You are currently browsing the archives for the Marketing category.
- "The Frankifesto" (11)
- 2011 (2)
- Adoption (1)
- advertisers (10)
- Advertising (25)
- airport security (1)
- Animals (1)
- animation (1)
- Auctions (1)
- backlash (5)
- balance (4)
- Beck (2)
- Bing (1)
- black hat (1)
- blessings (7)
- blogging (4)
- blogs (4)
- Branding (10)
- building business (25)
- business (18)
- business plan (7)
- business relationships (18)
- Character (2)
- Chris Anderson (1)
- computer (1)
- computer security (1)
- convent (1)
- creativity (10)
- Customers (2)
- cyber security (2)
- damage (4)
- delight (3)
- design (2)
- Discipline (1)
- Displays (1)
- environment (2)
- FedEx (3)
- Frank (50)
- Frank Communications (58)
- Frank Goad (57)
- FrankyGee3 (56)
- fraud (1)
- Friends (2)
- Gambling (1)
- general (6)
- global warming (1)
- Google (5)
- Humane society (1)
- Intelligence (2)
- Internet crime (1)
- leadership (7)
- left wing (2)
- Left-handed cow milkers (2)
- malware (1)
- manifesto (1)
- Marketing (26)
- PR (8)
- Public relations (12)
- question (1)
- relationships (16)
- responsibilities (12)
- retail (10)
- review (3)
- right wing (3)
- Sales (3)
- scams (1)
- search (3)
- search engines (3)
- self-employment (2)
- shipper (1)
- Social Media (7)
- strip search (1)
- Success (6)
- the economy (1)
- The Long Tail (10)
- threats (1)
- time (1)
- training (4)
- TSA (1)
- Twitter (1)
- Uncategorized (3)
- UPS (1)
- Video (4)
- Video Production (2)
- virus (1)
- watch list (1)
- Web development (4)
- welcome (4)
- Winning (1)
- writing (15)
- Yahoo (3)
- YouTube (3)
- 17. May 2012: Don't freak when you get the bill - it's about the time
- 14. May 2012: 20,000 Bottle Rockets - Is this your marketing?
- 1. May 2012: 5 Tips for Making Video
- 4. February 2012: What DO You Want From Your Business?
- 4. February 2012: Fact: Search Engine Optimization Isn't Advertising
- 4. February 2012: Do Video? Yes, You Can, Part II
- 3. February 2012: A Blogging Secret
- 1. February 2012: Do Video? Yes, You Can, Part I
- 15. December 2011: Bogus Internet Ad Sales - Don't Be Fooled, Pt. 1
- 2. November 2011: Sometimes Customers Need to Get Lost
Archive for the Marketing Category
20,000 Bottle Rockets - Is this your marketing?
14. May 2012 by Frank Goad.
I stumbled across a video showing 20,000 bottle rockets being launched. You light one and it catches the next one, then another three light, then ten and, soon, it’s a blazing platform with the rockets going everywhere. Pretty impressive, really, but there’s one problem: After the fiery crescendo, it dies quickly.
So, when you’re doing marketing, do you go for the big launch only to see your budget flame out? Your sales probably do, too. The key to advertising and marketing is consistency - go for the long haul, not the short, bright flame. When you do social media for your business, have a long-term strategy with definite goals and outcomes. Blogging for your business? Do it every week.
I’ve said this to a hundred people: If marketing and advertising isn’t a firm, not-to-be-touched line item in your budget, you’re cheating yourself and possibly sending yourself down the drain. To make my point very clear, here’s that bottle rocket video. Like most things, it starts slowly, but things light up fast once it gets going.
Posted in Frank Communications, Frank, Advertising, Marketing | Print | No Comments »
What DO You Want From Your Business?
4. February 2012 by Frank Goad.
A friend of mine is the manager of a local retail establishment. He’s a very smart man with a distinguished if not unusual career. He’s amazed me at times with words of wisdom that make any thought process stop dead in its tracks and listen He’s also very frustrated because the owners don’t seem very anxious to make the place a best in its class establishment. It’s sad because, if they would just step out of the way and give him the reins, they would make so much more money.
Most folks can run a retail business. It requires some attention to detail, some organizational skills and some ability to deal with the public. Notice that I used “some” a lot, and that’s because if you’re in a good location with reasonable traffic, you can keep the doors open and lights on without being a primo manager.
My wish for him is that a distant relative would die and leave him the money to buy the place. He’s got drive, intelligence and is champing at the bit to really turn a profit, make it a busy place and build a real brand. If he could buy it, there’s no doubt it would see 30% sales gains in the first six months. Yet, the owners treat it kind of like a hobby business. They’re not too particular about the little things and seem more determined to get pocket change from the place. They seem to have overlooked Frank’s Business Rule #1: When it comes to how the public views you, everything matters.
