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Weekly Story

Weekly Story 2018.10.03 Ben Franklin Effect

When Ben Franklin was a young man, he turned a rival into a fan with a brilliant, counterintuitive move.

Ben had co-founded a literary and debate society and served as clerk. When he ran for reelection as clerk, the rival ripped Ben in a long, hateful speech.

Rather than counterpunch, Ben asked the hater for a favor.

Ben wrote a letter asking if he could borrow a “very scarce and curious book” that the rival owned.

The rival loaned the book to Ben who quickly acknowledged the favor with a “thank you” note.

From that day forward, the former rival treated Ben with great respect. They became great friends.

The moral of this story: If you want people to like and bond with you, master the Ben Franklin Effect.

Yeah, “The Ben Franklin Effect” is really a thing.

Here’s how psychologists explain it…

We humans want our actions to make sense. So our subconscious mind crafts stories to put everything in order.

If you do a favor for someone, your subconscious tells this story: “I’ve done a favor for this guy. That means I must like him.” (Because it wouldn’t make sense for you to do a favor for someone you don’t like.)

So when you ask someone for a favor, you create a bond. The person who grants that favor is more likely to work well with you in the future.

Ben put it like this in his autobiography: “He that has once done you a kindness will be more ready to do you another, than he whom you yourself have obliged.”

I thought of Ben last week when I discussed “calls-to-action” with a client. I encouraged her to end her emails and social media posts with more direct calls-to-action. Ask people to share the post or forward the email or buy something.

“I don’t want to be too pushy,” she said.

Can you relate? I can. Many of us fear that we cross the “too-pushy” line when we ask for something. We reason that we’ll put people off. We even fear that friends and followers will get so annoyed with us that they’ll stop liking us.

Ben would see it differently. He would tell you that most people are happy to do you the favor if you ask. They’re happy to share your post, happy to forward the email, happy to refer a friend, happy to check out your products and services and even buy something. Just ask.

And whether they realize it or not, they may even like you more when they do you that “favor.”

Here’s the bottom line for marketing your business: You can’t drive action unless you call for it.

You may be surprised how well people respond.

Tom
MarketVolt

p.s. If you like these emails, please do me this favor (you saw this coming, right!?): Forward this to someone who might also enjoy it and encourage them to sign up for future emails on our website at MarketVolt.com. 🙂

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Monday Mash-Up

Monday Mashup 2018.10.02

Hello: Here’s the latest edition of MarketVolt’s Monday Mash-up. We’ll kick off every week with this quick collection of tips, recommendations, observations and other interesting, valuable stuff.

– Tom 
Monday, October 1, 2018
MarketVolt’s Monday Mash-UpRecommended Listening
HBR IdeaCast is Not Just For the C-Suite

Harvard Business Review publishes IdeaCasta weekly podcast that offers great advice and insight for business people. You don’t have to run a business to benefit from the podcast — which covers communication, marketing, management, mindset and countless other topics that will help you in your work and life. 

Happy Birthday Yosemite
Amazing Video About a Climber Who Conquered El Capitan


On this day in 1890, Congress established Yosemite National Park. The park is a climber’s paradise. And just last week, National Geographic released an incredible 360-degree video of an amazing climbing feat. On June 3, 2017, Alex Honnold became the first person to attempt and complete a free solo (no ropes, no harnesses) ascent of El Capitan, a 3,000-foot high slab of solid granite. This is a story of unsurpassed courage, dedication, preparation and focus. I’m not a rock climber, but I still draw countless lessons from this story. 
Recommended Resource
Save Big Time on Small, Tedious Tasks with Text-Fixer

I’ve added this site to the top of my bookmark list. The site contains a collection of free, helpful tools for managing text. My favorite — the tool that removes extra line breaks from text. I also like the tool that alphabetizes lists. This is a huge time-saver.  
I’m Listening to…
Otis Rush, Jr. 

