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Fishing For Customers - Free Small Business Marketing and Advertising Tools, Tips, Articles, Strategies, and Advice. Fishing For Customers: June 2005

Thursday, June 30, 2005

Would You Like Fries With That?

I was having dinner alone, in a strange community, at a nationally-known restaurant chain. I watched the waitress deliver the checks at the five other tables in her section before flagging her over.

"How many tables are in this section?" I asked. She told me six. Taking her through the math we determined that she averaged four table turns of two diners per table on each shift - approximately 48 customers per waitress per shift.

I then asked the price of the average desert on her menu. She estimated $3.50 I said, "Do you realize that if you invited each of those people to have dessert, and one out of three did, you'd make an extra $8.40 in tips every shift?"

She had that "no idea what you're talking about" look, when she asked, "Are you telling me that you want dessert?" "No," I said, "I'm telling you that people like to be asked."

Want to know the sad part? Restaurants aren't the worst offenders. You spend all that money inviting folks to your store, then your staff doesn't ask 'em to buy. Too many employees simply don't think about up-selling. Waaay too many. This is a management problem. It has a management solution.

Good managers know two basic facts:

1) The easiest sale is an add-on sale to an existing customer.
2) Anything that isn't measured can't be managed.

Make up-selling a requirement. Start at the customer contact level. Tabulate the average number of items per purchase. The only number your staff needs to track, and to be accountable for, is the average number of items on each receipt.

Do your employees think of this as (gasp!) SELLING? They're right. If they have a problem with sales, shame on you for not making very clear at the first interview that everyone's job was to sell. How do you describe the job? Clerk? Customer service person? No wonder your staff doesn't have your focus.

Maybe you need new staff people. Then again, maybe you could improve this staff. Start by changing their titles.

Drop into any Waffle House. You'll note that the waitress' name tags all say "Salesperson." The day they put on the uniform Waffle House employees know what the job entails.

Done correctly, all customer service jobs are selling.

"Would you care to see the dessert menu?" will never produce the sales of "The chef just pulled some of his homemade apple pies out of the oven. Did you save room for a warm slice with a scoop of vanilla ice cream and maybe a sprinkle of cinnamon?"

Yeah, selling.

When was the last time you bought a bottle of wine and were offered an ice bucket, or a corkscrew? No, it doesn't happen to me, either. Pity. Not only because the store could sell extra items, but also because I can never find a corkscrew. People appreciate it when you help them to save an extra trip. People are flattered by your concern.

When the customer brings a can of paint to the check out, ask if she has drop cloths, masking tape, or paint rollers with handle extenders.

When the customer asks for bedding plants, personally escort her to the plants, then ask if she has fertilizer, bug spray, a shovel.

When the customer buys the new projection TV, will she need video cables? A video switcher? Audio cables? Matching transformers? A universal remote? A DVD player? A couple new movies?

Never work up financing of the boat without reminding the buyer how much she needs life vests, depth finders, a trolling motor, a marine radio.
Selling. Refer to it as improved customer service.

What an incredible idea! Improving sales by providing genuine customer service. Put it in your ads.

"Here at Ajax Company we'll:

ease your frustrations; or
save you time; or
save you money; or
help you impress your friends,

by checking to see if you have everything you need before you leave the store."

Go through your business department by department. Make check lists. Figure out the your obvious offers, and make your staff very familiar with all of the appropriate add-on sales possibilities. Monitor them to make sure those possibilities are being offered.

Pay attention to, and reward, improvement in add-on sales. See if your sales and your customer satisfaction levels don't both go up.

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Thursday, June 23, 2005

The Definition of Marketing

A couple of decades ago I found a good working definition of the difference between advertising and marketing: Advertising is an attempt to find someone to buy your stuff. Marketing is finding out what people want, and helping them to get it.

By that definition, best-selling author Cindy Cashman understands marketing.

Cashman's first book, Everything Men Know About Women, has been perpetually popular, selling over a million copies since its first printing in 1988. She used the pseudonym "Dr. Alan Francis," claiming a "landmark book on men's understanding of that most complex of creatures: woman. Based on years of research and interviews with thousands of men from all walks of live, he presents the most complete picture ever revealed of mens's knowledge of the opposite sex."

The book is 150 blank pages. It sells for $3.95.

Cashman decided not to let Everything Men Know About Women get lost amid all of the titles in most bookstores, so she sold it at women's clothings stores where it's price made it an attractive impulse item.

