Why integrating consistent communications into every
activity gives you way more bang for the buck.
System Marketing™ means that your marketing is a system, in
the same way that your financial procedures form a system. In either case, the
specific task informs and is informed by the total organization.
System Marketing directs that you align your goals,
procedures, and communications to all pull in the same directions, with verbal,
nonverbal, electronic, print, and attitudes all reinforcing the same message.
Most importantly, System marketing requires a deep
understanding of the marketplace and the customer, and the ability to address
the customer's expressed, implied and inferred needs and desires. This requires
research. That research may be a simple as a comment sheet on your front
counters, or as complex as a multivariate, blind, controlled test. The cost
varies with the number of words used to describe the research. For example,
putting a comment sheet on your front counter requires nothing more than a piece
of paper, a pen, and some scotch tape. It will result in some of your customers
providing valuable insights into your operation, with minimal expense. The multivariate,
blind, controlled test will probably take several people several months, will
require a series of letters after the author's names, will result in a colorful
bound report with footnotes, and will cost appropriately. In either case, when
research is done thoughtfully and with well-defined goals, it is almost always
worth the money.
Let me give you an example
of how research helps. A while back, I was asked to provide a campaign to
increase interest and visits to a nice retirement home in Mill Valley,
California. As we talked, I realized that the staff had only the vaguest of
ideas about why people chose to come, or not come, to live there. So we started
some research.
First we conducted a written survey of the residents at the
Redwoods, asking them what they liked about living there. Along with a few
other questions, we also asked where they had lived before. From this we gained
a lot of insight. People, as expected, liked the beautiful grounds and that it
was easy to get into Mill Valley for shopping. The food was good, as were the
maintenance and staff interactions. What surprised us was the most important factor
in the move-in decision: Folks at the Redwoods really liked that they could
bring their own furniture!
We then sent out a mailing, by postal mail, to a large
population. I don't remember the exact numbers, but we mailed to over 10,000
homes in the Bay Area, to a radius of 40 miles from Mill Valley. Why 40 miles? Because
that's maximum distance from which Redwoods residents had come. (Some came from
further, but more than 80% had previously lived within 40 miles.)
The mailing included a brochure illustrated with
professional photos, taken on the grounds, of people who actually lived at the Redwoods, sporting
the headline, “Come Home to the Redwoods”. We emphasized the hot-button items
we knew from the survey: just like home, extra secure and safe, bring your
favorite furniture, and close to your friends, family, and familiar landscape.
This was the most successful direct mail effort I've ever done.
We received a 24% response rate, and a 10% conversion rate, thereby beating
expectations by a mile, and filling the waiting list. I am convinced that the
research set the tone that enabled this successful effort. But equally
important was the participation and buy-in of the staff, the truthfulness of
the messaging, and the ability of the intake staff to model exactly what people
expected. That's System Marketing!
Your organization can establish System Marketing as SOP
(Standard Operating Procedure). Do the research needed to truly know your
customers, the marketplace, and the outside factors that impact that
marketplace. Share staff knowledge about current customer-facing processes and
communications. Listen to complaints, and don't dismiss them as trivial. Be
sure everybody is involved and heard. Review your mission, vision, objectives
and impacts to be sure they are current and actually reflect what you do and
want to do, and how it happens.
Then you can unify communications and attitudes. Why
attitudes? Because a large part of your customer and prospect communications is
old fashioned conversation, as well as emails and other official, personal interaction.
It is essential that everyone understand and buy in to the official message,
and be able to reflect it in every action and utterance. Answering the phone, responding
to an email, completing a proposal, talking at the bar at a conference: the language,
style, conditions and outcomes should all reinforce your messaging. When you
add that to consistent public messaging, including your website, logos,
business cards, brochures, and advertising, then, my friend, you have a
marketing system and System Marketing.
Frankly, I don't consider this rocket science. I have been
thinking about it for a long time, and have seen the theory proven. Much of
this is common sense, and just plain good business, be it for- or nonprofit. This
book breaks down various marketing tasks and offers suggestions on how and when
to use them. Regardless of the marketing mix you chose, when you keep system
Marketing in mind, all your marketing will be more effective.
2 comments:
Sound advice. It all sounds terrible easy and straight forward. Why don't businesses do this as a matter of course?
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