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Add You - The Process of Change in Marketing Approaches
Get More Event Registrants Clicking Submit With the Right First Impression e organization will apply the knowledge to develop more customer-centric products and services and/ or to improve existing ones. In addition, the information will be shared within the organization to encourage employees at all levels to focus on creating maximized customer value and loyalty.I have many memories of my studying days. Many are actually good memories but there is one thing in particular that has stayed with me because even then I knew my strategy should change. I loved my highlighters. Maybe they gave me a feeling of purpose. Highlighter in hand, by the time I got to the end of a page there would be huge blocks of yellow. Needless to say, these yellow pages did nothing to help my studying. Instead of snippets of information jumping out from the page, everything was lost amongst the yellow.Less is more applies to most things in life and when it comes to your online registration form, we've found that it's particularly tempting to load up on details in the header. The single purpose of the registration form is to get registrants to the bottom where they click "submit". Highlight too much information right at the top of the form that fails to engage, overwhelms or distracts and registrants lose sight of the end goal.A header that creates the right first impression and draws people in follows a few basic guidelines.Brand your header but don't overdo it Familiarity makes us feel comfortable and confident. When registrants arrive at your online form and it looks like your website or event material, they'll not only know that they have arrived at the right place but will feel comfortable submitting their information. And seeing as you've already invested resources into your graphics, why not include them in th Why Customer-Targeted Marketing?: In order to have a competitive edge and to satisfy increasing levels of customers’ desires, companies realized that they have to see their customers as individuals rather a homogeneous mass of similar tastes, values and buying behaviors. Due to such transformation, companies need to be more customer-focused in its overall marketing strategy. This has resulted in organizations adopting a customization strategy to increase customer’s loyalty to their products and services. For example, in banking and insurance industry, there has been a move towards greater customization. Standard products/services have been given way to a varied menu of features from which customers may select their own preferred combination. In view of these changes, companies that understand the asset value of each customer, and that tailor their marketing efforts (and their costs) to acquire and sustain the highest-value assets, will win over less-adaptable traditional marketing approach of the 4 Ps. The Process of Transition: In order to strate Workin' Nine to Five In a world economy that is in constant flux and undergoing turbulence, more companies are realizing that their most precious asset is their customer base. An even more important realization is the need to satisfy the whims and fancies of these customers in order to survive in these increasingly competitive markets. Organizations that do not act on this dictum have suffered the loss of market share or worse, total annihilation. Such dire consequences have awakened many organizations to rethink the way they see marketing. Thus, there is urgency for an organization (be it products or service providers) as a whole to develop appropriate holistic customer-focused strategies to ensure that the customer remains at the core of their organizational thinking.Dolly Parton has told us all the trials and tribulations of the daily grind. Can you imagine the songs full of angst and heartache she would write about the hours most entrepreneurs and small business owners rack up?We all know that when starting any new business there is no such thing as an eight hour workday. I suspect that most small business owners and entrepreneurs are more familiar with 18 to 20 hour days. It's so exciting in the beginning of a new venture that it becomes very difficult to stop working for the day, but how long can you keep that energy?Don't feel guilty if you identify with that "honeymoon is over" fatigue of the new business cycle. It is nearly impossible to work nonstop for several months and not experience some level of burnout.It seems to me there are two ways to deal with these inevitable feelings. First, you can keep going like a freight train. You will no doubt know that you are above this common problem and burnout happens to other people, not you. Well, it's true that excitement and inertia will keep you going for awhile, maybe even a good while. But what if you're wrong and find out that you're only human? If you keep burning the candle at both ends without ever stopping for a moment, I think it's likely that when you finally reach that unavoidable breaking point, it can be more of a breakdown.Now, what would happen if you looked at your life realistically from the get-go? If you decide that you will channe With the rapid advancement of information technology (especially the rise of the Web) and the increasing difficulties of meeting customer’s needs and wants (for example, their expectations of 24 / 7 customer service especially for online transactions), there is a shift from a traditional marketing approach to customer targeted marketing. Many organizations and marketing consultants are emphasizing the need to allocate more funds to apply new-found knowledge of consumer behavior in new products development, build better customer relationships through customer loyalty and retention programs. This purpose of this paper is to raise the awareness