Word of mouth is not free

http://tomfishburne.com/?s=word+of+mouth&x=0&y=0

http://tomfishburne.com/?s=word+of+mouth&x=0&y=0

This morning a friend was telling me about a product he had used recently, and how it changed his life. Well, made a small piece of it better at least.

Next time I am looking for a product in that category, I will try it. Very little to lose even if I do not share the enthusiasm, and I value my friends opinion.

Word of mouth marketing.

Free marketing for the product supplier, right?

Consider how much effort went into making the product right, managing and optimising the value chain, in creating the programs that engaged and made an advocate of my friend, and gave him  the stories to pass on to me.

Word of mouth is very effective, the most effective form of marketing we humans have ever seen, and on the surface it is free, but beneath the surface, there is frantic paddling going on.

Word of mouth marketing works but is not free, it is earned.

Sporting analogies don’t always work.

Mojowire.net.au

Tonight is the first Origin game of 2014, and so  I expect to hear lots of people using sporting analogies  over the next few weeks, particularly football.

Sporting analogies abound in business, “A team of champions does not make a champion team”

How many time have you heard that?

As management layers are removed, and the management culture evolves rapidly towards recognising the value of teams in a commercial context, we often use the sporting team as the foundation of the commercial team .

Familiarity, known skills, interpersonal relationships, all that stuff gets considered as a team is put together. Sometimes of course, in the real world teams are put together with whoever is to hand, has some spare time, is at the water cooler too often.

We confuse this simplified sporting stuff, useful in its own context, with the key components of a commercial team faced with  commercial challenges.

In that case, you need a range of technical and domain skills, a questioning mentality, and a willingness to try things, and usually some diversity, some new or unusual blood being injected  to create a sense of discomfort that always precedes game changing ideas and insights.

Unlike sporting events, which last for a hour, more or less, commercial challenges are way longer term, when the micro interaction is important more as a learning event than a game breaker.

 

Show the value

'Rich red Fountain Tomato sauce"

‘Rich red Fountain Tomato sauce”

Fountain Tomato Sauce used to be the market leader in NSW, daylight was second and third. This was a long time ago, and responsibility for the Fountain brand was my first real job as a product manager who had real accountability, and the power to make lasting brand and resource allocation decisions.

I walked into the job just as Franklins   (remember them) launched a “No Frills” tomato sauce,  at 0.69c on shelf against the  0.73 for Fountain. Our volumes immediately took a huge hit.

I still remember the details, and the near panic that ensued.

“No Frills” was the first real housebrand of the type that 25 years later would play a role in the demise of the Australian food processing industry.

The immediate instinct was to drop the price of Fountain, and compete aggressively, certainly that is what the sales people insisted on, but we took a different tack.

We increased the price, to 0.81c, improved the product a fraction by adding a few percentage points more of tomato paste,  and advertised, giving consumers a reason to pay the extra. When it was just 3 cents, chances were the products were pretty similar, but when the difference was 0.12 cents, consumers recognised they were not the same, both might be tomato sauce, but they were not  the same, and they had to make a conscious choice.

We set about telling people why Fountain cost more, and why it was a great choice over the “cheapie” delivering real value to them and their families, and they paid the extra, willingly. Our sales went up, margins were up, the MD was very happy, and I was over the moon.

Point was, we gave consumers a reason to buy Fountain, we told a story, entertained, informed, it was a significant premium, but not one that would break any budget, and the product was better, much better, and consumers felt better buying it and having it on their table.

“Rich Red Fountain Tomato Sauce, Australia’s finest red”.

Wish Youtube was around then, and I had copies of the radio ads, they are still  the ads I am most proud of over a long marketing career, with many successful ad campaigns.

Sometimes, it is just a cigar

SMH.com.au

SMH.com.au

The photo of Joe Hockey and Mathias Cormann smoking a cigar just before the budget has raised temperatures in all sorts of places.

I wonder why?  After all, it is just a cigar.

Some are annoyed that they seem to be  promoting a nasty habit

Some say that it shows the inherent sense of elitist attitude in the government party

Some are just aghast at what seems to be a self satisfied indulgence.

Parts of all these reasons may be right, but I see it a  bit differently.

To my mind we the led are pissed that our “leaders” appear to have forgotten why they are there. They volunteered to  put us, the electorate before themselves, to do the right thing by us, to act in our interests, not their own.

That self sacrifice is the essence of leadership, and by this photo, a moment of time, two blokes who have worked hard together to deliver a project that has an impact on our lives, seem to be saying it was for them that they did the work, not us.

That is why we are pissed, or at least some of us, most are more realistic and recognise it is just a moment. Nevertheless, we rather it had not happened as it feeds our insecurity about the motives of those who volunteered to lead, and in whom we placed trust.

Predicting the future Vs leading edge of current

fortune tell

The future prediction business has so far failed to find a sustainable business model, apart from the fun stuff in the tent with the funny lady with the cards and crystal ball.

About the only serious people who still profess to be able to predict the future with any accuracy are politicians, and we all know how  that usually turns out. The rest of us set about controlling what we can control, and preparing for  the unexpected from the things we cannot.

By contrast, with some effort, staying on the leading edge is possible for all enterprises. Information is now so freely available, and consulting services whose stock in trade is “leading edge” whatever you want, so ubiquitous, you can stay in front of most if not all of your competition, and be aware of changes occurring so you are in the best position to leverage them.

Small and medium sized companies are best placed in this game of staying current, should they be prepared to make the commitment to do so.

Smaller companies can try stuff out, see if it adds value, and deploy in the time that their larger competitors take to organise the conference call to test if there may be a good idea in here somewhere.  The only hurdle is that it does consume scarce resources, but when you see that consumption as an investment, the payoff can be huge.

In the marketing space, my hometown, the cost of testing has fallen so dramatically over the last decade that there is no longer any valid excuse not to be testing extensively.

So get on with it, apart from being strategically and competitively sensible, being at the front is where the fun is.