[Want Customers? Think About Launching a Viral Marketing Strategy for the Ages]
As a time-worn marketing person, I can share with you that marketing on the web is a hard-won game. The reality is, getting attention on the web is hard. Viral marketing is hard. And viral isn't what you think it is.
When you are thinking about a marketing strategy that uses the web, you need to remember two things:
1. The difference between a great digital marketing strategy and a good one is that a great digital marketing strategy has to tap into what customers want in their lives. This is often separate from them wanting your product.
2. The web is the birthplace of network effect, which many people have seen when content "goes viral." But going viral is not something that happens with content delivery. It has more to do with psychology.
I want to share with you a strategy we used at Starbucks, where I worked with the digital team, that leverages network effect. I think this was in 2014-15. It taught me that marketing that goes viral isn't really about the messaging, it's about the customer need.
Every winter holiday season, Starbucks rolls out red cups.
We noticed that when these red cups emerged in the stores, Instagram and Twitter would be flooded with photos of people enjoying the red cups.
One of the people on our team came up with this idea that we should ask people to create a beautiful red cup image on social media. We would reward the most creative image creators.
The rules of the game were:
1. Create a stunning image of a Starbucks red cup
2. Post it on Twitter or IG with a hashtag (I think it was #redcupscontest
3. We will choose the best five for prizes, and give one real gold Starbucks cards to an overall winner and supply them with a lifetime of coffee at any store
More than 24,000 people posted images in two days.
What made this is a "viral" marketing campaign is that it had inherent network effect. If you participated, you made it attractive for other people to participate, not just because you might get a reward, but because you could help your own business and lifestyle.
People posted their images not just in the hopes of getting noticed by the brand. They posted them because they sought attention from creative teams, ad agencies, digital design houses, and creative directors. Those people cruised the hashtag looking for talent.
Over the subsequent years, the red cup contest has become a "thing." It celebrates the artist and creative lifestyle.
The secondary benefit is that it helps the brand, because it gives the brand image a halo -- Starbucks is creative, sincere, and a creator of special moments that deserve attention.
Notice, it says nearly nothing about the chain's ability to serve coffee.
Marketing on the web is really good tool for helping people, ad in my personal belief, I think this is the secret sauce to digital marketing. It's not about saying who you are in a fancy way that gains attention.
It's about helping someone who knows you feel better about themselves, learn something, gain extra super powers, or create synergy and serendipity in their life.
That's the magic muscle of digital. It amplifies life. It makes the feedback cycle of risk-taking and communication a positive one for whoever taps into it.
Think about that the next time you seek customers on the web.
Doug Crets
Communications Master, AppWorks Accelerator
Photo credit: xxolgaxx on Pixabay
starbucks business strategy 在 Dan Lok Facebook 的最佳解答
Why would anybody be “crazy” enough to buy coffee for $659 per kilogram?
This is the coffee I’m talking about…
Kopi Luwak, one of the world’s most expensive coffees.
Does it taste better than a $200-cup of coffee or a $5 coffee from Starbucks?
I don’t know. (As you know, I only drink green tea)
But there’s a reason why somebody would be “crazy” enough to buy this.
See, they are targeting what I call…
The Affluent Customers.
These customers buy based on feelings.
They don’t care about the price as long as the value you deliver is irresistible.
And if you want to sell high-ticket items and have high profits in your business, these are the people you want to sell to.
Now, it’s not as easy as you might think...
And that’s why I want to give you 3 strategies on how you can sell to them, so you can sell high-ticket items and make more money with less hassle, stress, and effort…
Ready to take notes?
Good.
1) Scarcity
How can the sellers of Kopi Luwak charge up to $659 for 1kg?
Because only 250kg - 500kg is produced every year… (compared to hundreds of millions tons kg of regular coffee)
If people buy 1kg of coffee at a time, only 250 - 500 people can buy it.
Now, if you’re offering a service, you can tell your prospect, “To make sure you get the highest results possible by working with me, I only take on 5 clients at a time.”
Or if you’re selling a product, you can limit the production or the total amount that you’re selling at a time.
See, when you sell something the prospect can’t have or other people want it as well, affluent customers buy in a heartbeat.
Which brings me to the next strategy...
2) Exclusivity
How can you make your product or service more exclusive?
You can have the prospect go through an application process (Black Card does this).
You can have them sign up to a waiting list. The more expensive, the longer you want to delay the sales process. (Ferrari does this too)
Or you can make them purchase smaller items to qualify for the exclusive items (Hermés does this too).