of the need to concentrate marketing efforts towards the customer rather than the inward-looking traditional product-focused arrangement. And more importantly, the paper will shed light on how an organization could go about in making this important transition in this current competitive market. Marketing Approaches Explained: Before I proceed to discuss the shift in the marketing approach, it will be appropriate to explain briefly the two marketing approaches separately for greater clarity. Traditional Marketing-The 4 Ps of Marketing: The marketing mix or what is commonly known as the 4 Ps is a framework for marketers to implement a marketing concept. It consists of a set of major decision areas that a company needs to manage in order to at least satisfy consumer needs. According to Kotler et al. (1999), the mix is a set of "controllable tactical marketing tools [...] that the firm blends to produce the response it wants in the target market" (p.8). Hence, in an effective marketing program, all of those elements are "mixed" to successfully achieve the company's marketing objectives. The traditional marketing mix contains four major elements, the "4 Ps of marketing". As defined by Kotler et al. (1999): 1.Product: Anything that can be offered to a market for attention, acquisition, use or consumption that might satisfy a want or need. In includes physical objects, services, persons, places, organizations and ideas. 2.Price: The amount of money charged for a product or service, or the sum of the values that consumers exchange for the benefits of having or using the product or service. 3.Promotion: Activities that communicate the product or service and its merits to target customers with a view to persuading them to buy. 4.Place: All the company’s activities that make the product or service available to target customers. With the rapid changes surrounding organizations, the traditional marketing mix of the 4 Ps has been criticized for being too myopic in this current market situation. The traditional marketing mix has also been disparaged for being too product-focused and for taking an overly inward-looking strategy with regards to the organization’s resources and capabilities in production matters. This is antithetical to attending to the more important organizational goal of satisfying the desired needs and wants of customers. In addition, the Web and E-commerce revolution has played a major role in alleviating customers’ ability to shape their relationships with the company. This has led customers to expect companies to market their products and services in ways that reflect more directly their individual needs. These changes have prompted enterprises that wish to stay ahead of their competitors to shift their traditional marketing approach to customer-targeted marketing. Customer Targeted Marketing: In customer targeted marketing, the customer becomes the central focus of the organization’s strategy and activities, rather than the product itself (which is the prime concern in traditional marketing). The organization’s paradigm shift in marketing requires a company to build a commitment to quality and to listen critically to the customer to determine the market needs and how the company can meet those needs more effectively. One of the major characteristics of the approach is to focus on each customer’s interests and interactions with the organization to deliver targeted, personal messages. This would require the company to be constantly gathering information about their customers in an effort to better serve them and, most importantly, to retain them as loyal customers. As suggested by Peppers and Rogers (1998), the organization would need to use various techniques and strategies (possibly with the help of information technology and the Web), such as focus groups, in-depth interviews, customer surveys, attitude testing and so on to obtain information about consumers for more effective marketing of a product or service. With these customers’ data and feedback, the organization will apply the knowledge to develop more customer-centric products and services and/ or to improve existing ones. In addition, the information will be shared within the organization to encourage employees at all levels to focus on creating maximized customer value and loyalty. Why Customer-Targeted Marketing?: In order to have a competitive edge and to satisfy increasing levels of customers’ desires, companies realized that they have to see their customers as individuals rather a homogeneous mass of similar tastes, values and buying behaviors. Due to such transformation, companies need to be more customer-focused in its overall marketing strategy. This has resulted in organizations adopting a customization strategy to increase customer’s loyalty to their products and services. For example, in banking and insurance industry, there has been a move towards greater customization. Standard products/services have been given way to a varied menu of features from which customers may select their own preferred combination. In view of these changes, companies that understand the asset value of each customer, and that tailor their marketing efforts (and their costs) to acquire and sustain the highest-value assets, will win over less-adaptable traditional marketing approach of the 4 Ps. The Process of Transition: In order to strateg The 3 R's of Customer Service is paper is to raise the awareness of the need to concentrate marketing efforts towards the customer rather than the inward-looking traditional product-focused arrangement. And more importantly, the paper will shed light on how an organization could go about in making this important transition in this current competitive market.What I am about to tell you may seem very obvious - you may even say DUH!!! but the fact is, - many company’s forget the 3 