He was one of the great blues artists to emerge from Chicago in the 1950s. Otis Rush, Jr. passed away on Saturday. Here is a video of him performing “I Can’t Quit You Baby.” Grateful for This…

“Maybe you weren’t born with a silver spoon in your mouth, but like every American, you carry a deed to 635 million acres of public lands. That’s right. Even if you don’t own a house or the latest computer on the market, you own Yosemite, Yellowstone, the Grand Canyon, Golden Gate National Recreation Area, and many other natural treasures.”~ John Garamendi ***
Any reading, listening, quoting, resourcing that you think we should share? Send us a tip.

Until next time, enjoy the rest of this week and the weekend.

Tom
Categories
Weekly Story

Weekly Story 2018.09.26 Frozen in the Cereal Aisle

I nearly had a nervous breakdown in Aisle 8 at the grocery store on Sunday.

There I stood, in the cereal aisle, reading the shopping list my wife created.

Item 15 on the list: “Healthy Cereal.” 

I marched up and down the aisle, scanning the shelves.  

Should I buy the Kashi or the Kellogg’s? Barbara’s Bakery or Bob’s Red Mill? What about General Mills?

Just guesstimating here, but I think there were 18 million options to weigh.

I texted my wife. No reply.

I called. No answer.

Panic was setting in. What to do? Which one should I buy?

I returned home with nothing from Aisle 8. “They were out of healthy cereal,” I muttered when she asked.

I know food manufacturers and grocery giants spend millions to master the science of product placement. There’s a reason grocery stores are organized as they are — to get us to buy more.

But those crowded shelves also can backfire. Too many choices can paralyze prospects.

That’s an important lesson for any business — not just grocery stores.

Numerous studies have proven that prospects act like I did when confronted with more buying options than they can comfortably process.

They freeze, and then they flee.

So keep it simple. Present good options, but not too many.

This principle applies not just when you’re selling products or services.

Remember that…

…the next time you present recommendations to your boss or co-workers.

…the next time you discuss what to do this weekend with your pals or spouse.

…the next time you’re stocking the shelves or writing a proposal or generally pitching your stuff.

You want to encourage people to consider the options, not freeze and flee.

Tom
MarketVolt

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Weekly Story

Weekly Story 2018.09.19 Tim Dean Life Coach

When I asked Tim Dean to describe his ideal client for me, his answer blew me away.

Tim is a life coach whom I ran into at a networking event.

His ideal client: “Parents of a millenial son or daughter who is living at home.”

We’ve all heard the old adage about finding a niche for your business.

But I had never heard of such a nichy niche.

I was very intrigued, but a little skeptical.

Me: “That’s actually a market?”

Tim: “Oh yeah. Lots of parents hire me to guide the son or daughter. They tell me, ‘We were going to turn the (kid’s) bedroom into an office or yoga studio, and then…’”

The kid came home and wouldn’t leave.

I have twin 21-year-olds about to finish college. I shivered at the thought.

“A lot of millenials are dissatisfied, unmotivated, not feeling like their work is working,” Tim said. “They’re much quicker to jump jobs. The parents want to help.”

Because they want that new office or yoga studio…

…and, Tim added, because they want to be good parents.

“This provides validation for what they’re doing as parents. Some of it is fighting their own stereotypes. They don’t want the world to perceive their children or themselves as failures. Some don’t give a darn about that. They just want to extend their dream of being great parents.”

Sounds like Tim has…

…identified a target market with very particular needs and…

…devised great solutions to address that market’s fears (“junior may never leave and I won’t get my yoga studio or office”) and aspirations (“I want to be a good parent who raises good kids.”)

That’s a good formula for any business: identify a target market with very particular needs and devise great solutions to address that market’s fears and aspirations.

What is your target market? What are the fears and aspirations? What solutions do you offer?

Tim reminds us how important it is to ask and answer these questions.

Tom
MarketVolt

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Weekly Story

Weekly Story 2018.09.12 Wine Bar Pitches too Much Wine

My buddy Mark has been sober for ten years and counting. That’s cause for celebration.

Every time we go out, I play dumb and ask, “How long has it been?”

He knows I know. But he plays along. “Ten years,” he says proudly.

He should be proud. That’s why I ask the question.