Since then, Cashman has written ten more books (with text) to become one of the most successful self-published authors in America. Her titles include, Bedtime Stories For Dogs, The Book Of Smiles, Mr. Eaves And His Magic Camera, and Life's Lessons For Women, which has been translated into seven other languages, and is being sold in ten countries.

"I don't consider myself a writer," says Cashman. "I'm a marketer. And the more educated people are the harder it is for them to understand what I do. I have a concept. I write the press release. I write a three-page summary. I write the beginning, a bit of the middle, and the end. Then I hire a ghost writer and a graphic artist to write the text and design the cover."

Where does she get her ideas? From ordinary people.

"I used to go out in my boat and jot down title ideas. When I had a number of them, I'd gather ten women together. I'd mix 'em up: an attorney, a housewife. Then I'd give the ladies the list of titles and ask them which books they'd be willing to buy. I didn't ask if they'd like to read them. I asked which ones they'd be willing to pay for. If I found a title that consistently got seven out of the ten to say they'd buy it, I knew I had a winner."

She also asks "Is this what I want to be known for?"

More recently, Cashman has experimented with electronic publishing. She's offering e-book titles such as The Million Dollar Question Handbook and As A Woman Thinketh from her web site.

Always attuned to the fickle attention of the marketplace, she got the idea for two titles three weeks before the finale of Donald Trump's The Apprentice. You're Hired: Unofficial Lessons From The Apprentice, and You're Fired: 17 Things You Can Do To Help Speed Up The Process.

"I got the idea Sunday afternoon, and pitched it to a publisher first thing Monday. They loved the concept but passed on the book. They said the book would take too long to bring to market, and there were only two episodes of the show left. I immediately wrote the press release, hired a ghost writer, hired a cover designer, and we all went to work. Within seven days of the first idea, the books were written, and my son had them up on the web site as e-books."

Find out what they want, and help them get it.

Yeah. Cindy Cashman understands marketing.

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Saturday, June 18, 2005

What Personals Ads Can Teach Us About Advertising

Is any advertising more closely monitored by the advertiser than a "personals" ad? I don't believe so. If ever an advertiser wanted results, and wanted them now, this is it.

Personals ads demonstrate some of the best, and the worst, techniques in advertising. Let's look at these examples and see what we can apply to advertising in general.


Five Rules For Your Business From The Personals

1.Stop trying to reach everyone.

Personals ads immediately need to focus on prospects, and eliminate non-prospects.

All too often, business advertisers try to make their ads appeal to "everyone." If you're a single woman posting in the personals, though, you don't want responses from everyone. Other women are probably of no interest to you. You likely don't want to hear from married men, either. If your objective is dating, it's pointless to attempt to reach people that aren't potential dates.

Trying to reach everyone is a fool's strategy in business, too. You probably don't have any interest in people who can't afford what you have to sell. You also aren't likely to want to reach the idly curious. As a business your objective is to reach people who could become good customers.

Make your ads speak directly to those people.


2. Your Headline Is Critical.

Get your prospect's attention. Get it immediately. If you don't get your prospect's attention, will he even notice the rest of your ad?

"Relationship wanted"

will never get as much attention as

"North Texas filly looking for stable mate"

Draw the business parallel. Your retail ad shouldn't say

"We want your business."

Instead, it should say

"Everything you need to make your garden grow is waiting for you at Mineral Wells Hardware."


3. Make me want to learn more.

The objective of personals advertising is to find someone to date. The objective of mass media advertising is to find new customers for your business. In neither case will you benefit from skimping on the descriptions.

"Single woman desires long term relationship."

is less likely to get the attention of gentlemen reading the ads than is

"Witty, flirtatious, and outgoing. I smile easily and enjoy laughing, am open-minded, honest, and like to talk about ideas. I would like to get to know a man who is confident of who he is and what he wants out of life. I'm single, have never been married, but like the idea of finding my soul mate."

By the same token,
"Bedding plants in stock"

is weak when compared to

"Brighten your yard with salvia, iceplant, petunias, and pansies. Color your flower beds with all the hues of spring, ready to take home today from the Nolan River Nursery."


4. Tell potential customers what you give them that your competitors can't.

Nobody spends advertising dollars in hopes of being ignored, and yet every day business owners manage to fade into obscurity by making their ads sound exactly like other ads.

Consider an all-too-typical personals listing:

"I love sunsets, long romantic walks by the ocean, and candlelight dinners."