R’s of good customer service- Respect your Customer, Take Responsibility for Your Actions and Products and give your Customers a Full REFUND when it just isn’t right. I promise you that if you follow these 3 simple rules you will never have to run after the same customer again!Respect the customer! Just about as plain as the nose on your face Right? Wrong!How many times have you been greeted in a less than courteous manner or worse yet- not at all!! Never lose the opportunity to make a great first impression- very rarely do you have a second chance to undo the damage done by that first encounter. No amount of advertising or even freebies, can make up for this faux pas. Remember it takes a customer 10 times of seeing your advertisement for it to become real to them. One customer has the power to tell 50 people how awful you are. That is a lot of damage control. That means that 50 people need to see your ad 10 times- that is 500 times each x 50 – are you reeling yet??? That translates into a lot of dough!!! Wouldn’t it be easier to be pay attention and be nice the first time around???Customers- they are your business- You need them- they don’t need you. They are your most valuable commodity and it doesn’t take a lot for them to be disloyal- on the other hand- develop trust – and it won’t matter how much your product costs- they Marketing Approaches Explained: Before I proceed to discuss the shift in the marketing approach, it will be appropriate to explain briefly the two marketing approaches separately for greater clarity. Traditional Marketing-The 4 Ps of Marketing: The marketing mix or what is commonly known as the 4 Ps is a framework for marketers to implement a marketing concept. It consists of a set of major decision areas that a company needs to manage in order to at least satisfy consumer needs. According to Kotler et al. (1999), the mix is a set of "controllable tactical marketing tools [...] that the firm blends to produce the response it wants in the target market" (p.8). Hence, in an effective marketing program, all of those elements are "mixed" to successfully achieve the company's marketing objectives. The traditional marketing mix contains four major elements, the "4 Ps of marketing". As defined by Kotler et al. (1999): 1.Product: Anything that can be offered to a market for attention, acquisition, use or consumption that might satisfy a want or need. In includes physical objects, services, persons, places, organizations and ideas. 2.Price: The amount of money charged for a product or service, or the sum of the values that consumers exchange for the benefits of having or using the product or service. 3.Promotion: Activities that communicate the product or service and its merits to target customers with a view to persuading them to buy. 4.Place: All the company’s activities that make the product or service available to target customers. With the rapid changes surrounding organizations, the traditional marketing mix of the 4 Ps has been criticized for being too myopic in this current market situation. The traditional marketing mix has also been disparaged for being too product-focused and for taking an overly inward-looking strategy with regards to the organization’s resources and capabilities in production matters. This is antithetical to attending to the more important organizational goal of satisfying the desired needs and wants of customers. In addition, the Web and E-commerce revolution has played a major role in alleviating customers’ ability to shape their relationships with the company. This has led customers to expect companies to market their products and services in ways that reflect more directly their individual needs. These changes have prompted enterprises that wish to stay ahead of their competitors to shift their traditional marketing approach to customer-targeted marketing. Customer Targeted Marketing: In customer targeted marketing, the customer becomes the central focus of the organization’s strategy and activities, rather than the product itself (which is the prime concern in traditional marketing). The organization’s paradigm shift in marketing requires a company to build a commitment to quality and to listen critically to the customer to determine the market needs and how the company can meet those needs more effectively. One of the major characteristics of the approach is to focus on each customer’s interests and interactions with the organization to deliver targeted, personal messages. This would require the company to be constantly gathering information about their customers in an effort to better serve them and, most importantly, to retain them as loyal customers. As suggested by Peppers and Rogers (1998), the organization would need to use various techniques and strategies (possibly with the help of information technology and the Web), such as focus groups, in-depth interviews, customer surveys, attitude testing and so on to obtain information about consumers for more effective marketing of a product or service. With these customers’ data and feedback, the organization will apply the knowledge to develop more customer-centric products and services and/ or to improve existing ones. In addition, the information will be shared within the organization to encourage employees at all levels to focus on creating maximized customer value and loyalty. Why Customer-Targeted Marketing?: In order to have a competitive edge and to satisfy increasing levels of customers’ desires, companies realized that they have to see their customers as individuals rather a homogeneous mass of similar tastes, values and buying behaviors. Due to such transformation, companies need to be more customer-focused in its overall marketing strategy. This has resulted in organizations adopting a customization strategy to increase customer’s loyalty to their products and services. For example, in banking and insurance industry, there has been a move towards greater customization. Standard products/services have been given way to a varied menu of features from which customers may select their own preferred combination. In view of these changes, companies that understand the asset value of each customer, and that tailor their marketing efforts (and their costs) to acquire and sustain the highest-value assets, will win over less-adaptable traditional marketing approach of the 4 Ps. The Process of Transition: In order to strate Changing Careers Got You Stumped? 