3) Contrast Pricing
Imagine you’re only selling a product or service for $3,000.
The prospect is thinking, “Do I want to buy this? Yes or no?”
Now you introduce two new choices…
A $997 offer and a $6,997 offer.
All you do is create a small, weak package and a premium offer that you know most people don’t buy.
And suddenly, when you have a $6,997 offer, the $3,000 package doesn’t sound that bad after all to the customer.
I call this method…
The Three Boxes.
Now these are only 3 of the most powerful strategies you can use to sell high-ticket products and services with less hassle and more profits.
If you want to know the new way of selling more effectively and get less objections, put the keyword “closing” below and discover them in one of my most popular articles.
When you put “closing” below, I’ll send you my article about the 8 infamous sales methods that are on their deathbed…
And the NEW way of closing more effectively in the 21st century.
Try them out and see for yourself.
I think you’ll find that they work incredibly well.
starbucks business strategy 在 Vocabno Facebook 的最佳貼文
#大學唔係呢回事🌋 #CityU #Marketing
👶🏻:Marketing(市場學)係乜嘢嚟?有冇學過啲咩得意嘅theory/case可以做例子?
🐶: Marketing簡單黎講就係發掘顧客的需要,然後滿足佢哋。除咗大家最熟悉嘅4P(Price, Promotion, Product, Place),其實仲有4C (Cost, Communication, Customer, Convenience)。我會講Marketing係比較customer-oriented,我哋好多courses都會談及人的習性。比起其他business科好似finance/accounting呢類,我哋更需要去觀察。曾經學過一個80/20定律,就係講通常一間公司80%嘅利潤係來自20%嘅客人,嗰20%嘅客人就係公司嘅loyal customers。所以好多公司都會有會員計劃去retain loyal customers,例如Starbucks嘅金星卡。除咗呢啲之外,Event Management同Public Relations有時都會比人歸納喺Marketing,不同嘅係呢兩個範疇就比較practical,相比起觀察,我覺得經驗更為重要。
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👶🏻: 如果中學冇讀過business科,上到year 1會唔會辛苦㗎?
🐶: 就CityU嘅個案黎講,係完全唔會,因為year 1無論你係咩business major,都會需要上college core(marketing, accounting, management...)所以即使你冇底,呢啲introduction嘅courses亦唔會好難,所以唔洗擔心。我嘅建議係如果大家有心想讀marketing嘅,對啲special terms留心少少,因為marketing好多時都要用一啲terms去illustrate你個idea。
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👶🏻: 讀完Marketing做咩㗎?係咪做廣告?
🐶: 廣告只係under 4P - Promotion嘅其中一樣野,好似上面咁講,Event Management同PR都係屬於Marketing,所以出路都相對地多。其次Social Media Marketing都係近幾年炙手可熱嘅career path,大家得閒可以上linkedIn/indeed睇下,好多時候公司請marketing都會想請人maintain FB/IG accounts,所以如果大家對social media platform熟悉嘅話,可能都會係一個優勢。
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👶🏻: 仲有冇啲你俾人問過啲關於Marketing而你覺得係謬誤嘅問題?
🐶: 暫時冇,可能大家對Marketing呢個學科都冇乜特別嘅stereotype,但我可以同大家分享一樣我學過好有趣嘅野。唔知大家有冇喺買機票嘅時候發現,有時價格會忽然升咗。呢個情況並唔係航空公司統一提高咗個價格,而係cookies作怪,cookies會儲存你嘅website history,當你不斷search一班航班,佢會知道你對呢班航班感興趣,所以當提高價格嘅時候,你都應該會買。雖然呢樣野我唔知係唔係真,但讀Marketing嘅其中一個樂趣係你會發現好多呢啲Marketing Strategy,但你都會不斷中伏,唔同嘅係你會知道背後有咩原理😂
(👶🏻: 機票價錢真係你最熟呀🤫😏)
//
Interviewer: 大大👶🏻
Interviewee: Shan🐶, CityU Marketing Year 3 兼 Vocabno co-founder (好多時大大構思咗一個活動嘅big picture就係靠Shan執行,令件事成真,呢啲咪Event Man囉🥰)
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#Vocabno #English #DSE #18DSE #2018DSE #19DSE #2019DSE #20DSE #2020DSE #Reading #Writing #Speaking #Wordoftheday #Vocabulary #Expression #Phrase #HKDSE #LiberalStudies #通識 #LS #Dsetips #Linguistics #語言學 #Morphology #JUPAS
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