Posted in Frank Goad, Frank Communications, FrankyGee3, blogs, blogging, delight, Branding, "The Frankifesto", Frank, business plan, business, building business, Marketing | Print | No Comments »
Fact: Search Engine Optimization Isn’t Advertising
4. February 2012 by Frank Goad.
I’ve been working with a client on an Internet advertising proposal. They sent me a note and said, “We have a new client that works on websites and seo’s (sic). I am sure you understand.” I do, but not sure they do and I wonder, do you? Let me explain it a bit so that you can make more money from your site.
First let me say: SEO is NOT advertising - not even close. SEO, or search engine optimization, is important - no doubt about that. It’s function is to make your website attractive to the “crawlers” (also called “robots” or “spiders”) that the search engines like Google send out daily to examine every website they can find. Crawlers send bits of programming code back to the search engine that details the content of the sites they find, yours included.
If you sell blue handled shelf stretchers and someone enters “shelf stretchers” in a search box and hits Enter, the search engine’s servers kick into gear. They look through their lists of data to find every website with those two words in their keywords and page’s text. If they enter “red handled shelf stretcher,” you’re now pushed down the list because you sell blue ones. The more times they see those words in your web, the higher your “relevancy” ranking. This is where SEO comes in. By entering the right keywords, you get picked more in the lists of sites the search engines display.
If keywords were the only thing Google and others use to rank websites, then SEO might be enough. The fact is it’s only one small part of the relevancy formula. One big thing that makes a difference is … money. Despite how democratic the web might seem, filthy lucre is the biggest determining factor, and that’s where advertising comes in. Higher rankings mean you get closer to the Holy Grail of being first in non-paid advertising.
Postscript: From when I first posted this, they are now out of business. Sometimes I hate it when I’m right. In the end, a balanced approach across all types of media (if they apply) still gives the best results; also, hire a pro (and, yes, I am a pro).
Posted in Google, Social Media, Yahoo, YouTube, blogging, blogs, FrankyGee3, Frank Goad, Frank, Advertising, The Long Tail, business, Frank Communications, building business, Marketing | Print | No Comments »
Do Video? Yes, You Can, Part II
4. February 2012 by Frank Goad.

The previous installment covered content, scripting, talent (who’s on camera) and length. This time, it’s about one thing … well three things in one, actually: Content – what is important in your script? Sounds easy, but it’s far from it. Please read on.I’ve been in communications for over thirty years and, to me, it boils down to three things that your audience needs to accept your message and consider you as a good source for video. They are: Confidence, Trust and Engagement.
Do you think confidence and trust are the same. Sorry, but they’re not. Confidence is about them believing you know what you’re talking about. Can they believe what you say? Does it sound like bull or the real thing? To build confidence, humbly let them know what your background is. Notice I’ve already mentioned how long I’ve been doing this, and you probably thought – even if not consciously – “Well, if he’s done it that long, he’s got to know something.” (“I do,” he said blushingly.) Notice that I didn’t say, “I’m an expert with … ,” because words like expert, guru, master, etc., are titles that others give you. I routinely go through my social media accounts and delete anyone who says they are a “guru” or “master” because they never are. Let your experience do the talking.
What can you say to prove you know what you’re talking about? Can people see other things you’ve done? Do you have a good place where they can find them, like a blog or a Flickr account or a website? Just as employers want to see your résumé, people want to see your work. Seeing what you’ve done lets them make up their mind if they want to listen to you and believe you. It’s okay to put your experience out there, just be thorough, accurate, honest and a bit humble. If you’re just getting started, well, everyone has to start somewhere and now is your time.
Trust is something that builds after they get confidence in you. What good is it to have confidence in your ability to bring information regularly, but not trust everything you say? Trust means coming to you as a prime source of information delivered in a way that let’s them use it, and so that they can also share it with friends – people rarely share things they don’t trust. For instance, a phrase you don’t hear: “Check this pistol. It’s pretty flaky so don’t get mad because it will probably shoot your finger off.” Confidence brings them to you (well, that and curiosity or a referral) and trust keeps them there.
Your audience must trust your work to be accurate and fair in what you say. Sure, you can go with bombast and incendiary topics, but audiences who respond to that are, generally speaking, fickle and fade quickly. You want a dependable, long-lasting audience.
Next is engagement. How are you going to talk with them? What can you say to engage them in a conversation? It might be one sided, but what do you have that will hold their interest? Do you have info that they can’t do without, or that you format in a way that gives lots of direction to the best sources? How is your delivery? Are you engaging on camera? Have you studied the techniques of television personalities you like?
A caution: Be honest with yourself and find someone who looks and sounds a bit like you. If you look like Jonah Hill, Bobby Hill, Eric Cartman, the dancing creepy old guy on the Six Flags ads, Tommy Lee Jones or Jack Black, don’t emulate Matt Damon, Bruce Willis or George Clooney. Sure, take hints from their delivery, but be who you are just like all the ones in the first group. Use it to your advantage – poke a little fun at yourself and go with what you have. You are the most engaging person once you get a rhythm and learn a bit about delivering lines on-camera.
