Proactive Marketing
7/5/2007
What do The
Body Shop, Disneyland, and VisiCalc have in common? Well, aside from their
all being highly successful products and services, their stories also
share a common theme.
Pain.
Each came
into existence because their creator refused to put up with a frustrating
or painful experience.
The
Body Shop
The Body
Shop grew out of Anita Roddick's frustration with the state of the art of
the cosmetics industry. As Roddick said in her book "Body and Soul"
(pp. 68-69)…
"It
seemed ridiculous to me that you could go into a sweet shop and ask for
an ounce of jelly babies and you could go into the grocer's and ask for
two ounces of cheese, but when you wanted to buy body lotion you had to
go into Boots and lay out five quid for a bloody great bottle of the
stuff. Then, if you didn't like it, you were stuck with it…The
other half of the equation was that I wanted to try to find products
made from natural ingredients. At that time, no one was talking much
about the advantages or potential of natural products - the green
movement had yet to get started - but I knew that for centuries women in
'under-developed' areas of the world had been using organic potions to
care for their skin with extraordinary success."
Disneyland
Disneyland
grew out of Walt Disney's dissatisfaction with the family entertainment
options of the day. As Disney told Bob Thomas in "Walt Disney" (p.
11)…
"It
all started when my daughters were very young, and I took them to
amusement parks on Sunday. I sat on a bench eating peanuts and looking
all around me. I say to myself 'Dammit, why can't there be a better
place to take your children, where you can have fun together?' Well, it
took me about fifteen years to develop the idea."
VisiCalc
VisiCalc
came out of the time that Dan Bricklin spent at the Harvard Business
School. As Bricklin said in the September 2001 issue of the Harvard Business
Review (p. 53)…
"In
the midst of my studies at Harvard Business School, I had grown more
than a little frustrated by having to manually calculate and recalculate
every single change on a spreadsheet as I worked through a case study.
There had to be a better way, I figured, so I started designing a
computer program to address those inefficiencies. I described my idea to
Bob Frankston, whom I had met as an undergraduate at MIT, and he agreed
to try to turn my primitive prototype into a working program."
Implications
Why, you may ask, are these case
studies relevant to you as a salesperson, marketer, or entrepreneur?
Well, I've found that not understanding the importance of
pain, and its role on the creation of an authentic
and compelling story, is at
the root of what many people falsely label as marketing problems.
I spend a significant amount of time working with
entrepreneurs, looking for ways to help them improve the sales of their products. While in some cases I am able to help, in many cases there is nothing
I can do.
The thing is that often these entrepreneurs have little to
say and
thus nothing that I can leverage as a marketer. They don't solve any problem or alleviate any source
of pain. There is nothing driving them as entrepreneurs (other than the
desire to get rich and/or work for themselves).
There is
nothing to tap into, no angle to find. No story.
This is NOT a marketing problem.
This is a more fundamental problem with the
conception of their business.
Companies in this position are not having sales problems because
they are doing a poor job of communicating their message. Usually they are
doing a good enough job. Instead, they are having sales problems because
the market has evaluated their product or service and has determined that
it doesn't care.
I find that entrepreneurs get
into this predicament because most have adopted a reactive
approach to sales and marketing. They think of sales and marketing only after their product
or service is designed. They assume that the role of sales is to
sell and the role of marketing is to
advertise what has already been built.
Unfortunately, waiting to think about sales
and marketing until this point in the process is too late. You cannot
make a significant impact on the product or service. You cannot
dramatically alter the
value that it delivers. You cannot influence its story.
About all that you
can do, if you are stuck with a product that has no authentic or
compelling story, is to coat it with some hype, but it's unlikely to stick or last.
Instead, what is required is a proactive
approach to marketing in which the story, and thus the basis for the
product's marketing, is built into the product itself. This story can then
be tapped at a later date.
That's where the case studies come into play.
I use these and other case studies to show
entrepreneurs what an
authentic and compelling story looks like. I show them how others have
used a frustrating or painful experience as the basis for their stories
and then built both their products and their marketing around these stories.
I show them how Anita Roddick used her
story to drive her merchandising and product development strategy. I show them how Walt Disney used his
story to develop the design and maintenance strategy of
Disneyland. I show them how Dan Bricklin used his story to define the
feature set of what became VisiCalc.
Most importantly, I point out that neither
The Body Shop, nor Disneyland, nor VisiCalc succeeded because of
a brilliant marketing plan that was conceived and pasted on after the fact. Instead,
each succeeded because at their core was a story of frustration or pain
that formed the vision that these entrepreneurs used to guide and judge
their every action.
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