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Customers come in, but do you know how? Why? How to get more like them? Do you want more like them? And what’s great design got to do with it?

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May 2008

Tip of the Week: Learn Something Old Every Day

Spark Your Creativity With a Little Time-Travel

I took time off from “real” work yesterday evening, pulled out some tools I haven’t worked with in a long while, and totally changed the direction I was going with a project.


Copperplate practice hand

A few bottles of ink, some lovely old pens. Revisiting line and form and backing away from the computer. I back away a lot and I recommend you do it, too, but I don’t usually back all the way into the past!

While I worked I thought about the pen, the ink, the feel, (the difficulty), all the generations who worked this way and didn’t know any other; I thought of the hours I used to spend practicing and the projects I did; I thought about old manuscripts I’ve read, old quotations I love, movies and titles and hand-written signs. I fell back into the past and my mind wandered. Suddenly, I had an entirely different perspective on the project I’d been stuck on.


Happiness often sneaks in through a door you didn't know you left open - John Barrymore

We don’t always leave the door open in our 9-to-5s. If you’re stressed and miserable, others will feel it. You can’t be as creative or productive as you should be without allowing happiness in.


Le papillon est une fleur qui vole; La fleur un papillon fixe - Econchard LeBrun

I used to do a lot of calligraphy, many years ago. My unsure hand makes it clear that it’s been too long! You don’t need to travel back to my past, or the past, to learn something old. No need for a new skill—try re-learning something from your own past. How could picking up an instrument, a tool (of any kind), or even a board game that you haven’t played with in a very long while spark new ideas for your business?


find the hambu

Don’t think you have to be perfect. Blow horrible notes on your trumpet. Draw terrible stick figures with piece of charcoal. Use a router to shape the edge of a length of scrap wood, just to remember the feel of the tool. Go to the ice rink—and fall down until your knees hurt and you’re still laughing. Or write letters too big to fit a word on a page. Eight times...


find the hamburger

... until you’ve found your direction. Learn something old every day. Renew your creativity. Then you can get serious about Maximum Customer Experience all over again.

What long-abandoned tools have you got lying in a box, waiting to be rediscovered? Make a little time to putter around, and re-connect your past and your present. It’s the weekend—get your kids in on it if you want. They’d love to learn something old from you.

When you’re back at the 9-to-5, those connections may just surprise you.



Grow and be well,

Kelly Erickson


P.S. “Learn something old every day” is one of my favorite quotations, from the very wise and infinitely creative Fred Rogers. Thanks, Mr. Rogers.

P.P.S. Want to find your hamburger? You might need to give the cow away. Click here to read why.

3 Essential Points for the Business Bilingue

Or, Why I Carry a Pen and Paper, Even on a Date*

¿Habla Español?

I speak Spanish. Pretty fluently. Not natively, but I get along in a rusty kind of a way. Though my speech is a bit slow, the hearing works just fine, thanks.

Many of you are also bilingual (though not necessarily in Spanish), and you may be asking,

“What does this have to do with Customer Experience, Kelly?”

I may have forgotten to mention I don’t look Spanish, mainly due to the fact that I’m not. (Note author photo, at left. Nice Irish Experience Designer. Not Irish Experiences, mind you... well, yeah. We can do that.)

*cue story music, of the soft, lush, romantic type*

So I’m out on a date recently at a lovely Philadelphia restaurant. The type where you can not get “Beringer by the glass,” people, so don’t even bother to ask. Lucky me, it’s be-a-grownup-night and I’m doing just that.

My waitress, she speaks Spanish. I know this, because every time either of two other servers go by, they speak to her as she goes about her business. In Spanish. About various things including my date’s tie (good), my shoes (they disapprove), anyone who walks in to sit at the bar (dateable and not dateable and I’m not going to say any more about that subject), what’s going on in the kitchen (not all good), and their mothers.

You think I’m making this up but I’m not.

All in hushed tones. Not actually while speaking to us at the table. Very discreet if your hearing is impaired, or maybe it’s background noise if you don’t speak the language.

Note to readers: We will NOT discuss use of English generally (nor the favored language of your country/province) in the comments, as that is not the subject of this post. We will discuss the use of discretion.

Points on Language: Yours, Mine, and Foul

If these servers spoke English only, they would not have been having such vivid snippets of conversation right next to my table. If they suspected I understood most every word they said except some which I believe were foul language, ditto. So why did I have to listen to all this during my nice night out?

Because they made a judgment about our looks (and probably our accents, too), and decided the two of us did not require curbing their tongues, no matter how much we paid for our meals.

Point one: Do not let your staff gossip around customers in any language. Not even Klingon, because you never know. Seriously, gossip is just not cool.

Point two: Using your prejudices to guess whether I can understand you, at work or elsewhere in your life, is probably a bad idea. Friends used to love sitting with me on subway rides to “overhear” people who assumed no one else could understand them. My Mom thinks it’s something like a party trick. I’m sure at a fast food restaurant or a convenience store you may have experienced folks who took one look at you and continued their conversation, having decided you did not understand them. It's not always so.

Point three: Lest you think this is about some other guy, English-speaking U.S. residents notoriously do this same thing when on holiday in other lands, only to have it blow up in their faces; many popular tourist destinations have large numbers of citizens who can speak English. If you think that doesn’t affect Customer Experience, since you’re the customer, think how annoyed the shopkeeper is with you. Your experience is going to be changed, by your own behavior.

No matter who you are or where, if you want a discreet, private conversation, have it privately. That’s discretion. Anything else is rude.

By the way, I have had staff wait on me while having their annoying conversations in English, without missing a beat to “help” me. Not in a nice restaurant, but in plenty of shops. This is not only about language.

However, when they know that we all know what’s being said, it’s not said about me, or my date, or the relative merits of the guy who just walked in versus last Friday’s hottie.

Point four: They were nice shoes.  :)

You’d never let your staff or coworkers do this, so.... Have you ever had to listen in on an indiscreet conversation while shopping or dining? What did you do?



Grow and be well,

Kelly Erickson


*Because you never know when your next post will appear!

Inspiration Points: Where Is Your Business Centered?

Wednesday Words

To Go Where Your VisionPoints, a few inspiration points for you and your business.


Too many people think only of their own profit. But business opportunity seldom knocks on the door of self-centered people. No customer ever goes to a store merely to please the storekeeper.
—Kazuo Inamori, founder of Kyocera Corporation


Grow and be well,

Kelly Erickson

Giving the Cow Away, but the Milk's Not Free!

So You Want Us to Beat a Path to Your Door?