A woman who likes sunsets, romantic walks by the ocean, and candlelight dinners? No kidding? Is there a woman alive who doesn't like sunsets, long romantic walks by the ocean and candlelight dinners?

By the same token, does there exist any business that doesn't offer helpful, courteous service and years of experience? Helpful courteous service doesn't make you special. It's the minimum entry-level behavior that customers expect.

Statements like "helpful, courteous service" make your ads fade into background as noise. Your store ad could just as well say that you "love sunsets and long romantic walks."

When your ads sound like everyone else's, you're not likely to be noticed, let alone be remembered.


5. Tell me what's in it for me.

If you met a stranger who opened the conversation with "I want to tell you all about myself," how much interest would you have in talking to that stranger?

Here's the personals ad which takes that posture:

"I'm looking for a long term relationship. Honest men only. I'm tired of fakes and game players. And if you are looking for someone to hang on your every word, keep on looking. No mama's boys need apply."

Think she gets many replies?

No, I don't suppose so. The business equivalent is:

"We need to sell one hundred cars to meet our sales goals, so we're going to be making the best deals we can remember. Limited to items in stock. Limit one per household. Not valid with other offers. You must take delivery from dealer stock before close of business Friday."

"We, us, our." "We" again. Aren't we something? Just ask us. Bleh.

Stop talking about you, and what you want from me. Start telling me why I should want to do business with you.

Here's a better example from the personals:

"Would you like to spend some time with someone who's optimistic and fun to be around? I hope you're comfortable in jeans, you know what you want, and aren't afraid to show it. You'll find me open-minded, non-judgmental, and loyal."

Much more effective, isn't it? In the business community you'll get substantially better results when you drop the "we / us / our" verbiage, and replace it with "you."

"Have you ever noticed that you walk a little bit taller and you even feel better, when you know you look good? We promise that you'll turn heads when you've had your hair cut at the Singing Scissors Salon."

Use these five rules as a starting point. Study the personals, and take note of those that get your attention. The basic principles will make good business ads, too.

Good ads don't scream for attention, they seduce, whether their purpose is personal or business.


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Do you work in radio? Then you already know that you run out of day long before you run out of work that needs finishing.

In a perfect world, you'd have time to do a complete Uncovery for every client, process the information, and craft compelling messages that involve the listener. Unfortunately we don't work in a perfect world.

Wizard of Ads® partners Ron Covert and Walt Koschnitzke combine their decades of radio management experience to help you improve your selling, ad writing, and management skills when they teach Radio in the 21st Century, July 14-15 at the Wizard Academy, south of Austin, Texas.

In a whirlwind 48 hours you'll learn:

  • what your customers really want
  • effective message development,
  • how to identify realistic expectations,
  • how to calculate a realistic ad budget,
  • media scheduling for maximum return on investment.

You're going to love this two-day class. Consider it a course in copywriting triage. Radio in the 21st Century is limited to the first 20 participants.






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Monday, June 13, 2005

Monday Night Blues

Confession: I’m a blues fan.

I like nearly all permutations of blues. In my office, when I need to decompress I’m fond of Muddy Waters, Lightnin’ Hopkins, and T Bone Walker. When I’m alone in the truck, it always cruises better to the heavily blues-influenced rock of Gary Moore, or Delbert McClinton’s steeped in blues honky tonk.

Now, I'm well aware that blues is marked by the use of the lowered third and dominant seventh (so-called blue notes) of the associated major scale, but that’s an intellectual observation. That awareness isn't part of the enjoyment. The enjoyment comes from feeling the music (right brain), rather than analyzing it (left brain).

So, here I am, Monday evening, listening to Gov’t Mule’s live recording of Jesus Just Left Chicago, when I get the urge to see what Gov’t Mule has issued that isn’t already in my collection. (I’ve switched to present tense for the telling of this tale. Feel like you're there, don’t'cha?)

Google Gov’t Mule. Click on the link to the official site. Browse. Read some of the bio material. I’m emoting. I’m ready. I’m feeling a need for new songs.

Click on “Mule Tracks.” Humm. Clever name.
Welcome To Mule Tracks.
If you haven’t downloaded shows before please check out the FAQ for info on the process. Or even if you have downloaded shows, there’s good info to be found in the FAQ
.”
You’re messing with my emotional willingness to purchase. You’re making me shift into intellectual mode. I don’t want to be in intellectual mode. I want the songs.

