articlehaul.com articlehaul.com
Search:    Index Page :> About Us :> Privacy of Info :> Terms of Use :> Add Your Link :> Submit Article   
Add Your Link
 

Self Help

Healthcare & Medicine

Education & Learning

Travel & Accommodation

Online Shopping

Adventure & Sports

Drink & Food

Research & Science

Finance & Investment

Careers & Employment

News & Media

Relationship & Lifestyle

Health & Hygiene

Family & Home

Recreation & Entertainment

Vehicles & Automotive

Art & Culture

Computers & Networking

Politics & Government

Property & Estate

Teens & Kids

Indoor Games

People & Communities

Companies & Business


 

Index Page –› Companies & Business –› Customer Support
 

Loving Your Customers, Getting Your Customers to Love You

 

It may be awkward to openly acknowledge it, but every sale is a kind of seduction. As marketers, we make introductions, pursue courtships and hope for consummation the sale.

And as in any love affair, we know that reason plays a subordinate role to emotion. Logical arguments are insufficient to win a portion of our prospects bank accounts, we must win their hearts first. Obviously, love is too strong a word for what we pursue. But make no mistake without that basic appeal to the prospects inner harbor of feelings, whether its in a consumer or business-to-business pitch you will not make any progress toward the bottom line.

Here, then, are a few thoughts on how to use words which may be applied to everything from direct mail to Web site content -- to make a more compelling appeal to the heart, and via the heart, to the purse.

Show them that you care.

Ever see a truly smooth operator in action? They almost always do two things at the initiation of their pursuits: 1)They talk about a subject they know the other person is interested in; and 2), they acknowledge the other persons feelings about it.

How does apply to sales and marketing? Suppose you offer financial planning services. The awkward suitor begins by talking about their services, but the smooth operator opens the conversation by talking about the future and makes the subject personal. She expresses the hopes of a prosperous future of comfort and security and the corresponding fears of poverty, deprivation and loss of comfort. She speaks to issues that interest her prospect and demonstrates an empathetic understanding of the prospects feelings.

By showing empathy with your prospects concerns, you earn their ears.

Its not me, me, me.

Consider the worst dates in your life. Chances are, they were the ones where your companion for the evening talked endlessly about his ideas, his career, his achievements and so on. Without leaving you room for a word edgewise.

Now take almost any topic from apple orchards to zoo maintenance and do a Web search for vendors in those areas. Go to their home pages the virtual reception areas of their virtual businesses. And what do you get? Loads of me, me, me. Visions. Philosophies. Years in business. Awards, honors, degrees. Waiter, check please!

The alternative? See my first point. Create comfort and attract interest by speaking to areas of common interest and start demonstrating both your grasp of the issues at hand and of the fears, hopes and desires your readers are likely to have.

Make a commitment.

Sure, youre a witty conversationalist and have a charming manner, butbefore your prospect is ready to make a move, you have to make a commitment.

Specifically, you need to make a guarantee. And make it simple: Your money back, no questions asked. Frankly, most of us dont like risk. That last obstacle before any sale is the customers nagging fear that hell be cheated, wont get what he wants, and will look or feel foolish in addition to being out of his hard-earned cash.

So create an exit door in bright colors thatll make him feel secure. When theres a clear way out, in makes it easier to step into a purchase. Write a clear, simple guarantee and be sure its prominently displayed in your marketing materials.

Bring the ring.

I dont know if a diamond really is forever, but it is a tangible sign of affection. In fact, its very physicality brings reassurance. While love is hard to measure and weigh, you know a diamonds carats with certainty.

Likewise, you want to make your product or service as tangible, as physical, as possible. By creating a precise picture, you introduce your product into the prospects thinking. If you can help your prospects see, feel, taste, smell or in some way imagine themselves experiencing your product, youre more than halfway to the sale.

Thats why the so juicy you have to eat it with a spoon copy (Royal Riviera Pears) is so important. Why Coca-Colas images of frosty, condensation covered soda bottles are so effective. And why, if you sell a service, its essential that you offer case studies, or at least step-by-step descriptions, that demonstrate your service in action.

Abstraction big words such as commitment, excellence, and quality is death. Use specific, concrete (and wherever possible, sensual) descriptions to bring your offer to life.

Respect them in the morning.

If so much of our profit comes with repeat sales, then why do so many us make so little effort to communicate with our customers after the sale?

Car dealerships do this right. I get regular coupons for oil changes and periodic updates on maintenance issues. By sending me these regular communications, these dealers keep themselves top of mind for that inevitable moment when I will need another car.

A simple thank you letter is a good place to start. Then, depending on the nature of your business, you may want to consider a newsletter, e-mail updates, a blog and other tactics with a similar goal: Staying in touch, saying you care, keeping your customers in your loop.

Author: Jonathan Kranz
 
Author Bio:

Jonathan Kranz

Today, I enjoy the confidence of numerous marketing and advertising agencies, but unlike most independent copywriters, my career didn't begin with them. Instead, I had stints as a follow-spot operator in a regional theater, a park ranger on an allegedly haunted island in Boston Harbor, and as a summarizer of documents in large-scale litigations (think: Melville's Bartleby the Scrivener).

After completing my MFA in Creative Writing in 1995 (and publishing a number of short stories in literary journals such as the Missouri Review and the Green Mountains Review), I leap-frogged agency life and jumped into freelancing with both feet. Since then, I've written a huge stack of advertising, direct marketing, and public relations materials for consumer and B2B clients in financial services, banking, insurance, high-tech, healthcare, education, and other industries. I don't enter award shows myself, but my clients have submitted material, with my copy, that has won a number of honors, including the 2004 New England Direct Marketing Association's Awards for Creative Excellence ?Best of Show? gold medal.

On the side, I've written columns for local newspapers and have been a guest essayist on National Public Radio's All Things Considered. I've taught writing courses at Harvard University Extension School, Emerson College and Northeastern University, and I'm currently president of the Southern New England Chapter of the Society for Industrial Archeology.

I live in Melrose, Massachusetts with my wife, Eileen; two daughters, Rebecca and Anastasia; and a vast collection of LP records.

This article can be searched using: customer service tips, good customer service, customer self service, customer support systems
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Business Foundations - Setting Strong Foundations for More Business
 
Principles of Marketing 101
 
Insurance Requirements in Franchised Companies
 
Don't Put Up With "Junk PR"
 
7 Tips For Choosing The Best Online Survey Site Around
 
Direct Mail Marketing
 
Creating a Call Center Script
 
Some Speculative Thoughts About Strategy Featuring Boeing and Airbus
 
Developing Successful Demonstrations
 
Janitorial Cleaning Service: Getting Started
 
 
 
 
 

Presenting a Government Project to the American People

When the government wishes to promote a new project or social program to the American people it must ... - Lance Winslow
 

Cliche-Ladened Presentations

Buzz words can sometimes aid a presentation, but often they tend to confuse a prospect, customer, cl ... - Virden Thornton
 

Traversing That Bridge Between Sales And Management

When a salesperson gains promotion to management the first thing they have to do is to quickly acqua ... - Jonathan Farrington
 
 

Why Hasn't Customer Service Improved Despite the Profusion of Databases and Technology?

Databases and technology are tools that we can use in our businesses. There has been a lot of emphas ... - Derek Williams
 

Telemarketing Training Pro Urges Screening Applicants By Phone

Many of today's recruiters hire from pieces of paper, from resumes, however resumes don?t speak. Onl ... - Dr. Gary S. Goodman
 
 
Index Page :> Privacy of Info :> Terms of Use
Copyright © 2008 www.articlehaul.com All Rights Reserved.