An Awesome Promotion IS:

Designed entirely from the customer’s perspective, for convenience and delight.

Truthful. With no requirements, no small print, no confusion, no trickery, it enhances the company’s credibility.

A giveaway that will be talked about, both before and after it happens: something so rare, it becomes a buzz-worthy event!

A sampling of what the company offers, introducing them to new guests and rewarding loyal customers with a free treat.

More than a sales drive: an awesome promotion is a great Customer Experience.

I’ll Have Mine Well-Done

Today, a great story of promotion done to perfection, from comments on Saturday’s Tip of the Week. I was so wowed, I started to write a response with all my thoughts about the incentive being offered. It got long.  :)  This subject deserves a post of its own, so I’ll let author and blog friend Friar start us off:

Turns out Harvey’s restaurant is giving out free burgers tomorrow (at least, around my area).

It might be a promo thing, for an anniversary or something.

But the ad in the paper said no coupons, no other purchase. Just come in and get a free burger.

Wow...now THAT is good deal (and smart marketing). Because almost everyone will probably buy fries and a drink on the side anyway,

Hmmmm...think I’ll go (But just for the burger!)

On Sunday, Friar turned in his follow-up report:

Well, that burger promo at Harvey’s was exactly as they said. A free burger...no coupons, no strings attached.

I went through drive-through, ordered one, and they said my total was “Zero” (Sweetest words I’ve never heard!)

I think it was a brilliant marketing ploy. The place was jam-packed, with wall-to-wall people, lined up outside the door.

Some (like me) just went for the free burger. But many, as I predicted, also bought the fries and drinks (especially the families with kids). I don't think they lost any money.

What’s funny, is a burger is only worth a few bucks. But give it away for free, and everyone (including me) will be beating a path to their front door.

This is brilliant Experience Design.

Take This to Go: What Harvey’s Did Right

1. Put it in the paper in advance, but not too far in advance. What day? Tomorrow. You don’t want to give folks a chance to forget or come in on the wrong day, which might build resentment.

2. Skip the coupon. Lots of people read the ad just like Friar. They almost can’t believe it, and they want to share the information with someone. Telling a friend that they have to go find a paper and get a coupon will wreck the buzz. They’ll tell fewer people, knowing they’re adding a chore to their friend’s day. The way Harvey’s did it, they’re helping you be the hero to your friends. You can tell them about a steal!

Now, viral marketing (“buzz”) takes over. Friar spread the message from Canada to greater Philadelphia, USA, and to [where are you?], too. Most folks in his area are going to tell several people whom they run into. Words like “zero” and “no strings attached” travel fast.

3. As Friar said, “almost everyone will probably buy fries and a drink on the side anyway.” Even if it’s just the soda, that’s the highest-margin item on anyone’s menu. The cup costs more than what they put in it, literally.

The funny thing is, if they gave away the soda (on the theory that they wouldn't be losing much money) no one would come in. They don’t travel to a burger joint for a drink. They have to give away the hamburger for it to work.

4. The right size incentive should still leave something to the imagination. How many people will go in, read the wonderful menu (I haven’t been, so I’m hoping for their sake the menu is great), and say, oh, now I don’t want that little burger for free, I’ll have the Super-Avalanche Burger instead?

5. People feel obligated when you give them something for nothing. It seems risky, but it’s a fabulous way to introduce yourself and create good feelings in your guests that will last far beyond that day.

Folks who did come in, will be back if the rest of the Experience lives up to this event. Folks who didn’t come in, will be nagged by what they missed, and will come give them a try on another day, because of the goodwill such an honest gesture created.

Pretty smart advertising, if you ask me.

Kudos to Harvey’s.

Kudos and thank you to Friar, for the buzz I couldn’t resist expanding on today.

What do you think of Harvey’s promotion? Would you take the (possible) short-term loss for long-term gains?



Grow and be well,

Kelly Erickson

Tip of the Week: How You Can Get Me to Jump Over my Granny

When a Third-Grader Can Do It Better, Please, Fire Your Marketing People

Have you heard about my love of champagne, which last week I attempted to combine with my love of a good discount?

Only it wasn’t a good discount. Click here to read about it. It’s real short, I’ll wait.

Are you back already? Wow, you read fast.

So my kid, who is vaguely aware of my love of bubbles in green bottles, says to me last night when I tell her of the unused coupon,

They should have just called it 15 bucks off $110. They get the same amount of money, but you would have bought three bottles to get that, Mama.”

The kid knows me too well. Without ever reading last week’s Tip, she sees the problem and a great solution. (Slightly flawed, since I would have skipped red lights for $95 bucks off $190, which no longer makes business sense. She used her common sense to come up with a workable number.)

It’s worth revisiting.

Create incentives people will jump over their grannies to use. Or their nine-year-olds.

From the mouths of babes, part 3. You can read part 1 here, and part 2 is here.



Grow and be well,

Kelly Erickson

Building an Empire on Resentment

Is It Quicksand?

Are you talkin’ to me?

Launching a new product or service? Expanding? Taking advantage of the slowdown to get your message out with less competition? If you’re a small business owner, you’ve got to make a plan, and get the word out about what you offer—and you need to do it every day.

Like the rest of your Positioning, your marketing strategy must be carefully tuned to your audience. Too few messages and you may not be remembered; too many, and your prospect will tune you out.

Monday, we talked about the danger of driving away customers who are already sold on you; Tuesday we dug into the customer’s Perception of a withholding campaign.

Yet somehow, there are “success” stories being told:

My friend Bert says he does great by sending out loads of email,* with little drips of information, over a long time. By the end, he’s got a nice list of people who are interested. What gives?”

*Your friend Bert may mention telemarketing, long, long direct sales letters, or other direct mail efforts (magazine and credit card offers come to mind), blasted repeatedly at a very large, unwilling audience. It depends on Bert’s business.

What customers are you attracting?

Methods of annoying, teasing, withholding, and other prospect-pummeling are like trying to build an empire on resentment. It changes who will stay with you, and who will say yes.

It’s a numbers game.

When BigBankOla sends offers to 500,000 people in a region, their offer is going to stick with some people. People who desperately need money right then. People who are just dissatisfied, but not desperate, threw the junk mail in the trash on their way to start dinner.

If you call 75 receptionists per day, one boss is going to be so sick of hearing your name announced that he’s going to agree to talk to you. Increase it to 75 an hour, and now you’ve got 8 annoyed C-levels to talk to every day.

Get a really big megaphone to announce your latest Internet sensation, and thousands of people flock to hear your message. They want your “Great Growth Make Money Online Quick Scheme,” theoretically, but they haven’t heard specifics or seen a dollar sign.