I scan down the left side of the page, and I see dates of specific shows. Humm. These appear to be live recordings. And it seems that they’re available for download. Cool. Is there a charge? Click on “What Do I Get” from the FAQ and read:
What do I get?
After completing the purchase process you may download the entire product in the format you've chosen. Individual files are not available as separate purchases - you may only purchase products in their entirety. Certain products also have printable PDF files for CD labels, booklets and tray inlays. You will need the free Adobe Acrobat Reader 5.0 or later to access the files.”
What the…? Product? I want songs. I don’t want “product.” Reading on, I come across:
FLAC
Using the appropriate software for your operating system, uncompress each of the FLAC files into WAV files. The WAV files are what you will need to burn an audio CD that can be played on most CD players. Keep in mind that not all CD burning software can burn WAV files. Be sure to check compatibility with your software. After the WAV files are extracted, burn them in your favorite CD burning application. For live performance products use the Disc-At-Once (DAO) option to avoid any two-second gaps between tracks on your CDs.”
What’s an FLAC file? Does it have something to do with that duck? And now you expect me to check compatibility with my software? Where do I find that?

I’m no longer jones’n for new Gov’t Mule songs. I’m frustrated and somewhat angry. Are you trying to keep the music from me? That’s how it feels. And just like I know about lowered thirds and dominant sevenths but don’t let it get in the way of the emotional enjoyment of the performance, I also know about file compatibility and digital rights management… but it’s getting in the way of my enjoyment of the performance.

Didn’t the Grateful Dead encourage live recording of their shows, and even rope off a special taping section just for that purpose? If they could make it that easy, why are you guys making it so difficult?

Screw it.

Warren, Matt, Danny, Andy… your music’s great. Your web site is not.

I’ve decided that I’ll wait to find the new album at Borders or Best Buy. I haven’t set foot in either place in months… but the next time I think of it, I may swing in. However, I’m sure as hell not blowing any more of my Monday evening by attempting to find out if my burner’s compatible with FLAC files.

Oh, and I’m going to send you a copy of the Eisenboys Call To Action so you can see where you lost me… I can’t be the only one. Check the web metrics and consider your conversion rate. I’ll bet it’s low. And that’s a shame.

How much money are you losing as people who are enthusiastic about your music get unenthused about the prospect of buying it?



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Saturday, June 11, 2005

Would You Like Fishing For Customers In Your E-Mail?

A few times in the last couple of weeks I've received comments that it would be nice if people knew when there was to be a new post on Fishing For Customers.

Unfortunately, I don't write on that tight a schedule.

So, here's my solution: sign up in the new "subscribe" box, and get every new post e-mailed directly to your "in" box.

It's free... and I hope it's something you can use.


Sincerely,
Chuck

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Thursday, June 09, 2005

Missing the Obvious

Radio programmers have had an expression for decades: “You can’t bore people into longer time spent listening.”

Know how to tell when a radio program is boring? You’ll recognize the unmistakable sound of radio receivers being switched off across the whole community. Likewise, you’ll recognize plummeting newspaper and magazine subscriptions as a sign that the writing is not particularly compelling.

And yet, the major media owners all seem to think that the audience is spending more time with their competitors (satellite radio and the internet) because the audience is enamored of changes in technology. In typical neo-Luddite fashion, a recent CNN/Money article explains that magazine publishers are joining together to promote magazine reading; that newspapers are joining together to promote newspaper readership; radio groups are joining together to promote terrestrial radio listening.

They’ve totally missed the point.

People aren't buying expensive satellite receivers and also paying monthly subscription fees because they percieve an improvement in audio quality. They didn't go to the web because they were unhappy about getting printers ink on their hands.

People went to satellite or to the internet to get content they specifically wanted to hear / view / read.

And if content providers want an audience to continue using the more traditional delivery channels, they need to come up with better content.

Offer radio programming that moves us, emotionally, and we’ll listen to it on shortwave if that’s where it's found. Make the writing fascinating and we’ll pay for a subscription to read it.

But give us the same recycled pablum as all of your competitors, and the technology doesn’t matter at all.

Boring content is boring content no matter what the medium.



Want to make your customers and potential customers find your communications with them to be fascinating? I can't think of a better source of information you can immediately use than you'll find at The Magical Worlds Communications Workshop.

The workshop is based on the findings of America's leading cognitive neuroscientists, and is personally taught by the Wizard of Ads®, Roy H. Williams. You'll learn to do consciously what talented people do unconsciously.