Get feedback from friends (careful asking family as their boundaries can be a bit far out) and watch yourself on the screen as objectively as you can. It’s tough to get a natural delivery and only a few have a totally believable delivery (they’re called stars – see the names mentioned above), so accept that you’re an amateur and have fun with it. If you take yourself too seriously, your audience won’t take you seriously at all. It takes time and practice so, keep at it and have fun.
Think of it this way: There are lots of grocery stores and restaurants, but we usually have a favorite. We drive past others to get there and do so gladly. Your audience will listen to you for reasons you might never know, but they’re there. The size of your audience is less important than their loyalty, and your consistently good work will keep them coming back.
As to your scripts, use small words and active phrases. Avoid the words will, should, could, might, etc., and use active words like is, does, has, goes, etc. “He might have a chance if the playoffs go well,” vs. “He has a chance with good playoff performance.” Which is more engaging and exciting – yea, the second one. Make statements, but make ones you can stand behind.
That’s it for today boys and girls. Here’s another one of mine that was well received. Cheers!
Who Defines Your Brand? From Business Lexington’s “Smiley Pete TV” channel on YouTube.
Please subscribe to this blog - it’s easy. Scroll down the left side of the page, at the bottom of the lists, there’s a box titled, “Meta.” Click where it says, “Entries,” and it’ll open a window to choose how you want to receive notices (email, etc.). Thanks!!!!!
How about some Facebook – please Like my page: Frank Communications Lexington
Also, there are videos on my YouTube channel, Franky Gee Lex, or at Business Lexington’s Channel, Smiley Pete TV, where I’ve got about 35 or so videos, many with folks I’ve interviewed.
Oh, yes, there’s my LinkedIn, Twitter, Google+ and Quora. There are more, but that’s enough. Thanks!!
Posted in Yahoo, Google, YouTube, Video, Video Production, FrankyGee3, Frank Goad, Frank, Web development, writing, Frank Communications, Marketing | Print | No Comments »
Do Video? Yes, You Can, Part I
1. February 2012 by Frank Goad.
Video is about the most powerful tool on the web. YouTube has upgraded its looks and layout and has added more business-friendly features. Your YouTube or Vimeo channel can be your best marketing and advertising tool. In another post, I’ll talk about do-it-yourself video (cameras, mics, etc.), but today’s post (and a couple more in the future) is about the very basics of content.
First, remember to talk with your customers and prospects, not “at” them. Offer them information they can use in their everyday lives. If all you do is throw sales pitches out on the Web, you’ll soon be avoided, and then forgotten. Every business today must learn to help people understand why your product or service is important. If you help them understand that without resorting to a hard sell, they’ll respect you and be interested. Be an adviser, a purveyor of useful info, not a sales person.
Let’s say you sell fire extinguishers - the need for one in the home or office is obvious. What folks should also know is how to prevent fires or when to abandon that nice extinguisher and head for the door. Talk about advances in alarms and new fire-retardant fabrics. Do stories on new government regulations that might impact how they do their business, or force them to replace things to meet new fire safety codes. If you love your business, you’ll have much information to pass along in a video.
While you might be good at “winging it,” script what you want to say. Don’t get flowery or try to be profound, tell them what they should know simply and pleasantly. Put a computer monitor directly under the camera’s lens and put your script in PowerPoint. Use only the top third of the screen for your PowerPoint and have someone change the slides for you. Be sure to stand back about fifteen feet so that your script reading is less noticeable. If you’re close they’ll see your eyes looking under the lens, but standing back farther reduces that effect. Keep your shot from the waist up because close-ups can be dangerous unless you’re Brad Pitt or Angelina Jolie.
Who should be on camera? You might be a great talent on video, or you might be bad, but at least give it a shot. If someone says, “Gee, you really ought to think about getting some help with that,” take it graciously. Not everyone is suited for doing video. Park your ego at the door because the last thing you want is a poor delivery distracting people from the message. The same goes for your family - just because little Sally or Johnny are really cute and smart, that doesn’t mean they or any other family member should be on the video. The main thing is to get folks to take you seriously and listen to the message, not be distracted by the person delivering it.
Keep the message to three minutes or less. Just about anyone will watch a three-minute video IF it’s interesting. If you can say it in two minutes, all the better. Add a short intro with your logo and a little music; at the end put contact info, your website and so on. Buy some royalty-free music online because using a popular song will get you a call from a lawyer and maybe more than that. You can buy nice music for as little as $5 for a song to use as your theme music; maybe less. Use the music at the open and close of the video.
This is barely the tip of the iceberg. Remember that the purpose is to let folks know you know what you’re doing, and to build rapport with them. In part II of this series, we’ll talk about how to let folks know you have something for them to watch. I’ve put a link to one of the videos I’ve done so that you can see what I’m talking about. These were done in a small space with a decent camera and a couple of lights - very inexpensive, but still effective enough that Capella University picked it up for their online marketing classes. Cheers!