You decide to hold off. To tease, to entice. To build attraction. Clickthrough rates were great on that first piece where you said nothing. Here goes again. Well, more people didn’t follow through this time, but you started with so many. A few just aren’t interested. Again, and again, you deliver nothing, until you are left with a fraction of the audience you had in the beginning. You think that interest waned and you have only devoted fans left. Wrong.

You don’t have brand Propheteers, pre-sold on your Vision. The folks who are left at the end of all these cons are the desperate, the bored, the worn-out, the hangers-on. The easily conned are your remaining prospects.

It’s a numbers game, and you will sell to a percentage of them.

Is The Big Tease part of your big plan?

Doing this isn’t always “wrong.” BigBankOla has the money, staff, and time to throw at the problem. They don’t want to make more personal, genuine efforts at growing their business. They’ve done a lot of research; they’ve planned it exactly. They know exactly how large the mass mailing needs to be, who those desperate seekers are, how many will be desperate enough, and how to catch their eye. Whether I like it or not personally, they know what they’re doing. Do you?

Are you making the decision consciously? Are the easily conned, your Ideal Customers? Does this align with your company’s Purpose?

Some do build an empire on resentment. If you try, don’t be surprised that your customers are not your fans. They’ll be gone, as soon as the next empire-builder catches their eye.

Can we build our empires on-line and off with a kinder, gentler Tease? What works or doesn’t work for you?



Grow and be well,

Kelly Erickson

Will the Real #10 Please Stand Up!

Thank You, Random.org

Yeah, we’re going a bit OT today. If you don’t want to get Whacky, come back next time.

The world is a cruel place, and my fabulous readers have found that out this week. In spite of some stellar efforts that made my stats (which I really don’t obsess over, Tei) do cartwheels, not a one of you has left the required quotation in the comments of last Thursday’s amazing review of a life-altering work of non-fiction.

You won’t mind my telling you, stats or not I was miffed.

Plus amazon wants my money, because Jeff Bezos and I are like this, and he’s been watching the (distinct lack of) drama.

What to do? Sad for an Experience Designer to admit, but this Experience has not resulted in a giggly winner jumping up and down.

Until now?

I woke up today at an excruciating hour, and remembered somebody mentioning this cool random number generator which they used on their blog to give away something. Hey, I’ve got something I can’t give away! Perfect! I got up, I hunted it down, and looked at the number of comments on my review last week.

I typed “18” into the random number generator. No snickering, for a very niche blog I think that’s a nice number.

I’m not 6 Weeks or Men With Pens or even the occasionally very wild Writing Forward (thanks, Friar), but I love my commenters, because you’re smart and you make me think, as well as letting me make you think a bit. (Who says I can’t link out purely for fun?)

It’s decided: I’ll give A Whack on the Side of the Head to the commenter whose number comes up, since y’all found better things to do this week than to locate this reference to my age, on a post which followed and mentioned my birthday:

What’s that? Oh, thanks. Don't look a day over 38 3/4, do I?”

That post has been restored to its former glory, so the reference to my age is no more. It has been there all week, though, you hunters. No crying that it was too difficult.

I Bet You Think This Song Is About You, Don’t You?

I typed in “18.” Yeah, I said that already. I hit “Go,” or whatever their button said. It spits it out: 11.

I count down, 1, 2, 3,... oh, darn, the eleventh comment is my own. This could get sticky, since I leave quite a few comments.

I tried again. Didn’t you read the title?

Number 10, you may stand up. And for those of you who are sick of this tease, it’s that Quebecer who was the only one to jump up and down at all in those comments, so it sorta seems fair anyway, even though he was wrong and then got Bright Shiny Object Syndrome and forgot to get it right.


Mr. Chartrand, if you feel like emailing me a secret post-office box address that you only keep for a week so I won’t send you flowers daily after this, I’ll talk to Jeff and we’ll get that book right out to you. ‘Cuz I’m not going to disappoint Roger.


The rest of you? Buy the book already. It will alter the way you look at your world. No kidding.



Grow and be well,

Kelly Erickson

Inspiration Points: Making Money Online or Off, Vanish

Wednesday Words

To Go Where Your VisionPoints, a few inspiration points for you and your business.


Designing your product for monetization first, and people second
will probably leave you with neither.
—Tara Hunt, HorsePigCow, 07-12-2006



Grow and be well,

Kelly Erickson


Tomorrow I'd really like to give a book away here at the Maximum Customer Experience Blog. If you haven't had a chance, please click to read the rules, and take a Whack at it. (The comments may give you some hints.) It's your Maximum hunting skills I'm waiting for!

What Are You Withholding?

Is Holding Back Good for Your Business?


Wolf Jingle

Infomercials do it. Long sales letters do it. 89-day e-courses do it. The slow come-on is not a new marketing technique. There are some times when it works, and some times when it makes for minimum customer experience. Tipping points can go both ways.

What are the limits of withholding?

I’m not old enough to have driven past them as a kid, but many of us have heard of these legendary teaser billboards (or seen modern knock-offs): a series of five or six little boards spaced out, planted on the side of the road, each with a part of a witty jingle ending in


Burma Shave

Burma Shave images by R. Franke


They gave out their message a little at a time, hoping it would catch your eye and entice you to buy their product. With hundreds of variations you could drive past, thinking of Burma Shave first when you needed to lather up for a shave became almost inevitable.

Yesterday we discussed the drip-drip-drip of a series of emails that have been trying to seduce me for weeks. I had asked to be part of the mailing list (which is rare for me). The first videos were promising. A whole lot of promising. When I realized the sender was never going to get to the point, I stopped listening.

Statistics say it takes at least seven “touches” for your business to be remembered by a potential customer.

For bricks-and-mortar companies this should be done with a combination of touchpoints: Signage, word-of-mouth mentions, traditional advertising, personal interactions, your website, your blog and of course, your store or office itself.

That’s seven ways to reach out and touch a prospect. Even if you hit each one once, they’re going to remember you.

So what’s wrong with these emails I’ve been getting? He’s just hitting me 7 times, right?

Wrong. I’m not having any problems remembering him. Here’s why this deprivation or teasing is bad, for me:

1. I opted in. I signed up. I already want to know what you are trying to sell me.

Continuing to tell me how very valuable what you are going to sell me is, but not telling me what you’ll sell or even when, bores and irritates me.

If I walk into a restaurant and ask for a table, will they say yes, we’ll get to that, but first let me tell you how great it will be?

I hope not.