The workshop scheduled for July 20, as usually happens, this class, has been sold out weeks in advance. There are still a few seats available for the August 17 class.



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Wednesday, June 08, 2005

The Big Lie

The Big Lie. A simple concept. Make a statement. Repeat it. Repeat it until people accept it as true.

Only one thing wrong with The Big Lie. It doesn’t work.

Its been tried by governments, and advertisers, and employers, and spouses. The Big Lie doesn’t make people believers. The Big Lie is recognized as a lie when it contradicts their experiences.

You see, statements are only accepted as true when they align with other statements that people have already accepted as true. If there’s an intellectual, or emotional conflict, people reject the new statement. They mentally catalog it as a lie.

So, if you, Mr. or Ms. Advertiser, make any statement in your ads, prospective customers are going to weigh that statement against that which they already know to be true. Does your claim resonate with truth, or does it cause dissonance within their minds?

If your ads do not reinforce what potential customers believe about your business, you’re wasting your ad budget.

No one cares what you think about your business.

Let me offer an example.

When I was a much younger copywriter, working for a local radio station, one of our salespeople brought an assignment:

My client, a local pool hall, wants to build more family business. Make us some ads showing families having fun playing pool on Friday nights.”
I wrote a series of three ads, in which kids told stories about actually enjoying their parents company. We got some good child actors to play the parts, recorded the ads, and made sure that the schedule offered enough frequency to make some impact for the advertiser.

The ads bombed.

Of course, it might have helped had the salesperson, or even the client, thought to mention that a local motorcycle gang used this establishment as their meeting place. There were so many chopped hogs, chains, and tattoos in the parking lot that any family who packed up the kids and drove to the pool hall would never let them out of the car.

The advertiser was well aware of his current clientele. He desperately hoped advertising would bring in people he wanted as his customers.

If his business had been brand new, that might have worked. Unfortunately, he had an existing clientele and an existing image. And, not only does no one care what you think of your business, they don’t care what you want them to think about your business either.

Does it matter that you believe you’re telling the truth, when your prospects don’t? Sorry. Their perception is your reality. Did those families who found a parking lot full of motorcycles care that the owner didn’t think of his place as a biker hangout? They didn’t. They recognized The Big Lie. NO ONE CARES what YOU think about your business.

Now, if your ad sounds true, it has a chance. The more familiar that new statement sounds, the more comfortable people are accepting it. Jeffery and Brian Eisenberg put it this way in Call To Action – Secret Formulas To Improve Online Results:

Words and phrases that look or feel familiar will have more of an impact on people than the unfamiliar … Too often, people talk or write the way that makes them feel comfortable and ignore what is necessary to make the audience … be open to the message.”
Step back and take an objective look at your ads. From your prospective customer’s point of view, do your ads resonate with truth, or do they it cause dissonance and discomfort? Make them uncomfortable enough, they’ll assume you’re lying. And when prospects believe you lie, they don’t buy.

From time to time an advertiser will assume that if he tells The Big Lie, the “sheeple” will do what they’re told and come buy from him. When they don’t flock to his door, he blames the advertising. He’s right. Those ads don’t work. People are not stupid. They don’t trust advertisers who lie to them.

Still, when there’s enough money riding on new sales, it’s relatively easy to start believing what you want to believe.

It’s a simple thing, isn’t it? You hire a new agency, buy a TV campaign, get your product featured in the popular magazines. If they can’t do it, hire someone who can. No more excuses. Tell The Big Lie.

In the late sixties, GE, NCR, Zerox, and RCA all tried to challenge IBM for the computer mainframe business. They all thought of themselves as electronics manufacturers, and thought of computers as electronics devices.

Unfortunately purchasing agents didn’t equate mass-produced television sets with digital computers.

When “RCA, The Computer Company” was used as a slogan, the market responded “Don’t lie to me. RCA is not a computer company. RCA is a radio and TV company.” “NCR Means Computers” feels like The Big Lie. It must be a lie. We all know that NCR does not mean computers. NCR means cash registers. IBM means computers.

By the mid 70s GE, NCR, Zerox, and RCA were out of the computer business.

Their computer divisions weren’t killed by a competitor’s superior product. They were killed by bad advertising. The advertising was bad because it created an incompatibility with the truths already in the minds of the purchasers. “NCR means computers?” Sure. Sure, it does.

All through the 50s, the 60s, the 70s, Cadillac was the symbol of success. We’ve all heard other things of quality being described as “The Cadillac of…."