6 Stellar Tips to Jumpstart Your Way ion that might satisfy a want or need. In includes physical objects, services, persons, places, organizations and ideas.So, your life is taking a different direction?Maybe you're ready for a new challenge or you were the fortunate victim of a corporate drive-by (aka "downsizing"). Notice I said fortunate. It didn't feel that way initially, but soon after I came to see the blessing in the situation. Either way, it's time to change careers! Where do you start?Many people find themselves at a loss once they are faced with the reality of making a change. Face it, we are creatures of habit but change doesn't have to be so traumatic. You can prepare yourself on your journey of success in your quest for finding a new career. Just follow these simple, easy 6 tips and you will be well on your way...Tip #1: DO WHAT YOU LOVE!Life is too short to be stuck doing something you don’t have a passion for. Follow your bliss…it will make a world of difference and you will want to wake up in the morning and go to work! In fact, it won’t seem like work…it will be fun and enjoyable!Tip #2: DEFINE YOUR USP—Unique Selling Proposition.Think of yourself as a brand! Now, clearly identify your strengths, talents, and what you have to offer a company. The clearer you are, the more you can articulate your offerings. You are selling a service & a product: YOU! What makes you stand out from the competition? If you are having difficulty identifying your strengths, ask those who know you closely…or look at your past performance reviews to see which area 2.Price: The amount of money charged for a product or service, or the sum of the values that consumers exchange for the benefits of having or using the product or service. 3.Promotion: Activities that communicate the product or service and its merits to target customers with a view to persuading them to buy. 4.Place: All the company’s activities that make the product or service available to target customers. With the rapid changes surrounding organizations, the traditional marketing mix of the 4 Ps has been criticized for being too myopic in this current market situation. The traditional marketing mix has also been disparaged for being too product-focused and for taking an overly inward-looking strategy with regards to the organization’s resources and capabilities in production matters. This is antithetical to attending to the more important organizational goal of satisfying the desired needs and wants of customers. In addition, the Web and E-commerce revolution has played a major role in alleviating customers’ ability to shape their relationships with the company. This has led customers to expect companies to market their products and services in ways that reflect more directly their individual needs. These changes have prompted enterprises that wish to stay ahead of their competitors to shift their traditional marketing approach to customer-targeted marketing. Customer Targeted Marketing: In customer targeted marketing, the customer becomes the central focus of the organization’s strategy and activities, rather than the product itself (which is the prime concern in traditional marketing). The organization’s paradigm shift in marketing requires a company to build a commitment to quality and to listen critically to the customer to determine the market needs and how the company can meet those needs more effectively. One of the major characteristics of the approach is to focus on each customer’s interests and interactions with the organization to deliver targeted, personal messages. This would require the company to be constantly gathering information about their customers in an effort to better serve them and, most importantly, to retain them as loyal customers. As suggested by Peppers and Rogers (1998), the organization would need to use various techniques and strategies (possibly with the help of information technology and the Web), such as focus groups, in-depth interviews, customer surveys, attitude testing and so on to obtain information about consumers for more effective marketing of a product or service. With these customers’ data and feedback, the organization will apply the knowledge to develop more customer-centric products and services and/ or to improve existing ones. In addition, the information will be shared within the organization to encourage employees at all levels to focus on creating maximized customer value and loyalty. Why Customer-Targeted Marketing?: In order to have a competitive edge and to satisfy increasing levels of customers’ desires, companies realized that they have to see their customers as individuals rather a homogeneous mass of similar tastes, values and buying behaviors. Due to such transformation, companies need to be more customer-focused in its overall marketing strategy. This has resulted in organizations adopting a customization strategy to increase customer’s loyalty to their products and services. For example, in banking and insurance industry, there has been a move towards greater customization. Standard products/services have been given way to a varied menu of features from which customers may select their own preferred combination. In view of these changes, companies that understand the asset