Now if I’m at home and I haven’t expressed an interest, beginning my Experience by touching me with a variety of messages is absolutely necessary.

2. It makes me suspect I can’t afford it.

She saw him standing in the section marked
‘If U have 2 ask, U can't afford it’ lingerie”
—Prince, The Glamorous Life

Why are you waiting so long and trying so darn hard? Is it going to cost as much as a vacation to Naples or a two-carat diamond, either of which would be more fun than what you’re trying to sell me?

Giving me too much time to think about the awesome, unbelievable thing, allows me to plant my own seeds of doubt.

3. Methinks thou dost protest too much. This is the most important point: the longer you go on and on, the more you sound like a used-car salesman, and the less I believe you!

Crystal at Big Bright Bulb recently wrote a fabulous article discussing how much is too much. Like 89-lesson e-courses.

The short answer: One minute past when I say the word YES is too much.

When I tell my attorney to draw up the contract for her retainer, she does not say, let me pitch you some more. (Trust me. She doesn’t.) What she says is, “Sign here.” And so should you.

Tease too much, you lose your captive audience.

So that’s what’s going on in the customer’s Perception. Opt-in marketing uses different rules. When you’re designing a campaign to build your business, keep focused on the customer’s point of view.

Later this week we’ll get down and talk about the really dirty bits: how The Big Tease campaign can hurt your business beyond just driving away customers who are already sold.

How do you respond when a company won’t come to the point?



Grow and be well,

Kelly Erickson


Are you the most creative thinker reading the MCE Blog today? Claim your prize and bragging rights. Please click here to read the rules, and take a Whack at it. (The comments may give you some hints.) Only two days left to find the post where I make a reference to my age!

Tipping Points Go Both Ways

Did You Know That You Had Me at Hello?

After four cliffhanger video-emails, I reached the Tipping Point.

No, not that Tipping Point.

They were good, I’ll admit it. Charming, hesitating, intimate; stopping courteously before taking up too much of my time. Promising to sell me... something, right after telling me a few more secrets. Asking for my patience. Why, of course! Believably amateur. Slickly unslick. Each one had me hanging on the edge of my seat for something that never materialized, like the date who can’t get up the nerve to kiss me.

Four was my magic number. After that, every email that came in from him I marked as read and put in a “someday if I have absolutely nothing else to do” folder. If you can’t put one over the plate in four pitches, you walk.

Minimum customer experience. No sale.

Eroding my resistance or eroding my confidence? How many pitches before you notice you’ve been slimed?



Grow and be well,

Kelly Erickson


Are you the most creative thinker reading the MCE Blog today? Claim your prize and bragging rights. Please click here to read the rules, and take a Whack at it. (The comments may give you some hints.) Three days left to find the post where I make a reference to my age!

Thanks, Crystal. We'll take another Whack at this subject tomorrow.

I Know It Was Earth-Shattering! But I Lost It in Bed!

Sometimes, Writing Things Down Isn’t All It’s Cracked Up to Be

Because everybody loves a good bed-headline once in a while.


Illegible Bed Notes

I frequently suggest folks keep a pen and paper handy by the side of the bed for middle-of-the-night ideas. It cuts down on insomnia if you can just write down the Earth-shattering concept and roll over. Blogging friends Paul and Nick are big proponents of the pen and paper, also. Do they recommend turning on a light?

One potentially interesting title, no blooming idea what the subject was.

re: what?

:)



Grow and be well lighted,

Kelly Erickson


Have you found the post where I make a reference to my age yet? Boy, do I want to give away a prize, but there’s only four days left to claim it! Why not click here to read the rules, and take a Whack at it?

Tip of the Week: Put a Cork in the Fine Print

AKA How to Pass the “Are You Kidding Me?” Test

I love champagne.

I mean, ooh, I love champagne. The sexy crashing sound as it hits the glass; the musty, bready aroma of the good stuff; the omniscient, Zelda-Fitzgerald-feeling from a single, perfect glass.* Heck, I even love how you can take nearly-mediocre stuff and pour it with Guinness and get Irish heaven (otherwise known as a Black Velvet).

So when my local mega-liquor-store sends me their weekly e-newsletter with a $5 off coupon for champagne, I hit print and get ready to go, now. Boy, do they know me, I’m whistling.

On the way out the door, the fine print catches my eye: any purchase over $100.

No champers for this author.

Folks, this is 5%. Not even tricky math; I’m not drinking yet. That is an incentive to nobody.

By the time I drive there and back, the five bucks is gone one way or another. At $5 off my usual $35 bottle, this still seemed like a good reason to throw some CO2 into the air. At $5 off $100? I’ll sit back down, because I’m going to need the other $65 for filling up the tank. I got half a good Experience out of this, which is worse than none at all.

Did this pass the “Are you kidding me?” test with anyone at corporate besides the person who wrote it? Why bother?

Tip: When you offer an incentive, you are looking to overcome a resistance your customer has to purchasing from you. Do a little research, use a little common sense. Know how high the barrier is, so your incentive can overcome it. Put a cork in the fine print.



Grow and be well,

Kelly Erickson


* “Champagne’s a heavy mist before my eyes,” says Jimmy Stewart’s character, Macaulay Connor, in The Philadelphia Story. Mmm.


Did you get a chance to read Thursday’s article? I’m surprised to be saying this: no one has found the post where I make a reference to my age yet. There’s a prize involved for you, and five days left to find it! Why not click here to read the rules, and take a Whack at it?

Why is Go Daddy so Gosh Darn Ugly?

I Love 'Em But Their Website Makes My Skin Crawl!

After Today, You Can Have a Better Site Than a $250 Million Company

Disclaimer: Go Daddy is VisionPoints’ web hosting company. I think they’re superb. Their customer service is top-notch. That is a big part of Experience Design, especially in the beginning of a relationship with a company whose doors I will never set foot inside. If you’re just a little tech-y, but don’t have a resident tech guru, you’d never want to go anywhere else.

This is about their user interface (the website you and I see and try to use), a huge part of their Experience Design after the relationship is established, and about making sure you will never, ever put up a website like it for your business.

Breaking All the Rules

The site is a classic example of what not to do. It’s crowded, it’s crazy, it’s unfocused, and it’s discouragingly difficult to use, even when you’ve been a customer for quite some time.

Go Daddy home page

“Hello? I'd like to buy the racecar driver on special for $1.99. Thanks.”

When you try to use a feature it gets even uglier, as randomly-sized menus seem to pop up from almost anything you roll over on the homepage. This does not get better on interior pages.