Positioning: A Core Element of Your Brand http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4VmCx8Ic7qw&list=UUxvxQU1n03Fh301TbAzgxRQ&index=16&feature=plcp
Please subscribe to this blog - it’s easy. Scroll down the left side of the page, at the bottom of the lists, there’s a box titled, “Meta.” Click where it says, “Entries,” and it’ll open a window to choose how you want to receive notices (email, etc.). Thanks!!!!!
Or, how about some Facebook – please Like my page: Frank Communications Lexington
Also, there are videos on my YouTube channel, Franky Gee Lex, or at Business Lexington’s Channel, Smiley Pete TV, where I’ve got about 35 or so videos, many with folks I’ve interviewed.
Oh, yes, there’s my LinkedIn, Twitter, Google+ and Quora. There are more, but that’s enough. Thanks!!
Posted in YouTube, Video, Sales, Video Production, Google, Social Media, Advertising, Public relations, business, relationships, Marketing | Print | No Comments »
So, you think you can write?
26. October 2011 by Frank Goad.
![]()
Before we start, I’m not trying to pick on you, belittle you or make you feel bad. This is about what you can do to improve your image and increase sales, and really good writing is a huge help. I cover this topic fairly often because I see examples daily of how people shoot themselves in the foot in the self-deluded idea that they are great communicators. Bad writing drives people away very, very quickly; good copy grabs and holds them.
Okay, back to the title: Yes, it’s sarcastic, but it’s a legitimate question: Do you really think you can write? Is it something you love to do? Have you been published more than two or three times? Have you attended workshops or webinars to improve your writing? Do you write something with at least 300 or 400 words every day, or at least several times a week? If the answer isn’t yes to these questions, you really need to think about your skill level. Writing is like any other activity – it takes regular practice to be good.
One of the things I do for a living is write and I do it for people who either don’t like writing, or don’t like it enough to want to spend the time, or they make a lot more money doing what they do best and would rather pay me. Be assured, these are smart, successful people, so their wisdom is probably something to absorb.
My point here is that if your writing isn’t really well-crafted, folks aren’t going to read it. If no one has ever paid you to write for them, that’s a sure sign you haven’t been exposed to the things that make ad copy and articles hold people’s attention and motivate them to do what you want. Good writing makes the cash register ring; bad copy does not.
By all means, though, you should write and try to improve your writing. Just as famous actors take acting lessons throughout their career, the best writers have editors, coaches and critics, too. The more you know about writing the better you express yourself in everyday life.
So, keep writing, and get help for your business needs. Yes, I’d love to work with you but, whether or not it’s me, get help. It’s an investment that pays great dividends and sets you apart from your competition.
Posted in Frank Communications, Frank Goad, FrankyGee3, Success, Web development, business relationships, building business, Marketing | Print | No Comments »
Social Media & Your Brand - It’s What THEY Say
12. September 2011 by Frank Goad.
Even though I’m starting a social media and marketing school (www.facebooklexington.com), social media isn’t the be-all and end-all. You’ll notice it’s a social media AND marketing school, because too many people are giving seminars on social media, but they’re not really telling you how to use it to its best effect. Some are treating it like it’s all you need, and that’s the real fallacy – social media is only one part of your marketing and should be part of an overall strategy. Some question whether it should be in the mix at all.
There is some discussion among the marketing mavens in the uppermost floors of skyscrapers in the world’s major cities, and the discussion centers on whether social media is worth it. Some major companies are not seeing the returns they expected on huge expenditures in social media. For instance, despite going viral, there is reason to believe that the Old Spice Man videos didn’t help sales; coupons and in-store promotions did. It could be argued that it bought mind share, but how do you know?
I believe it has to do with the fact that social media misses the mark for many folks. Why? Two big reasons:
A. Not enough people are doing social media right. What’s most important is not the number of friends, how often you post, how many people see your post, and so on. It’s how many people give you their money.
B. People are throwing time and resources at it (which equals money - it’s not free like people tell you) without a real strategy. That is a recipe for waste and disappointment. When you post, are you leading up to something? Are you finding ways to tie your posts to your products or services?
The foremost question is, are you promoting your brand?
I love this quote from Johnathan Salem Baskin: “Brands don’t exist, at least not like rocks or tax returns. Brands are ideas that have no external existence or legitimacy apart from the creative agency of human experience. Brands aren’t things but rather conclusions, and therefore have no voice, reputation, attributes, or actions that aren’t the result of somebody doing something (or something happening to them).”
My main definition of brand is this: A brand is the promise of continued delightful experiences based on a history of delightful experiences. If you’ve read this blog, you know that I rave over the service and food at Bella Notte (go there and you’ll understand). The number one reason I do is, I’m delighted every time I’m there without fail. Do your customers have that unwavering loyalty? Do they post to FourSquare, Facebook, Twitter, Scoville, Yelp, etc., etc., etc.? Eating at Bella Notte here in Lexington compels me to tell the world … on social media. In one sense, it’s not what you post, it’s what everyone else posts for you.
Is social media a fad? No, it’s a constantly morphing electronic entity that has roots running back to the 80s. First it was dial up service and bulletin boards; now it’s social media on a variety of devices (even refrigerators) and who knows what tomorrow. Be ready to change.
