Customer Experiences are Marketing

Customer Experiences are Marketing

Marketing is more than just information that introduces products and services.

Marketing is the experience of buying your products.

It is also the experience of using the product.

It is the experience of returning a product that does not perform as expected.

To prevent that one, marketing can be helping the customer get more from the product, or upgrading to an improved version.

I recently upgraded my iPhone and family service plan. There were some bumpy segments within that journey, but now that it’s complete I can say that I’m happy.

Stay with me for the point of how this relates to your marketing.

Shared Customer Experiences are Marketing

Google defines the zero moment of truth (ZMOT) as the moment when a prospective buyer discovers your business. This may be through a personal referral or information online.

What’s interesting is the zero moment of truth is usually the result of either a fabulous or inferior customer experience, because that is what gets talked about.

Let that soak in.

Our 3-hour ordeal of understanding one mobile service plan from another was stressful. It was clear the representative understood the plans; he just couldn’t explain them well for our situation, so we had to go over them again and again.

Training easily solves the problem we experienced.

The business opportunity is finding those touchpoints within your buyer’s journey that need improvement.

I discovered this when operating my landscape design and construction business. We broke everything down, created new materials, practiced telling the right stories, and more.

Most important is that we identified the one thing about the customer experience that would distinguish our business if it were significantly improved. It worked like magic.

Make this your 2016 goal. Choose just one thing about the customer experience that will make your company stand out if you do it better than everyone else.

Remember that whether that is marketing, product or service related, it’s all still marketing, if you still struggle to get leads then read this blog post about Facebook Quizzes.

More for Overachievers

There are really three ways you can improve the customer experience.

#1 – Innovate: Find new ways of doing things that do not exist today.
#2 – Disrupt: Create new ways that make the old ones obsolete.
#3 – Iterate: Make the current way of doing things better.

The last one was what we did with our landscaping business to solve an industry-wide problem.

Technology is typically the way to disrupt. Innovation is what builds market leaders.

I’d love to hear your thoughts on customer experiences? Meet me over on Twitter to take the conversation further.

About the Author:  Jeff Korhan, MBA, is the author of Built-In Social: Essential Social Marketing Practices for Every Small Business and host of This Old New Business podcast.

He helps organizations use media to create exceptional customer experiences that drive business growth in a digital, social and global world. Connect with Jeff on LinkedInTwitterFacebook, and Google+

Pinterest Marketing: How to Build Sustainable Website Traffic

Pinterest Marketing: How to Build Sustainable Website TrafficThis is Episode 20 of This Old New Business weekly business podcast with Jeff Korhan.

If you have been ignoring Pinterest for growing your business, you may be surprised to learn that it often drives more traffic than sites such LinkedIn, YouTube, and Reddit … combined!

Do I have your attention now? I thought so.

Many of us set up our Pinterest accounts years ago and then walked away because we were not quite certain how to use it, or why. Cynthia helps us with both in this episode.

You’ll learn that Pinterest marketing really is quite simple to learn, and powerful for both attracting and sustaining more relevant traffic to your website.

Our Featured Guest: Cynthia Sanchez

Pinterest Marketing: How to Build Sustainable Website TrafficCynthia Sanchez is the CEO and founder of Oh So Pinteresting. Her clients range from companies in the mobile app industry to Beverly Hills jewelers. Cynthia is an international speaker, author, and podcaster – and she has been featured by Social Media Examiner and Entrepreneur as a leading Pinterest expert.

Pinterest is Visual Discovery

Once you understand the structure of Pinterest, everything makes a lot of sense.

Pinterest describes itself as a visual disovery tool. Think of your Pinterest account as a file cabinet. Within it are your Pinterest boards, which are collections of photos. Think of those boards as drawers within a file cabinet.

How you organize your Pinterest boards is up to you. However, your objective from a marketing standpoint is to make your visiual content discoverable by the customers or communities your business serves. Thus, your boards are ideally organized for them, which means using relevant language and keywords for which they are searching.

Each of your Pinterest photos has at least one link back to your website. So, when a photo you publish is pinned or shared on another board, it creates another link to your business from its new location.

As Cynthia points out in our interview, that new location may be a board of a highly influential individual or business, which means big traffic to your website.

Pinterest Demographics are Changing

One of the reasons many businesses do not embrace Pinterest is they view it as a site populated primarily by women trading recipes. For whatever reason, the early arrivers to Pinterest were midwestern, middle-aged, college educated women with children. That demographic still dominates.

I think back to the days of owning my landscape business. These women were the majority of my customers. How about your business?

Cynthia suggests this will change as have so many other things social media. In the meantime, if your business serves a different type of demographic, you have the opportunity to stand out now before your competitors build their presence on Pinterest.

Pinterest is a Visual, Mobile Search Engine

Just like Instagram, Pinterest is a visual, mobile search engine. And just like Instagram, the photos pinned to Pinterest accounts have staying power, unlike content that flows through Facebook and Twitter, never to be seen again.

Cynthia often experiences a surge in traffic from photos published months and even years ago. Thus, in many ways your Pinterest boards are visual content that tells the story of your business, and you as a person, much like LinkedIn Publisher articles do for your LinkedIn profile.

In our digital world visual content is red-hot. This is likely due to the fact that it instantly makes meaningful, emotional connections. Now you know why smart businesses are reconnecting with Pinterest marketing to build sustainable traffic to their websites.

How is your business planning to use Pinterest marketing?

Lighting Round Tips and Advice

Cynthia’s Top Sales or Marketing Advice – Be helpful. Be a resource. Give people additional information.

Her Favorite Productivity Tip – Put your cell phone in your drawer where you cannot see it.

A Quote that has Inspired Cynthia’s Success – “Why not go out on a limb? That’s where the fruit is.” Mark Twain

Key Take-Aways

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If you enjoyed this episode of This Old New Marketing podcast, please head over to iTunes or Stitcher to leave a rating, write a review, or subscribe.

About the Author:  Jeff Korhan, MBA, is the author of Built-In Social: Essential Social Marketing Practices for Every Small Business and host of This Old New Business podcast.

He helps mainstream businesses adapt their traditional growth practices to a digital world. Connect with Jeff on LinkedInTwitterFacebook, and Google+

The Power of Questions for Attracting and Engaging New Buyers

Content marketing makes your business more attractive to prospective buyers by eliminating questions that stand in the way of them engaging with your company. Thus, when thinking about selling products and services, it’s smart to first consider the most relevant questions that need to be addressed. I just recently had car graphics London ON wrap […]

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