Go Daddy with menu

Wildly confusing menus pop up and are difficult to get rid of. They can get in the way of the action you were trying to take (Log Out, for instance, is below a menu you must carefully avoid on some screens). And now I can't even see the nice lady who has nothing to do with web hosting.

On my 17" laptop, an arguably standard size screen to design for, this disheartening mess continues way “below the fold” (below where you have to scroll), where only information I don’t necessarily need should be placed.

Go Daddy below the fold

See the racecar drivers' faces? Next to them (under the menu) it reads: “New to Go Daddy? Not sure where to begin? Our Product Advisor is your personal guide.” With a big arrow leading from their faces. Is Dale Jr. going to teach me about Go Daddy? No matter. With the dark color, pop-up menus, and thousand other things grabbing your attention on this page, you'll never notice the bar anyway.

On every page, some menu items are repeated in various locations, leaving the viewer always wondering if they are choosing the “right” version of the task they want to accomplish.

What Rules?

Simplify, simplify, simplify. Three rules in three areas. Follow these and you’ll have a site that puts Go Daddy’s to shame:

From a graphic design standpoint: What do your customers need to see?

Visual focus: clear Purpose jumping out at the viewer

No clutter

Aesthetically pleasing (yes, good looks count)

From a usability standpoint: What do we need to function?

Ease of reading

Logical progression through navigation

One location for each action

From a sales (marketing) standpoint: What do we need to read?

A hierarchy from headline to details, leading to the action I take next

Benefits to me (the Ideal Customer)

Straight talk, no jargon or confusion

Oh, boy, a debate!

I think they’d be making sales a lot easier, and post-sale satisfaction a lot higher, if this part of their Customer Experience were a lot better. Heck, I don’t think there’s any way to go but up on this.

Let’s debate this for a minute. Not whether they’re functioning in spite of themselves (they’re making plenty of money, no doubt)—whether there are benefits to what they’re doing.

For instance, are they actually being told that this terrible user Experience is somehow the right thing for them to do? Go Daddy has the money to hire me and any other Experience Designers they choose. So why is their site so horrid?

Is there any reason why they need to be so awful, from a business standpoint? What do you think?



Grow and be well,

Kelly Erickson


If you haven’t read yesterday’s article, no one has found the post where I make a reference to my age yet. There’s a prize involved for you, but there’s only six days left to find it! Why not click here to read the rules, and take a Whack at it?

Because the Side of my Head Has Been Sore for 25 Years: Prize Time!

I Feel Just Like a Certain Prize-Fighter...

Yes, folks, it’s been 25 years since Roger von Oech wrote A Whack on the Side of the Head. I’m going to confess now, so you don’t go back through every one of my posts trying to find the one where I mentioned my age, do the math, and then pin me down to whether I really read it at that age...

Nevermind. Go back and read every single one of my posts. First one to find the post where I mention refer to* my age, and leave a comment here quoting that post, gets a copy of the 25th Anniversary Edition. Really. My age will only be mentioned in that post for one week, and then I’m taking the mention out, so after you read this, get going! You have to quote it—just knowing how old I am ‘cause I talk elsewhere doesn’t count.

... so I confess. The side of my head has only been sore for about twenty years. From the moment Roger von Oech’s deceptively simple book came into my life, I have been whacking myself on the side of the head whenever I get stuck, in any sphere of my life. On the list of life-transforming books, this is easily in my top ten. His quirky creative-thinking vocabulary is so much a part of my life, that it wasn’t until reading the 25th Anniversary Edition of A Whack on the Side of the Head that I even realized how many of his ideas are part of how I approach life every day.

What’s A Whack to you?

  • Permission to let go of conventions
  • Hundreds of new ways to look at your same-old stuff
  • Brilliant sillyness, delivered fresh every time you crack open a page

This is a book you can not read the same way twice. With a fresh problem on your mind, you will find a whole new book in your hands.

If you own the 1983 classic or a revised edition, fear not. I dug out my old copy and found delightful updates, timely additions, and revisions that made me smile, like the wonderful random-word page.

Working on your company’s Experience Design? Give yourself a Whack. New ways to look at your Vision, your direction, and at reaching your Ideal Customer, are already rattling around in your head. This will shake those ideas free. (And if not, give VisionPoints a call. We’re already Whacked.) Stuck on a personal problem? Another Whack. Can’t imagine what to write for tomorrow’s blog post? I dare you, put your finger down anywhere on that random-word page in chapter eight.

I sold A Whack to my mother two weeks ago. She sat down with my copy and fell for it instantly, made me tell her about my love for all things Roger von Oech, and told my father to order her a copy on amazon as we continued talking. By the time they got home from their visit to Delaware, the book was waiting for her. I’m not making this up. I’m just that good.  :)

Dear Reader, I won’t leave you hanging. Why is Kelly telling me about this book? you ask. Well, I’m a big fan of Cam Beck’s and I read his posts devotedly. When he did a smart review of the new Whack at Chaos Scenario, I dropped him a line to say that his photo looked like my entire library, including my very well-worn Whack. If a book’s worth keeping, it’s worth dogearing beyond all reason, to me (and to Cam, apparently). To my unending surprise, Mr. von Oech read that comment and wrote a lovely email, asking if I’d like a review copy of the 25th Anniversary Edition.

Kelly does not say no to free books. Especially to new editions of books she already loves by people who’ve changed her life.

Your intrepid author wants your small business and your life to be changed by her suggestions. That’s what I’m here for at the Maximum Customer Experience Blog, and that’s what we do at VisionPoints. Lofty, I know, but it’s me. I’ve loved this book for half my life, and you will, too.

Oh, there is that one trick: First one to find the post where I mention refer to* my age, and leave a comment here quoting that post, gets a copy of the 25th Anniversary Edition of A Whack on the Side of the Head, straight from me to you. Because I love my readers.



Grow Whacky and be well,

Kelly Erickson


*I don't think I'm being too difficult, here, but just in case: there is only one direct reference to my age in all the posts here at MCE. Maybe that clarifies, or maybe y'all need to think a little more creatively. If you think you've found it you'll quote it here, right, and not worry about looking silly? ‘Cause I'm itching to give this book away...


Buy it now on amazon:

A Whack on the Side of the Head: How You Can Be More Creative

25th Anniversary Edition (2008)

by Roger von Oech

Inspiration Points: Planning, Prepwork, & the Payoff

Wednesday Words

To Go Where Your VisionPoints, a few inspiration points for you and your business.


The fight is won or lost far away from witnesses—
behind the lines, in the gym and out there on the road,
long before I dance under those lights.
—Muhammad Ali


Grow and be well,

Kelly Erickson

You Definitely Don't Want to Know These 8 Random Things About Me

Tag, Tag, Tag...