In the end, social media is a way to measure sentiment and gauge your performance. You have to “prime the well” (a saying lost on many who use social media because they’re too young) and create conversations, then find ways to listen closely. You need to make it part of all your marketing. It needs a plan, goals, measurements and ways to judge the ROI. Don’t think it’s free because that will really cost you.
If you want help making it the most it can be with the least “wasted motion,” give us a call. It does work, if you know how.
Frank Communications Lexington, 859-335-8742, our Website (click here), our Facebook page
Posted in Frank Communications, Frank Goad, FrankyGee3, Social Media, 2011, building business, Advertising, advertisers, The Long Tail, business relationships, Marketing | Print | No Comments »
Three Client Question Types – From Good to “Wait … what?”
24. August 2011 by Frank Goad.
I find there are three kinds of questions that my clients ask: A. Those of piercing insight; B. Those of curiosity or the need for more info, and; C. Those that tax any form of belief.
A. I love, love, love getting the A-types. They make my job so much easier and the clients see much better results. Sometimes they occur when a concept I’m explaining lights up inside their head and they see the big(ger) picture; other times, they happen when they take what they’re given and come up with something entirely new. These questions (or observations) are a bit rare and usually come when I’ve been working with someone for awhile.
B. These make up the majority of questions that I get and occur during the discovery and strategy portions of our relationship. Given that Frank Communication’s modus operandi is pretty comprehensive (we look at the whole company/picture, not just a small aspect), and that we ask a LOT of questions, clients don’t always see the connections we’re working toward. As we spend time together, they see what’s going on and get excited, and then the questions come: “Hey, what if …?”, “That sounds like something I saw last week – did you see … ?”, or “Ohh, I get it … does this mean we’ve been … ?” These are exciting because these questions lead to an A question if they’re going to happen.
C. The incredible ones in this category aren’t what you might think: They usually don’t come from ignorance but, instead, come from misinformation. They can start with “Well, I’ve got a friend who said X, so don’t you think we should … ?”, or, ”Yeah, well, I heard about X and heard about someone who tried it and X happened – shouldn’t we try that?”, or a variation of those.
C-type questions are understandable, though, because so much has changed about advertising and marketing in the last six years, and some changes are a bit drastic. Folks are often taking advice from people who are shooting in the dark (often at their foot), or they’re reading books written by someone who’s really persuasive but ill-suited to be giving advice, or who is simply giving bad advice. Sometimes it’s because folks are desperately confused and grabbing at straws or, even more bewildering and touchy, a good friend tried something that worked for them, but which doesn’t work so well for my client for one or more reasons (timing, content, budget, etc.).
When I get C-type questions, I’m glad because that means we’re making progress. It often happens that when folks have a bad experience, although they might be wary, they now have a base of information that helps them make sense of what will help.
The most important thing is to keep asking questions. Sure, sometimes the questions sound dumb, but that’s okay because that’s how we learn, and the more we learn the better off we are. A, B or C, it doesn’t matter because you’ll probably only have to ask any of them once.
Posted in Frank Goad, FrankyGee3, Intelligence, question, Frank Communications, Success, Advertising, advertisers, Frank, Marketing | Print | No Comments »
The Ultimate Money Machine - Penny Auction sites
26. July 2011 by Frank Goad.
I kept seeing ads for the auction sites like BeeZid, QuiBids and so on, and curiosity got the best of me, so I decided to see what the penny auction sites are really about. And the answer is: Money, that’s what, and lots of it. Forget casinos, these things are like crack and can drain money faster than anything I’ve ever seen, short of a thug with a gun. Here’s how they work.
First you sign up with a credit card or PayPal. Most want $60 - $100 to get started. “But, wait Frank, I thought it was an auction. Don’t you pay when you win?” Aaah, yes, Grasshopper, you do … and you pay to get access to the auction, too. You have to buy bids at generally around $0.60 each. Yes, each bid costs you $0.60, but each one only raises the auction price of the item by one cent (hence the name penny bids even if each bid is sixty-one cents). If you win, you pay that purchase price plus a handling charge. In effect, you’ve already paid with your bids, so they don’t have to get much for the final purchase price because they’re making money every time you click the red “Bid” button on your screen.
Here’s a scenario: At auction is a 55″ LCD TV with a retail price of $1,999. It’s a nice one that anyone would like to have. It “sold” for $75.55 at the auction’s end. Sounds cheap, doesn’t it? Again, each bid is only a penny toward the final purchase price, meaning that there were 7,555 bids. Now, take .6 (the price of each bid) times 7,555 and you get $4,533. That’s right, they made a handsome profit of $2,500, and that’s if you only consider retail because they probably got a volume discount on the TV. They have at least fourty auctions going at any one time, and sometimes as many as 100.
