Today’s lesson will focus on how Word
of Mouth (WOM) messages are delivered and what you can do to influence those
messages.
There are essentially 3 methods of WOM:
·
Expert to Expert
·
Expert to Peer
· Peer to Peer
When experts are discussing your
products and/or services you will most likely receive a noticeable increase in
sales and new customers, so obviously this is one of the best things that can
happen. You can also facilitate this outcome through offering free products to
experts for them to review.
Expert opinions can also bring about
new ideas that fuel new products, services and operating systems within your
company. If you take the time to change or cultivate the opinions of even a
small group of experts, your business has the potential to expand dramatically.
There is a standard WOM delivery
system that, in most cases, takes a few years, but you have the ability to
speed this up into only a few weeks. The standard system is:
·
First impressions from an expert;
·
Organized trial of your products or services;
· Pooling peer experiences.
It’s pertinent to be aware of exactly
who is promoting your products and/or services. Take the time to find out who
they are and reward them appropriately. While you may already have a customer
service system for filing complaints, it is unlikely that you also have one for
compiling praise. However, if you take the time to show these people your appreciation,
they will be the ones that will continue to promote your products and/or
services all the way to the top.
Some of the ways you can show your appreciation for the promoters of your products and/or services are:
·
By inviting them to a customer appreciation dinner;
·
Offering to videotape their testimonials;
·
Asking to interview them for feedback;
·
Offering them a premier customer membership;
· Asking them to join a referral incentive program.
There are many things you can offer
your biggest fans to further spread the word about your products and/or
services.
Conventional media has been around
forever and while it can still be effective, it has lost a bit of its appeal
over the last few years for the following reasons:
·
It is expensive and doesn’t necessarily return results;
·
It is boring and lacks innovation;
· It has too short of a time slot to offer enough information.
While the above is all true, there
are ways you can make conventional media work for your business. For the
information to be effective, it needs to be presented in the right sequence,
come from the right sources, be relevant to the target customer, be credible,
and be delivered at the right time in the medium.
Now we are going to switch gears a bit
and look at the two phases of the product adoption cycle. Traditional media is
great for taking you through the information stage where you are able to offer
the required information to your potential customers, but it is not ideal for
measuring the results of those efforts.
Without results of your efforts, you will
not be able to fine tune your marketing and as a result could easily miss the
mark and lose potential customers, not to mention waste a whole lot of money.
Once a consumer has the information they need to make a purchase, they will go
through a verification process as they analyze whether or not the purchase was
a favorable one. They generally will get their information through:
·
Direct experience with the product;
·
Interaction with peers using the same product;
·
Experts’ experience;
·
Scientific journals and other resources;
· Independent reviews and opinions.
You can accelerate this process by:
·
Providing your own demos and free trials;
·
Offering them indirect experience through the experience of
others;
· Offering a good, credible story that can be passed around.
Once you have the ability and can
work through these concepts, you will be better able to target your customers.
If you need help with any of this along the way, please don’t hesitate to reach
out to me for assistance.