Okay, but just this once

Since I never do memes like Cam Beck’s 4 x 4 Meme, like Naomi Dunford’s “I Never Called It a Meme,” Meme, or like Brian Yerkes’ “Business Cards of Bloggers” Meme, I’ll play, just this once twice thrice. But only because Brett, whom I adore, got the ball rolling, then Ellen, whose call is irresistable, said hey, and my pal Matt, who calls ‘em like he sees ‘em while visiting Rogue Ink, tapped me on the shoulder again. Is this a hint? If y’all don’t think I’m revealing enough of myself all around the Internet, well, Janice knows that I did my share of revealing before the ‘net came along.

With all that link love, if you can read the paragraph above you win a prize.

8 Things

Since James Lipton is never going to have me on Inside the Actors’ Studio, I’ll start with three questions I’d love to be asked by him:

1. What turns you on, creatively, spiritually, or emotionally?

People who love their kids (Happy Mother’s Day, everyone!); suits/well-dressed people generally; great writing; ambition; a sharp sense of humor; scent; art; foreign accents; intelligence (not necessarily in that order)

2. What turns you off, creatively, spiritually, or emotionally?

Dumbing down; bad grammar; condescension; “letting yourself go”; prejudice; cigarette smoke; violence in life or on-screen; meanness

3. What professions other than your own would you like to attempt?

Acting; genealogy; long-haul truck driving; professional miniature crafting


And the rest:

4. I love rain. Walking in it, listening to it, the scent of a rainy day... I’ve even written bad poetry about rain. Some of my poems have been published—none of the ones that were about rain.

5. I share my birthday with Rod Stewart, and I love love love that fact.

6. My nickname was “Tigger,” for a short time as a teen, because I’m (sing it...) bouncy-bouncy-bouncy-bouncy, fun-fun-fun-fun-fun! No kidding. I hate when people call me “Kel,” or frankly any nickname. “Tigger” was quashed rather quickly, though I still love the reason for it.


7. People whose work I adore: (use your favorite search engine ‘cuz I am just not providing a link to each one)

Ken Burns

Leslie Cabarga

Ivan Chermayeff and Tom Geismar

Bob Geldof

Cedric Gibbons

Tricia Guild

Al Gore

Jim Henson

Katherine Hepburn

Steve Jobs

Betsey Johnson

David McCullough

Hattie McDaniel

Kevin McHale

Barnett Newman

Michael Osborne

Andrea Palladio

Robert Parrish

Gordon Ramsay

Zandra Rhodes

Fred Rogers

Mark Rothko

John Saladino

Franz Schubert

Carlos Segura

Kiki Smith

Stephen Starr

Adam Tihany

Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown

Bennett and Judie Weinstock

Vicente Wolf

What do they all have in common? Determination. Vision.


8. I am photo-phobic, meaning I avoid having my picture taken like it’s torture, which it is for me. I have an aunt with the same phobia. Even when I’m trying to get a good shot I’m impatient and probably impossible. I think it shows...


Kelly Erickson: Photo Shoot 1 Kelly Erickson: Photo Shoot 2 Kelly Erickson: Photo Shoot 3

The shoes couldn’t make faces.


That’s it. Though most of my pinstriped suit is still on me (see legs, above), I think we've gotten plenty personal today. No more tag for a while, okay? I’m all worn out.

Though I’d love to come up with 24 people to tag, for the three times I got hit, there are only three who I’d really like to hear from. I’ll call it one for each hit. I don’t know if any of them will come and play, so here goes:

Amy, Write From Home

Charlie, Ignite Living

Paul, Idea Sandbox

Tag, guys. If you feel like getting a little frivolous, you’re it! Here’s the rules, stolen from Brett’s blog:

1. Each player starts with 8 random facts/habits about themselves.

2. People who are tagged, write a blog post about their own 8 random things, and post these rules.

3. At the end of your post you need to tag 8 people (oops!) and include their names.

4. Don’t forget to leave them a comment and tell them they’ve been tagged, and to read your blog.



Grow and be well,

Kelly Erickson

Tip of the Week: Mother's Day Special - The WoMamas and the WoPapas

Be a Trusted Resource

Let’s close out the Brand Propheteers series with an action tip for you today.

A while back, I wrote a post asking Who Drives Better, Men or Women? There are many studies that show women are traditionally better drivers of word-of-mouth.

This Mother’s Day weekend, think about your Mom. She was always recommending a doctor, a new snack food, a restaurant where babies are welcome, or a shop where the salespeople never tire of answering her questions in plain English without making her feel pressured to buy.

Times are changing, and men are catching on to the amazing power of word-of-mouth. It’s time to smash the tradition! Ladies and gentlemen, shy and bold, business owners and consumers: Get out and recommend one product or service today. Open your ears, listen for opportunities, and you can make someone else’s day better. Focus more on others than on yourself and your shyness will recede. You’ll hear chances to make recommendations all around you, with friends, customers, and strangers.

Make an introduction, like Keith Ferrazzi. Suggest a better match for your customer, like Kris Kringle in Miracle on 34th Street. Rave about a company you purchase from, or a blog you read (Harry and his commenters got a great discussion going about customer service going at Men With Pens this week), and become one of their Propheteers.

Give generously, and that generosity will come back to you. As you give, your friends, family, colleagues, and customers will remember your help, and the ranks of your own Propheteers will grow.

Bonus: Make listening and giving a habit. After you get out and rave about somebody today, do it again tomorrow. Soon you’ll be known not just as a great businessperson, but also as a facilitator, and a trusted resource.



Grow and be well,

Kelly Erickson

Inspiration Points: No Regrets!

Wednesday Words

To Go Where Your VisionPoints, a few inspiration points for you and your business.


A man is not old until regrets take the place of dreams.
—John Barrymore


Grow and be well,

Kelly Erickson

Brand Propheteers: Part Three - Grand Concepts, Practical Advice, and the One Great WoM Story

Delaware Valley Business Owners Say It’s Simple! Put a Smile on my Lips if You Want my Word-of-Mouth

This is the third and final post in the series Brand Propheteers: 10 Ways to Get the People You Already Know to Rave About Your Firm. Click on the links to read Part One, and Part Two.

Propheteer: The very best driver of word-of-mouth for your company: a cross between prophet (someone who preaches) and volunteer. VisionPoints’ term for the raving fans we want you to have more of!