There’s a timer, too, that counts the seconds. The auctions on most sites are twenty, fifteen or ten seconds for each round of bidding. If you click (meaning you bid), then the clock starts over. they often start at twenty seconds and, as the price goes higher, the time gets shorter which raises the intensity. If it’s something you really want, watching that timer go to one second and trying to bid at the very last half-second can raise the stakes without your knowing it.
Think, too, what you had to do to get the item. Let’s say you clicked the bid button fifty times for that deluxe TV. That means if you won, you got it for $75.55 plus the $30 you spent in bids (50 x $0.60 = $30). So, you did get a very cool TV for $105.55 plus $20 for handling (or so). You might just as easily have lost, too, because only one person wins the prize.
It’s insidious, really. You get your sights set on something and you think, “Man, I can get this for $25,” and you start bidding. Soon, someone starts a bidding war and, before you know it, you’ve sunk $20, just in bids. You can get so involved in the bidding, that you wind up “buying” it sixty cents at a time. You can click many times before you realize how quickly it goes.
The thing is, nobody really feels any pain. You don’t have to hand over any cash when you click, so there’s no feeling of parting with money, which is a very painful thing for people. Okay, your losing bids totaled thirty bucks, so you’re disappointed and a little upset, maybe even feel a bit foolish, but it’s no big deal. On one item, though, there might be thirty, fifty or one hundred people and more who bid on that item, too. Like any auction, it can be exciting and you can walk away with some sweet deals. The truth is, though, most people don’t. Just like a casino, someone across the room lets out a big “Whooop!” when they hit the slot machine or the roulette table. That’s one person in a room that might see 500 or 1,000 people in a day, or more, and all are parting with cash looking for the “big score.”
Those are the rare cases because, if you talk to a professional gambler, they’ll tell you that you can’t get emotional or attached to any one idea. Grudge matches on the table never end well, and so it goes with the auction sites. Luckily, my losses were minimal, but it still smarts to get outbid or take your eyes off for one second and see that you just lost after watching it for a long time.
What it really take is LOTS of patience and the ability to watch one auction continuously, sometimes for hours. I watched one auction for three hours and it still wasn’t over. You try to time your entry into the auction when it’s getting near the end and you don’t have to bid as much. Get in too early and you’ll bid and bid and bid and … .
There is a bit of skill to it, but more of it is luck. You’ll see a card for fifty bids end for $1.25. You think, “Hey, that’s good. I’ll try that,” and then watch the price go to $10 in your auction. So, are you feeling lucky? At least now you have some idea of what you’re in for should you try one. Good luck. You’ll need it.
Posted in FrankyGee3, Auctions, Frank Goad, Frank Communications, retail, Gambling, Marketing | Print | No Comments »
We’re all smart, but …
13. June 2011 by Frank Goad.
Time and again, clients ask me, “What should I do?” While many think I’m being a smarta**, my response is, “What do you think you should do?”
This isn’t a flippant answer but, instead, a serious question. Most people know more about what to do than they think and, like many things, need some training. Moreover, they need to learn how to think about what they communicate to their customers. Part of my job is helping people hone in on what their customers hear from them that keeps them coming back. Businesses often have a very hard time answering that question because they’ve been doing what comes naturally and not analyzing what those things are.
You talk to customers all the time and have a good idea what they want, like, need and, conversely, don’t want, like or need. Time has taught you to largely think like them and tailor your business in order to cater to them. You work hard to “walk in their shoes” and anticipate their next desire. You develop a relationship with them and use what you learned from them with the next new customers.
On the other hand, learning how to create a motivating advertising or marketing campaign, write ad or brochure copy in a way that speaks directly to them, or even see through their eyes takes time; often a long time. The truth is, some folks never learn, and that doesn’t make them any less of a business person, it simply means that it’s not their strength. As we all know, dealing with someone one-on-one is totally different than trying to persuade people you can’t talk with personally through ads, brochures and so on.
It’s like my mechanic - he doesn’t want to do ads anymore than I want to do his job all the time. He’s an excellent mechanic and has spent decades learning the tricks of the trade. His experience lets him solve mechanical problems in a heartbeat, whereas I’d spend a lot of time researching the problem. On the other hand, he named me “Old Golden Tongue” and calls me when he has to write an important letter or put an ad somewhere. “I understand cars,” he says, “but people are a bit harder for me.”
My point is, you know your business and I know mine (which is communications, advertising and marketing). As a another good friend of mine says - who, by the way, is an awesome accountant but a really lousy writer - “We’re all smart, just in different ways, and the trick is to find someone who’s smart in ways that make you look better.” Give me a call and let’s see if I can help you.
Frank Goad, Pres.
Frank Communications Lexington
For information, email: fcl.info@frankcomlex.com
www.frankcomlex.com
859-335-8742
Posted in creativity, Frank Communications, Frank Goad, FrankyGee3, writing, building business, Advertising, Frank, The Long Tail, relationships, Marketing | Print | No Comments »
Your Website And Smart “Spiders”
1. June 2011 by Frank Goad.
Your Website And Smart “Spiders”
Not too long ago, to keep your search engine rankings for your website up there, you merely had to put some content up and add a few links or a video. Not so much anymore because the spiders have been getting smarter with every passing month.