The last time we went out, a few people in our party ordered a bottle of wine. I ordered a beer. Mark ordered an Arnold Palmer.

He has no problem sitting with others who drink.

But he had a problem with the waiter.

“May I pour you some?” the waiter asked Mark after bringing the wine bottle to the table.

Mark replied, “No thank you.”

The waiter persisted, “Are you sure? It’s delicious. Matches perfectly with the pasta you ordered.”

“Yes, I’m sure,” Mark grumbled.

(Sigh!)

The waiter had good intentions. But come on, man! Don’t pitch wine to an alcoholic!

Seems pretty obvious, huh!? But businesses do this all the time. They pitch their “perfect” products to everyone without regard for what prospects want or need.

It happened to me with another restaurant this summer.

I joined the restaurant’s email list when I stopped in for a quick lunch.

I didn’t order any wine that day. No martinis either. Just a bowl of chowder and a sandwich.

Since then, I’ve received two emails.

The first promoted a month-long discount on wines.

The second pitched a one-night event (“celebrate our 11 year anniversary”). The hook? Discounts on sparkling wine from 4 to 7 p.m. and discounts on other bottles all night.

Don’t like wine? Been sober for 10 years? Wondering whether there’s a special menu or food discounts? Nothing to see here. Move on.

I like this restaurant. Tasty food. Nice selection of beers. Friendly service. Reasonable prices. That’s why I go.

I don’t go for the wine list. Nor would Mark. Same goes for many others on the email list.

So if you keep sending emails that pitch nothing but wine, we’re going to tune out. We’ll stop opening the emails. We may opt-out altogether.

Sending everything (i.e. narrow pitches for wine) to everybody, regardless of their interests, is the greatest mistake email marketers make.

Next Wednesday, I’ll dig deeper, share some examples from businesses that get it and offer some tips about how to engage email subscribers more effectively.

Tom
MarketVolt

Categories
Weekly Story

Weekly Story 2018.09.05 – Better Call Saul Burner Phones

I have a friend who’s convinced the government or Russians or Martians (or…whoever) listen to every cell phone conversation he has.

A few years ago, the friend (I’ll call him “Bob”) dumped his regular cell phone and began buying pay-as-you-go “burner phones.”

Bob pays cash for the phones.

“They can hear me,” Bob says. “But they don’t know it’s me.”

Bob is squeaky clean (I think). He’s not a drug dealer. He pays his taxes. He doesn’t have a cheatin’ heart.

He’s just a little unhinged. Or maybe he’s smart. (There’s such a fine line between paranoid and careful.)

I thought of Bob this week while watching my favorite TV show, “Better Call Saul.”

The main character, Jimmy (a.k.a. Saul) works at a mobile phone store.

Prepaid phone sales are slow.

So Jimmy buys some of that gaudy orange and yellow window paint (the kind you see at used car dealerships) and writes in four-foot-high lettering on the storefront: “Is the man listening? Privacy sold here.”

Sales skyrocket.

That’s some smart marketing, Jimmy!

“Better Call Saul” is a crash-course in smart marketing and copywriting. Really. I’m not kidding.

In the burner phone episode, Jimmy delivers a brilliant pitch to the leader of a biker gang who ends up buying a pile of phones. Even the most seasoned sales champion could learn something here.

Check out Season 4, Episode 3. Jimmy ad-libs a pitch for copy machines that they should reprint in sales training manuals.

Take notes in Seasons 1-3 as Jimmy pitches his legal services to senior citizens.

Brilliant stuff.

If you know the show and the Jimmy/Saul character, you know: He happily works for and with drug dealers, tax dodgers and cheating spouses.

Don’t worry about that. That’s not the point.

The point is this: Jimmy/Saul brilliantly assesses what motivates his prospects. He knows what they desire and what they fear. And then he tells (true) stories about how his products or services can fulfill the desire or address the fear.

Jimmy doesn’t sell mobile phones. He sells privacy.

What do you sell?

