENCY, I mean that you are going to stick with your positioning for a long period of time, to build understanding than create confusion)….that you’re prepared to hammer home this core message over and over and over and over again. If you look at the K-Mart vs. Wal-Mart war, one of the things you’ll notice is that K-Mart has floundered around trying inconsistent strategies, like celebrity fashions, Martha Stewart housewares, vastly different ad campaigns, etc. while Wal-Mart has stayed its course over years; in fact it has one TV ad campaign with smile-faces “dropping prices” it keeps rotating year after year. And Wal-Mart is winning.

By ADVANTAGE, I mean that the positioning gives you some competitive or persuasive advantage with your target market.

If you cannot identify an advantage you have vs. competition and an advantage you provide to customers that they do not get from your competition, then I question the validity of your even being in business!

By FULFILLMENT, I mean that you can and will deliver on the promises stated and/or implicit in your positioning. Over-promising and under-delivering is a deadly combination. American Airlines or United dare not deliver a service level equal to Southwest’s, but Southwest has the highest level of passenger satisfaction in the entire industry delivering its level of service; the consumer expectations differ because the positioning is different. Kelleher at Southwest has brilliantly established positioning he can honor; expectations he can meet or exceed all the time. As I’m finishing this, I’m staying in a Ramada Inn in Cleveland, which I’ve settled for purely because of location/convenience, and it is terrible; room service comes without silverware or napkins, maid service is erratic, lamps are missing light bulbs, and so on. If this happened in a Hilton or Marriott, I’d be raising hell every two minutes. But this is a Ramada and I expected exactly this kind of “low rent” experience. So, there’s the issue of expectations linked to fulfillment. The best policy, of course, is to establish the kind of promises and expectations that are very attractive to your prospects, then exceed them in fulfillment.

By the way, I think my clients like Whitehall, Linda Miles, Joe Polish at Piranha Marketing, Michael Kimble, U.S. Mortgage, and, in our JPDK business, Jeff Paul all go to exceptional lengths with customer service and support, and deserve recognition for doing so.

The Power Of “Interest”

April 21, 2007

The Power Of “Interest”

The #1 ultimate marketing sin is: being boring, and the marketplace will forgive you for just about anything but this.

In one of the classic sales formulas, ATTENTION is the first step; INTEREST is the second. Developing and holding the interest of people requires timeliness, a sense of “newness”, reasons to want to know more.

As I was writing this, I noticed that Proctor & Gamble was continuing its strategy of making sure there’s a frequent answer to “What’s New?” – and Tide…..now, new TV advertising for “Tide With Bleach” and “Mountain Spring Tide.” P&G makes some kind of change to Tide every few months like clockwork, so as to recapture the interest of the consumer.

The American attention span is declining rapidly. The biggest complaint about Internet Web sites is the slow speed at which they open. With clicker in hand, today’s TV viewer restlessly surfs thirty channels, clicking out of commercials or boring scenes, going from one unconnected place to another – bored and trying not to be. My favorite industry, horse racing, is in trouble because it is too “slow” for the public’s taste, so times between races are shortened, TV monitors are placed on tables in the clubhouse so people can watch TV between races, slot machines are invading the tracks, and so on.

It is the marketer’s job to find new and different ways to be interesting to a jaded, disinterested, detached marketplace.

Above all else, remember that interest and self-interest are closely linked. There’s a Chinese proverb I use in many of my seminars that makes this point:

“Man more interested in boil on own neck
than the drowning of 10,000 in Yangtse.”

Restructuring: 2nd Step

March 22, 2007

Now for each credit card, you need to audit the max limit, the interest rate, along with the monthly payment.

Identify the credit cards with the lowest rate and the lowest balance, call these cards and ask for a credit increase of about double of the current max.  So if its $1500 max, ask for $3,000 max.  This creates room to move high interest credit cards to the lower interest credit card.  Be sure to negotiate low balance transfer fees and special balance transfer rates.

If you’re like me and are not getting new credit offers in the mail, this technique restructures your existing monthly expenses to be the lowest possible so that when you make payments, you’re paying more off.

Restructuring: The first step to get you on your way to investing

March 22, 2007

Restructuring your finances is a simple exercise, possibly tedious exercise, but will put your mind at ease and give you confidence before you make that first move into investing.

The first thing we do in a restructure is to first document your current situation.  Simply pull out a piece of paper or open up an excel file and start listing all your debt like this:

Chase Card $2,000

Bank of America $5,000

Citibank $1500 

 Then your expenses from this debt per month, like this:

Chase Card  $77

Bank of America  $125

Citibank $95

Phone $45

Cell Phone $69

Gas $200

etc…

We are just taking an inventory.  Then list down your monthly income.  Subtract your monthly income from your monthy expenses and you now have your current existing cash flow.