First, let’s assume you don’t know what a spider (or bot) is in search engine terms. Google, Yahoo, Bing (Microsoft) and all other search engines send out little programs that, in effect, roam the web and “crawl” over every single website they can find all over the world, and then send info on what they find back “home.” How many web pages is that?
Hold on to your hat: Google has indexed over 40 Billion web pages (not sites, but all website pages). Your site is in there, too. Google will re-index all those pages every 30-90 days, too, so, yes, you are being watched … sort of. How do they do it?
First, Google has over 1,000,000 servers! Mind boggling, and they can find anything on them almost instantly so that you can have it when you do a search. Millions of spiders are coursing over pages and sending a constant stream of info back to the servers where every jot and tittle is cataloged and made ready for search.
As if this wasn’t enough, the spiders are getting smarter every day. One of the things they “measure” is relevancy, which is based on (among other things): The sources you quote; whether it looks, sounds or “smells” like another article (meaning it might be nothing more than a copy); how reliable your sources are (popular? oft quoted?), and; how many sources you have used. Bewildered? Discouraged?
Well, don’t be. It simply means that, when you put articles and content up there, you write shorter pieces on which you do more synthesis. Having longer articles isn’t always better because the spiders are looking “into” your pieces and judging the relevancy and originality. Step up your creativity a bit, cast a bit wider net for sources and you might wind up better than before.
Posted in search engines, search, Frank Communications, Frank Goad, FrankyGee3, writing, Branding, convent, Advertising, Frank, The Long Tail, building business, Marketing | Print | No Comments »
Bad weather downtime is your friend
21. January 2011 by Frank Goad.
While talking with a client recently, he was bemoaning the diminished traffic during the winter snows. When asked what he did with the down time, he replied, “Oh, you know, the usual. I cleaned, organized and took care of some loose ends.” When asked if he couldn’t have an employee do that, he said, “Well, I suppose, but I know exactly how i want things.”
This is a perfect example of working in the business, not on it. We talked about how he might have made that time more profitable and here’s part of the list:
- Call customers and say, “Thanks for your business - what can I do for you?”
- Look over his Facebook page and add posts to it
- Look over his Facebook page’s friends and see what they’re talking about; knowing that can help you know what they’re likely to want or need so that you can advertise to their comments
- Look for local happenings on the different calendars and see if there’s an event that would offer people and a theme that resonates with his business
- Call his vendors and see if they have any marketing ideas or have any examples of some other customer’s promotions
As you can see, the list is as long as your imagination. If you have employees, let them do the busy work. It’s easy to fall into doing menial tasks when you’re stressed because, as Dennis Waitley says, “They are tension relieving, not goal achieving.”
So, don’t fret the snow. Use that time to build customer relationships and boost your business.
Posted in creativity, Frank Communications, Frank Goad, FrankyGee3, retail, writing, Frank, Public relations, business, building business, Marketing | Print | No Comments »
Coupons & Discounts: The Good, Bad and Ugly
13. January 2011 by Frank Goad.
You just got a coupon in the mail - wow! 50% off! You rush to the store and score a killer deal on a new whatsit by Whosis Electronics – you’ve wanted that one for months. Basking in the warm glow of zero buyer’s remorse, you decide to go back and look for other items in your mental shopping list.
Next visit, you see sale items, but discounts are a paltry 10% or 15%. After 50%, all the prices seem too high, and there’s the rub: Your expectations were set based on your first purchase.
This can become a trap and, worse, a habitual way of doing business. I’m going to talk about Kohl’s and, to be sure, I shop there often and like their stores. I’ve noticed they always seem to have (guesstimate here) roughly 50%-70% of their merch on sale. It makes me skip regular priced merch and, worse, think their retail prices are artificially high so that any sale item seems to be a bargain. They seem addicted to sales with crazy discounts.
I see companies having 50% off sales. If you’re in an inventory or tax crisis, sure, it makes sense. Short of a crisis, it devalues your image and overall value in the customer’s eyes. They ask, “If you can discount 50%, then are your regular prices too high?” It also makes customers wait to see what your next sale is going to be if they are loyal; if they’re not, they’re going to shop you to death.
So, what about Groupon, which so many people are saying is the next wave? Well, ask yourself this: When I buy, do I look for value or the cheapest price. You might say, “That depends on the item or service,” and indeed it does. But go one step further and ask: Which builds real, true value in the customer’s eyes, coupons or being the best at what we do? Obviously, the latter.
Your competition might be discounting like crazy, and that means they might be addicted to coupons. They’re trying to make up lost margin in volume, but that’s a plan with diminishing returns (and that’s a whole other post for later). Sure, every now and then, coupons are a good idea, but be very, very frugal. Build value with customers first, then discounts seem like a reward, not a desperate move.