Tom
MarketVolt

p.s. I can help you re-define what you sell — so you can sell more. It’s something I do for clients all the time. It makes their sales pitches better. It makes their content more focused and relevant. It helps the bottom line. And for those of you who work for nonprofits or schools, the same principles apply. You are “selling” something — even if you don’t think of it that way. If you want to learn more about how this works, give me a call (314-529-1431) or email me

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Weekly Story

Weekly Story 2018.08.29 Spammer Claims to Know Me

I got some spam this week from a guy who claims he knows me because of my job title.

He doesn’t.

The email said: “Your title suggests you know better than most that inventory solutions in your industry cost a fortune. Worse yet, most don’t integrate with QuickBooks.”

My title is “President,” not “Inventory Manager.” My company sells software and strategic marketing services, not stuff we store in a warehouse.

But that didn’t stop this guy.

He pitched his inventory management solution. It’s easy to use. It integrates with QuickBooks!!!!

Here’s the funny/sad thing: I work with lots of companies that manage inventory and might benefit from better software.

But I’m not buying from this guy.

I don’t trust him.

Don’t get me wrong. I’m all for “personalizing” emails. We encourage you to do it. We help many of our clients do it. Well-executed, personalized emails yield far better results than impersonal emails.

But personalizing does not mean pretending I know you.

It means including content that you believe will be pertinent to the reader — and doing it in an authentic way.

Saturation bombing people with a certain job title and implying you know the person — that’s not authentic. Sure, his email may reach some inventory managers who fall for the “personal touch.” But there’s nothing really personal about it.

Tom
MarketVolt

p.s. Want to discover how to personalize your emails to improve results? We can help you do that. MarketVolt’s experts can help you devise creative, smart strategies and tactics for your campaigns. We can help you with content planning, copywriting, email production, blogging or other content marketing. We can show you how to do it, or we can do it for you. If you want to learn more, give me a call (314-529-1431) or email me

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Weekly Story

Weekly Story 2018.08.22 Grizzly Bear

When a half-ton grizzly bear walks through your campsite, 20 feet from where you’re sleeping, you take stock.

I should know. That happened to me two weeks ago in Alaska.

After sleeping soundly, I crawled from my tent to find my pals comparing notes. They’d heard it, splashing through the creek bed next to our tents.

“Had to be a bear,” they were saying.

Then we saw the tracks. Big as dinner plates.

Then came the stock-taking.

Profound questions like “How am I still alive?”

Turns out there’s a logical answer.

In mid-August, the land in southwest Alaska is covered with ripe berries, and the streams are filled with spawning salmon. It’s an all-you-can-eat buffet for grizzly bears. Easy pickin’s.

Bears know: Why bother trying to take down a nasty, pepper-spraying, gun-toting, punch-throwing, boot-stompin’ human being when you can get your fill with far less effort and risk?

Call it strategic targeting.

Grizzlies do it. So should you.

Ask and answer these questions…

Who are your best, ripest, most plentiful prospects?

Where do they reside?

What are the costs and risks in pursuing them?

Which are easiest to land?

If you’re not asking these questions, you’re probably wasting time and energy chasing difficult prospects…

…while a bounty of opportunity surrounds you on the hillsides and in the streams.

If you are asking these questions, but aren’t sure how to answer them, I can help. I know a ton of great strategies and tactics to help identify and target your best prospects (see p.s. below).

Tom
MarketVolt

p.s. Want to discover how to identify your best prospects and target them most effectively? We can help you do that. MarketVolt’s experts can help you devise creative, smart strategies and tactics for your marketing campaigns. We can help you with content planning, copywriting, email production, blogging or other content marketing. We can show you how to do it, or we can do it for you. If you want to learn more, give me a call (314-529-1431) or email me

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Weekly Story

Weekly Story 2018.08.08 – Krishnas

When I was a kid, you couldn’t move through a big-city airport without being pestered by people pitching their religion and begging for money.

The “Hare Krishnas” were the most notorious. With their shaved heads and orange robes, the Krishnas would approach harried travelers, offer a small gift and then ask for a donation.

When they started this routine, Krishnas gave out small flowers. Travelers usually tossed those in the trash and rushed off without donating.