value of each customer, and that tailor their marketing efforts (and their costs) to acquire and sustain the highest-value assets, will win over less-adaptable traditional marketing approach of the 4 Ps. The Process of Transition: In order to strate Are YOU Too Private To Be In Business? anges have prompted enterprises that wish to stay ahead of their competitors to shift their traditional marketing approach to customer-targeted marketing.Everywhere you look someone is telling you..."Look out for identity thieves!""Beware of emails it could be a virus, or someone phishing!"Blah...Blah...Blah.Listen!You won't last in business if you don't make yourself available. Think about it. Wal-Mart the largest retailer in the world is open 24 hrs. a day 7 days a week, and on most holidays.McDonald's has a lot of locations that are open 24 hrs. a day, and they are the largest fast food chain in the world.I'm not saying that you have to take phone calls at 3 AM, but you don't have to make EVERYONE feel like that can contact, that you will respond to their needs, and that you will take away all risk in doing business with you.How do you do that?1. Get a phone number that you post everywhere.You can buy a cell phone for 39.99 from Best Buy, and buy $10.00 worth a minutes, and use it for voice mail.Also get a toll free number.2. Post a physical addressIt doesn't have to be your home address. For most people, they expect companies to have a P O Box.3. Get a designated email address for customers and potential partnersYour main email address should be something different than what you post on your website. You should make sure that you respond to the one you post on your website, but when you respond let them know that for (customer questions, jv offers, product questions, etc) they need to contact you at an alt Customer Targeted Marketing: In customer targeted marketing, the customer becomes the central focus of the organization’s strategy and activities, rather than the product itself (which is the prime concern in traditional marketing). The organization’s paradigm shift in marketing requires a company to build a commitment to quality and to listen critically to the customer to determine the market needs and how the company can meet those needs more effectively. One of the major characteristics of the approach is to focus on each customer’s interests and interactions with the organization to deliver targeted, personal messages. This would require the company to be constantly gathering information about their customers in an effort to better serve them and, most importantly, to retain them as loyal customers. As suggested by Peppers and Rogers (1998), the organization would need to use various techniques and strategies (possibly with the help of information technology and the Web), such as focus groups, in-depth interviews, customer surveys, attitude testing and so on to obtain information about consumers for more effective marketing of a product or service. With these customers’ data and feedback, the organization will apply the knowledge to develop more customer-centric products and services and/ or to improve existing ones. In addition, the information will be shared within the organization to encourage employees at all levels to focus on creating maximized customer value and loyalty. Why Customer-Targeted Marketing?: In order to have a competitive edge and to satisfy increasing levels of customers’ desires, companies realized that they have to see their customers as individuals rather a homogeneous mass of similar tastes, values and buying behaviors. Due to such transformation, companies need to be more customer-focused in its overall marketing strategy. This has resulted in organizations adopting a customization strategy to increase customer’s loyalty to their products and services. For example, in banking and insurance industry, there has been a move towards greater customization. Standard products/services have been given way to a varied menu of features from which customers may select their own preferred combination. In view of these changes, companies that understand the asset value of each customer, and that tailor their marketing efforts (and their costs) to acquire and sustain the highest-value assets, will win over less-adaptable traditional marketing approach of the 4 Ps. The Process of Transition: In order to strate Managing Emotions During Career Change and Job Search, Part Two e organization will apply the knowledge to develop more customer-centric products and services and/ or to improve existing ones. In addition, the information will be shared within the organization to encourage employees at all levels to focus on creating maximized customer value and loyalty.Half the battle in successfully managing your emotions during a job search or career change process is in recognizing and naming what you’re feeling. Most of us could barely brainstorm a dozen or so emotions, yet many, many more exist. As you begin naming what you’re feeling, this list of emotions, each arrayed within a cluster of similar but different emotions, will help you expand your awareness of the depth and breadth of all that you feel in the course of any given day: Happy: buoyant festive playful brisk generous pleased calm glad relaxed carefree grateful restful cheerful hilarious satisfied comfortable inspired serene complacent jolly surprised contented joyous sparkling ecstatic jubilant spirited elated lighthearted thrilled enthusiastic merry vivacious excited optimistic exhilarated peaceful Eager: anxious earnest keen ardent enthusiastic proud avid excited zealous desirous intent Doubtful: defeated hopeless skeptical dubious indecisive suspicious evasive perplexed Why Customer-Targeted Marketing?: In order to have a competitive edge and to satisfy increasing levels of customers’ desires, companies realized