Posted in Frank Communications, Frank Goad, FrankyGee3, building business, business, Advertising, Frank, damage, Marketing | Print | No Comments »
The Formula for Delighted Customers
28. December 2010 by Frank Goad.
Definition: “Delight - To take or give great pleasure or joy.” You often hear companies being told to “Delight your customers.” You definitely should do that, but let’s go over the definition of “delight” as it is a bit overblown in some of the things I’ve been reading, especially in light of the definition I use and how it relates to brands and marketing.
Going over the top with offers and special deals is for the 20% of your customers in the 80/20 rule (80% of your business comes from 20% of your customers). Most folks don’t have the time or resources to lavish great attention on every customer, much less get employees to really care enough to do it (the last paragraph address this).
My personal definition of a brand is, “A brand is a promise of repeated delightful experiences based on a history of delightful experiences.” Given that the customer owns your brand, and you or your clients do not, it’s up to them to decide what’s delightful or not.
There are so many times when we go to see, buy or do something and the experience falls short of what is promised in ads. Consistently good results for our investment of time and/or money makes us happy - delighted, if you will - because being disappointed is so common. Getting what we feel is fair value for our time and money is delightful.
Customers should be delighted every time they do business with you or your client; i.e., they should be quite pleased or feel a bit of joy. Coke and McDonald’s delight customers with every purchase. How so? Well, water, bread and lunch meat will satisfy hunger and thirst but, on a hot, dusty, day, a cold Coke is (say it with me) delightful. When you’re pressed for time, a hot, grilled chicken sandwich on a whole grain bun with lettuce, tomato and mayo is a damn sight better than a pack of cheese crackers from a gas station, especially if an ice cold Coke is served with it. If I’m really, really hungry and an hour from anywhere that sells food, finding a pack of cheese crackers is - you guessed it - delightful. I’m not overjoyed by my discovery (unless it’s my first meal in days), but I am delighted.
Let’s say I own a junk yard and a person calls me looking for a part after calling five other yards. I have the part and they’re delighted, and I was simply doing was my job. That puts me at the top of their list for next time. When they call again - and I’ll likely be the first call after being their part savior before - and I don’t have the part, I offer to locate it for them, and that makes them happy. To go one further (and keep the business), I offer to get it sent to my store, they’re delighted and, again, I’m just doing what I do. Even junk yards can delight customers.
I’m delighted when:
• I can help my clients set higher marketing and advertising standards
• We educate all their employees about the value and importance of those standards and how their contributions help everyone (”A rising tide lifts all boats”)
• We put systems and rewards in place to ensure that measurable goals are achieved and perpetuated
• They make excellent internal and external communications about their products, services and company the rule
Why am I delighted and not overjoyed? Because what I described is my job as a marketer. I’m overjoyed when they come back and have added ten, twenty or thirty percent to what I set out. Now, THAT’S some serious, overwhelming, tear-jerking joy!
Posted in retail, Branding, building business, Success, delight, FrankyGee3, Frank Goad, Frank Communications, business relationships, business, advertisers, responsibilities, Advertising, Frank, "The Frankifesto", training, business plan, Marketing | Print | No Comments »
Social media is filling gaps in real life
14. December 2010 by Frank Goad.
For anyone who says Facebook is evil, or that LinkedIn is nothing but a time-suck, you might want to think again. “Trend spotter” Marian Salzman, in her latest work, “11 Trends for 2011,” points out something about social media you might want to consider when making your advertising and marketing plans for next year.
“People around the world are losing faith. Many Americans, for example, have lost trust in their politicians, their institutions, heir media and the direction of the nation. To compensate because they haven’t lost trust in self-reliance and faith in echnology), they are looking to their networks, turbocharged by omputers and the Internet.The Network Effect is making good n its promise. …
“With almost 2 billion Internet users worldwide (including 239 million in the U.S., 51 million in the U.K., 45 million in France, 81 million in India and a whopping 420 million in China), there’s a virtually unlimited supply of people out there who can meet anyone’s networking needs—whether it’s old friends, new buddies, lovers, advocates, employers, partners, suppliers, fellow enthusiasts, fellow sufferers, co-religionists or people to just
hang out with. There’s a new sense of unlimited possible partners for anything from recovery to marriage.
“As world citizens continue to embrace social media—from Facebook,Twitter and LinkedIn to Orkut, QQ and Copains ’avant—they are realizing that keyboards and mobile devices can also facilitate real conversations and mediate real human connections. (Although, in a related aside, we’ve been witnessing an interesting decline in people’s personas on social media— from an authentic expression of self to a measured, calculated
projection of values—with attendant societal implications both online and off.*) The more niche the passion, the more social the match experience. And as time goes by, the interactions will build into rich, detailed connections and an ongoing sense of ambient awareness—true connectedness to a wider network of
people. ”
*I believe it’s because people are smarter and realize that, once you post something online, it’s there forever, like it or not.
Posted in Web development, Branding, building business, writing, retail, FrankyGee3, Frank Goad, Frank Communications, business relationships, relationships, PR, Frank, Advertising, Public relations, The Long Tail, business, self-employment, Marketing | Print | No Comments »