Unfortunately, it was the symbol of success for old people. The average age of a Cadillac owner was 61. When Baby Boomers went looking for an entry-level luxury car, they bought Saab, or BMW.

GM’s solution? Slap a Cadillac nameplate on a Chevy Cavalier, and call it the Cimarron. But, wait a minute. Cadillacs are big, they’re quiet, they’re luxurious. Ask any Cadillac owner. Ask any non-owner. The Cimarron? Not big. Not quiet. Not luxurious. Obviously, not a Cadillac. It’s The Big Lie.

It was an expensive lesson. You’d think GM would remember 1982. Nope. Gotta get the sales curve headed up. Gotta expand the market beyond old people. And when there’s enough money on the line, it’s easier to believe what you want to believe.

In 1997 GM decided Cadillac should make another attempt to capture the younger market. They called this one the Catera, “The Cadillac That Zigs.” Humm. A non-luxury Cadillac, with a big price tag, marketed to a younger audience? Bad car, or bad advertising?

Seen any Cateras lately?

Advertising can’t help your company by making claims that can’t / don’t / won’t be accepted by the marketplace. Advertising can’t fix a broken business… or a broken business plan.

How does Roxio intend to make Napster profitable as a paid download service, when the company’s identity is so closely tied to free file sharing? Can they overcome this major intellectual and emotional discord?

Overstock Dot Com may see themselves as a high-end retailer. They can run ads forever claiming “It’s all about the O.” Bad, out-of-date sexual reference aside, will consumers buy into a luxury image from a company named OVERSTOCK?

As my dear, sweet, saintly old Grandmother, Fanny McKay, used to say: “Wishin’ don’t make it so, and neither do massive amounts of gross ratings points.”

So here’s what you can do… must do: Make sure your ads build upon what the public believes about your business. Never contradict what they already know.

The only way to do that is to find your customers perceptions of you.

You’re not going to like what you find. THIS is what people really think of my company? I promise, your fist look through their eyes will be painful. Most of what disappoints you, though, will be small stuff. Grit your teeth. Dig deeper.

Find the nuggets… those reasons that your regular customers keep coming back. Find out what your existing customers believe they can’t find anywhere else. Ah. These are the truths you can use to build a long-term advertising campaign.

They’re the truths that a competitor can never take from you.



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Friday, June 03, 2005

Are Your Ads Working? Can You Prove It?

In 1961 Rosser Reeves, the Creative Director of Ted Bates Advertising, Inc., wrote a book titled Reality In Advertising. Although it's now out of print, you may be able to find a copy at a used bookstore or a library.

Reeves was the man who created "I Like Ike," "Melts in your mouth, not in your hand," and the famous Anacin ad with the tiny bubbles carrying relief to boxes in a silhouette head. Reeves also had a simple method of determining whether an ad was "working."

His staff phoned 1,000 people across the country at random and asked two questions:

Are you familiar with our advertising?

Do you use our product?

He put the tallies into a grid much like this one.

Please appreciate the elegant simplicity of this test.

The left side is made up of people who are familiar with your ads. As a percentage of the total, these people represent your MARKET PENETRATION. The higher your Market Penetration, the better your advertising is working. The lower your score, the greater potential for increased sales with a good advertising campaign.

The top side is made up of people who buy what you have to sell. If ten percent of the unpenetrated group buys your product, and twenty percent of the penetrated group buys, you may subtract the first group from the second to get what Rosser Reeves called the "Usage Pull" of your advertising. Today it's better known as the CONVERSION FACTOR.

Thankfully, we don't see it often, but it is possible to have a negative Conversion Factor. This is evidence that your advertising is actually harming sales. Should you find yourself in this situation, STOP YOUR ADVERTISING IMMEDIATELY and get help.

Reeves techniques are nearly half a century old, but they still work exceptionally well. If you can find a copy, Reality In Advertising deserves a place in your marketing library.

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Next week I'm traveling to the
Wizard Academy to attend Michelle Miller's Wonder Branding: Marketing To Women workshop June 9-10.

This is an intensive two-day seminar, jam-packed with information, real-life examples, discussion, and creative exercises that will open your mind to a new way of thinking about your marketing, your customer, and business in the 21st century.

It's no accident that Michelle's consulting and speaking engagements are limiting the number of times she has available for this workshop. If you can fit this trip into your schedule, be sure to say "Hi."


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