that they have to see their customers as individuals rather a homogeneous mass of similar tastes, values and buying behaviors. Due to such transformation, companies need to be more customer-focused in its overall marketing strategy. This has resulted in organizations adopting a customization strategy to increase customer’s loyalty to their products and services. For example, in banking and insurance industry, there has been a move towards greater customization. Standard products/services have been given way to a varied menu of features from which customers may select their own preferred combination. In view of these changes, companies that understand the asset value of each customer, and that tailor their marketing efforts (and their costs) to acquire and sustain the highest-value assets, will win over less-adaptable traditional marketing approach of the 4 Ps. The Process of Transition: In order to strategically change from a traditional marketing approach to customer targeted marketing, an organization must be aware of these following areas: Paradigm Shift. A company must fully understand that customer targeted marketing requires a shift in the organizational mindset, and not just structural organizational changes. They must realize that their sole purpose is to continuously satisfy customers’ needs and wants. Thus, to ensure a smooth transition from a traditional marketing approach to customer targeted approach, an organization must reflect and ask itself questions as to what areas need to be analyzed and to understand the ramifications of such a transition in the organization. On the other hand, an organization needs to realize the negative consequences for not willing to be a more customer-focused marketing organization. Customer Targeted Planning. As in any organizational change initiative, proper planning is needed. The objective of planning customer-centric marketing strategies is to find win-win opportunities with customer and to identify the best mutual opportunities for your customers and your company. This requires the organization to see the issue(s) from the customers’ perspectives and to strategically plan the organization’s resources around them. In short, the organization’s shift to customer-targeted marketing should embrace these three important points: 1.Planning should focus on customer wants and not looking inwardly at company goals 2.Focus on the honest feedback and suggestions through creating different channels of communications. Listen to the customers, rather than forcing them to listen to you. 3.Integrate your customers in every aspects of your business, from new product design to after-sales services and more. Organization-wide Responsibility. For the approach to be successful, members need to understand the new philosophy of marketing and embrace it organization-wide. Many organizations tend to underestimate the degree to which every facet of the enterprise needs to be involved in the process and to be integrated into the actual customer relationship. Organization Redesign. An organization has to assess the roles of all functional departments interacting with customers to ensure that they add value to customers instead of increasing the costs. By reorganizing the company with the customer as the focus, many departmental roles and responsibilities will have to be redesigned. And when that happens, the employees will have to adopt new work processes that would be more customer-centric in nature. Human Resource Training. There is a need to develop customer-focused human resource through customer behavior training, across the functional departments. By investing in such training at all levels, the members will be more knowledgeable, more autonomous, and more efficient in anticipating and meeting the needs of the customers. Use of Information Technology. With the advancement and increased affordability in information technology, more companies are able to collect available data on customer purchase behavior more efficiently. For example, technologies ranging from checkout scanning to Internet cookies are commonly used to track customers' buying behaviors. Companies that employ such technology will be more adept at acquiring new customers, retaining existing customers, and cross selling than those who do not. Enhanced Customers Communications. With the use of the Internet as a medium for targeted communication, this allows companies to be in touch with customers at less than one-hundredth of the cost of more traditional snail mail, brochures or flyers. Communication through emails with the customers is almost free, and the customers can retrieve communications almost immediately. However, this has also resulted in customers having 24 / 7 service expectations of these companies. Customer Targeted Measurement. An organization must be able to measure and evaluate the success of their customer targeted marketing strategy. In most cases, traditional measurement techniques such as profitability, market share and profit margins are used to measure the success. There should be an added emphasis given to developing measures that are customer-centric and which are able to assess the marketing strategy. Customer acquisition costs, conversion rates, retention rates, customer sales rates, loyalty measures and customer share within a brand are some examples of customer-centric measures than a customer-focused organization can adopt Conclusion: The need for survival has provoked many organizations to shift from traditional to customer targeted marketing. The market conditions surrounding us will continue to change at an accelerating rate and customer’s expectation will continue to rise. Hence, without any doubts, more and more companies will adopt a customer-targeted marketing strategy with increased intensity.
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