Then the Krishnas tried a new strategy. They gave out small American flags.

Travelers were reluctant to trash the flag. So they would pocket the gift, or pin it to their lapel.

And then…

…They would dish out some dough to the Krishnas.

After Krishna’s switched from flowers to flags, donations sky-rocketed.

Why so? Because when we humans receive a gift we value, we want to return the favor.

The key word here is value.

Give me a little flower, and I think, “Meh,” as I toss it in the trash and move on. Nothing of value here.

Give me a flag — even a tiny plastic one, fastened to a toothpick — and I have something more valuable. Sure, it’s not a diamond ring. But it’s not something I want to dump in the trash.

So I keep it. And now, even if I’m not conscious of the impulse, I want to return the favor.

Airports banned the practice, and courts upheld the bans. So the Krishnas are long gone from Terminal A.

But the marketing lesson lives on.

Give and you shall receive…

…as long as you give something of value.

Tom
MarketVolt

p.s. Want to discover how to create business-building content that delivers value to readers? We can help you do that. MarketVolt’s experts can help you devise creative, smart strategies and tactics for your marketing campaigns. We can help you with content planning, copywriting, email production, blogging or other content marketing. We can show you how to do it, or we can do it for you. If you want to learn more, give me a call (314-529-1431) or email me

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Monday Mash-Up

Monday Mashup 2018.08.06

Hello: Here’s the latest edition of MarketVolt’s Monday Mash-up. We’ll kick off every week with this quick collection of tips, recommendations, observations and other interesting, valuable stuff.

– Tom 
Monday, August 6, 2018
MarketVolt’s Monday Mash-UpValuable Resource
Discover Whether Your Info Has Been Compromised 

Seems like we hear about another major data breach every week. But how do you know if your personal information was among the compromised data? A website called “Have I Been Pwned” can tell you.

Go to the site (haveibeenpwned.com), enter your email address, and you’ll see a list of data breaches that contained that address. The site will tell you the nature of the breach (i.e. whether passwords, credit card numbers or other sensitive data was captured). If you have been “pwned” (slang term, popular among online gamers for “owned”), you can react accordingly. Change your password. Cancel the captured credit card. And so forth…

The site doesn’t have records for all data breaches. But it has enough info to be very helpful.

How-To…
Prevent Videos from Auto-Playing
I can’t stand it when I’m visiting a website and a video begins to play automatically. I found this useful article in the New York Times that describes ways to prevent videos from auto-playing. Enjoy the silence! 

Shout-Out For
An Excellent Graphic Designer and Digital Marketer

Looking for someone who can create a great logo, design a kick-ass graphic or flyer, help get your site to the top of the search rankings, write a compelling blog post or manage your social media? Check out AdrienneLuther.com. We hired Adrienne for the summer. She left us this month to complete her final semester at the University of Missouri. Meanwhile, she continues to work as a freelancer. We highly recommend her. You’ll find her contact information on her websiteI’m Reading
The Story of Hiroshima, As Told By Six Who Survived the Bomb
 

Seventy-three years ago today the U.S. dropped a nuclear bomb on Hiroshima. John Hersey was among the first American reporters to visit the ruined city where he interviewed countless survivors. The New Yorker magazine devoted its entire August 31, 1946 issue to Hersey’s work — a 30,000-word piece that tells the story of six survivors.

This is a brilliant, moving, frightening article that was ground-breaking then and remains pertinent today. It’s must-reading — regardless of your politics. Quote that Still Resonate Today

Why have I shared this article and the quotes that follow in a weekly email intended to educate and entertain? Well… Brilliant journalism is educational and entertaining — even when it covers the darkest subjects. To explain my thinking further, I share this quote from the New Yorker Editor’s Note that preceded Hersey’s work…

“Few of us have yet comprehended the all but incredible destructive power of this weapon. Everyone might well take time to consider the terrible implications of its use.”
***Any reading, listening, quoting, resourcing that you think we should share? Send us a tip.

Until next time, enjoy the rest of this week and the weekend.

Tom