Let’s Sum It Up—or Not

BUSY

Boy, did I hear that word a lot in the last month. As a small business owner and a single mom, I hear your pain. I’m glad you folks are busy, because that means you are taking care of business. Readers and interviewees, I want you to consider adding one word to your busy schedule: Metrics.

We all want to increase the ranks of our brand Propheteers. More than half of the owners I spoke with said their repeat and referral customers generally made larger purchases and easier sales.

I didn’t expect exact numbers, so my questions were worded to encourage approximations. Still, I was surprised that not one owner I spoke with is breaking down their sales to determine their source. Many said they don’t know whether advertising or other efforts are pulling their weight, yet most are not asking how new customers found them. Without measurements, you won’t know if increased efforts at encouraging word-of-mouth are gaining traction.

Brand Propheteers can be powerful advocates for your company, no doubt about it. We don’t need hard numbers to remember when new customers have come to us excited because a friend or a coworker insisted they give our company a try. That pre-sold customer is a lot of fun to take care of, too. Yet very few local companies have a program in place to actively encourage repeat business, and only two that I spoke to have a system for encouraging referrals.

A simple loyalty program giving discounts or goodies to repeat customers, and a policy of thanking Propheteers for making referrals—this can be as simple as a thank-you note or as formal as a gift card toward their next purchase with you—will yield immediate and measurable results. Let your Propheteers help you grow: they’ll feed proud to have helped out, and you? You might not have to be quite so busy.

Are you actively encouraging and measuring the vital role your raving fans play?


Grand Concepts and Practical Advice


4. Positive Experience*

“Referred customers expect the fun that was relayed to them,” says Donna Rego, owner of Bellefonte Café and Trading Company. She cites their music and atmosphere at the top of the list of what gets customers to rave, after their food (of course!). Donna describes the café’s Experience as a “California vibe,” with a relaxed, family feel, and social interaction between staff and guests. “Customers feel at home here, that’s why they tell friends to try us.”

At several of the companies I visited, sound played a critical role in setting the mood. The key, according to one store owner, is “not [being] too overpowering.” What does your place sound like? Hushed can be as distracting as noisy, so find a good balance.

“Customers spread the word because of the positive Experience that they have,” says Betty Bronstein, owner of Artisans’ Gifts and Furniture. The setting, the easy flow of traffic, the colors, the mix of merchandise, and her “happy” staff, who “pick up on each customer’s needs,” create that Experience. “They’re so used to taking care of others. We try to help them feel good about treating themselves, too.”

Ed Hawkins, owner of Hawkins & Sons Custom Home Appliance Center, says his philosophy is to imagine himself as his customer, to try to see the Experience as they do. The company’s (in-home) service calls are crucial. “Our trucks... make a professional presentation right away. We’ve got clean-cut, uniformed guys who get their work done and talk to the customer when possible. Actually, our service guys are creating word-of-mouth and future sales by making that Experience great.”

Experience is all these touchpoints and more. From your telephone manner to your website, from your store to your merchandise, sights, sounds, smells, staff, and customer satisfaction—they’re all part of the Customer Experience. Take a good look all around you, and see your business from a clear Perspective. Your customers are deciding whether to rave to their friends, based on the Experience they have with you today.

*I gave no suggestions for answers to any questions, nor multiple-choice lists, by the way. This top-ten list is in order of number of mentions, or you know I’d have Experience as #1.  :)


5. Know your customers

As I talked with Betty Bronstein, it became clear that she knows her Ideal Customer extremely well. “She’s always doing things for someone else.” Betty described the time of day she comes in, the likely first-time purchase, and what her buying habits would be as she returned on future visits. “Her time is valuable.... She comes to a small store when there are other options she could choose, because she wants information...” that an educated staff like hers can provide. “This is a very clear persona to you,” I said, and she proceeded to describe one of her less frequent visitors, the typical guy persona. “Married guys—they have a plan.... Oh, they can really shop the store—especially during the holidays.” All her descriptions were so vivid it was as if four or five Ideal Customers were walking around behind us as we talked.

Many owners outlined their Ideal Customer in perfect detail. They’ve made a study of who their customer is, and are able to describe every element of the customer’s buying habits and motivations.

In arriving a bit early for some of our interviews, I watched this attention in practice, as owners discussed children and hobbies with real customers they knew incredibly well. Carol Harvey, owner of Hansel & Gretel, says “I'm from the midwest—that's why I'm friendly,” while acknowledging that the relaxed style she looks for in all her staff helps them learn more about their customers. Knowing a persona or two (or five!) is not a marketing “tactic” to them. For these small business owners, their understanding of the Ideal Customer comes from unhurried relationships, with people who happen to buy from them—and wouldn’t consider going anywhere else.


6. Price

I wrote a few weeks ago that I had not heard the word “recession” spoken once in these interviews. At last, one owner did wonder about changing course in a “downturn,” but by and large these owners seemed less than concerned about the greater economy’s effect on them individually.

Small business owners tend to be incredibly positive people, inclined to look for the silver lining. I think there’s even more to it than that. Many owners talked about the “advantages” they have over larger stores, and said they do not have to worry as much about price or economic woes, because their customers come to them for so many more reasons.

Still, about 1/3 of the folks I interviewed did say their prices get customers raving. Can this be true? I talked to owners of businesses at all price points. It was the owners of the more upscale companies who mentioned price!


7. Personalization/customization

Sure, you know you need a great product or service, but what makes it so remarkable that customers can’t wait to spread the word? Almost every owner I talked to said the advantage of being a small business is your ability to customize.

Helen Walker, owner of Designer Stencils, says repeat customers may not have worked with her for years. When they return, “they’ve got a 6, 10, or even 15 year old catalogue that they want to order from. We might not sell the item anymore, but we keep files of everything, so we can still put that order together for them. We’re known for that.” They love doing completely custom work, too.

Diane Abrams customizes her expert services for the needs of busy dance studios, who know they can arrange for private fittings for a group during off hours, making sending new students to Brandywine Dance a breeze. Their expertise is a draw, and their flexibility cements relationships with dance professionals.

How can you make your product or service feel exclusive? Go beyond price and selection—leave those to the big stores. Special hours, features, services, and other personalization get customers to rave about how different you are. What can your company offer to make your customer’s Experience unique?


8. Reach out to media and professionals

Many owners reach out to new groups of potential customers through charitable work and donations. They do feel it contributes to word-of-mouth referrals. For small business owners, tracking the tangible benefits of this outreach is difficult. The love of giving back inspires the folks I spoke to, though a number of owners wished they knew if anything was coming of it.

Several, including Diane Abrams and Ed Hawkins, cited business-to-business (B2B) relationships as vital to their growth. Ed says that ongoing relationships with vendor representatives and factories who know and trust him is a big source of referrals.

Helen Walker is a master of reaching out to both media and professionals. Some years ago, a freelance journalist cold-called her to ask about using their home products in an article, which later caught the eye of a magazine publisher. “It snowballed from there,” she says, and their products have been featured in top mags including Woman’s Day and Country Home. She cites accessibility as a factor in working with the media: “We send samples right out, when asked,” and have even done photo shoots in her own staff’s homes to accommodate the tight deadlines of the magazine world. Over time, trendspotters have learned to look to her company.

Helen is also active in industry shows to help chefs discover her company’s culinary product line, and counts many well-known executive pastry chefs among her clients. Working with their exacting needs—even improving products to their specifications—increases her company’s reputation immensely.

Start small, be generous and flexible, and create your own snowball effect through media and professional contacts, which Diane Abrams called “mutually beneficial business relationships.” Put the emphasis on mutually beneficial.


9. Making mistakes

Though I did not ask any questions about mistakes, nearly every owner talked about making mistakes in one area or another. Each was incredibly thoughtful and open on the subject. Staffing, and making the best possible use of the Internet, were the top areas where owners felt they’d made mistakes. Hearing successful business owners discuss mistakes again and again made me wonder whether it is a component of their success.

Betty Bronstein made the case for mistakes very well. She describes making mistakes as a positive: “When you’re making mistakes, it’s because you are changing, expanding, considering, learning.” Her confident approach to making mistakes is one reason customers feel “a part of” her company’s success.

One restaurant owner said customers like to see him “goof up. I think it’s sometimes what they tell friends about—’Yeah, they got it all wrong. Then they fixed it and we had a better time than before.’ They see us differently afterward.”

We’re all going to goof up. It’s a learning experience. Let your guard down a little as you correct your mistakes, and it can be an unexpected way to create raving fans!


10. Always Be Closing

You’ve heard it before, and here it is again. You don’t have to hit people over the head, but as you develop relationships with your customers, you should make that request for their business—and don’t forget to ask for referrals, too! Sometimes all it takes for a fan to start raving is knowing how much you’d appreciate their recommendation. We’re all busy people; we don’t always think to rave about you. Most business owners don’t do this, so this is an edge for you. Ask for the sale, ask for the referral; then you’ll be top of the mind.

Though not everyone mentioned the concept, on the way out of the interview nearly every owner found a way to solicit my business! The best solicitation was from Helen Walker, just featured in Martha Stewart Weddings: “Getting married?” she asked, pointing to her fabulous culinary stencils in use on their cover.

Sorry, Helen, not soon.


What’s Your One Great WoM Story?

The last question I asked of everyone: “What’s your one great word-of-mouth story?”

I got some excellent responses, including many who’d had customers from across the globe through a chain of WoM.

I loved the story of a couple from West Point, New York who came all the way to Betty Bronstein’s Delaware shop to buy an entire room of furnishings in one trip, because “they liked talking to [Artisans’ staff] on the phone.” Remember all your customer touchpoints. How’s your telephone service?

My favorite story came from Diane Abrams. She agreed to an interview though she seemed sure she had nothing to say on the subject of word-of-mouth referrals. “Going back to 22 years ago,” she told me of buying the business and beginning from scratch to create a devoted following. She “had to get out and fight” to grow. She personally visited all the local dance studios (wearing out her own shoe leather!). She introduced herself and her plans for the shop, and “began to develop relationships” with the teachers and owners she met. Her dance background meant they had something deeper than just business in common. Many of these people are her friends today, and she continues to accommodate studios’ special needs.

What do I love about this story? To Diane, word-of-mouth meant a customer-to-customer (C2C) opportunity that she doesn’t feel is significant to her business. B2B referrals are the source of 75% or more of her business (like a teacher recommending her store to a student)—she just doesn’t think of that as WoM.

Her one great story is a classic example of how small business can’t get along without Propheteers.

Thanks again to everyone who took a half-hour to talk with me. If you know of someone in the Brandywine Valley/ greater Philadelphia area who’d like to be interviewed for the next article in the series, send me an email to kellye (at) visionpoints (dot) net.

I gotta get a new pair of black pumps first.  :)


Tell your one great word-of-mouth story. Tell us how you create brand Propheteers. Leave a comment about the business that gets you raving, and why. It’s your turn, and I’d love to hear from you.



Grow and be well,

Kelly Erickson


Interview locally, apply lessons globally.

For more information:

Read about the articles coming up in the rest of the 2008 Interview Series

What were The Baffling Results of Wearing Holes in my Black Pumps? Find out!

Previous posts in Brand Propheteers: 10 Ways to Get the People You Already Know to Rave About Your Firm:

Part One—Golden Opportunities and “I’ll Have What She’s Having”

Part Two Is Tricky


If you enjoyed this post, take a moment to subscribe now, at the top left of this page, and don't forget to bookmark (below) to spread the word about Brand Propheteers!


Special thanks:

Diane Abrams, Brandywine Dance Shoppe, 3617 Silverside Road, Wilmington, DE

Betty Bronstein, Artisans’ Gifts and Furniture, 2113 Concord Pike, Wilmington, DE

Carol Harvey, Hansel & Gretel, 3603 Silverside Road, Wilmington, DE

Ed Hawkins, Hawkins & Sons Custom Home Appliance Center, 400 New Road, Elsmere, DE

Donna Rego, Bellefonte Café and Trading Company, 804 Brandywine Boulevard, Wilmington, DE

Helen Walker, Designer Stencils, 2503 Silverside Road, Wilmington, DE

Brand Propheteers: Part Two Is Tricky

Delaware Valley Businesses Are Rocking the Basics to Stay Ahead and Grow: Can You?

This post is the second of three in the series Brand Propheteers: 10 Ways to Get the People You Already Know to Rave About Your Firm. To read Part One, click here.

Propheteer: The very best driver of word-of-mouth for your company: a cross between prophet (someone who preaches) and volunteer. VisionPoints’ term for the raving fans we want you to have more of!


Just How Big a Deal Are Brand Propheteers?

Handwritten sign outside a local café: “You can use 90% of the statistics to mean anything you want 50% of the time.”

In that spirit, three statistics compiled from these interviews. (Note: not every interviewee answered each question, and some could not give numbers, but rather descriptions like “most,” which don’t fit into my calculator too well. These numbers are based only on folks who answered with... numbers.)

Approximately what percentage of your customers are repeat business: 75%

Of these, what percentage would probably describe themselves as fans: 76%

What percentage of your customers are referred to you: 12%