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Weekly Story

Weekly Story 2018.02.21 Foot Powder Elected

This is the story of how a bottle of foot powder was elected Mayor of a town in Ecuador.

I’m not kidding.

During the 1967 mayoral election in Picoazà (population 4,000), a foot powder company launched an ad campaign with this slogan:

“Vote for any candidate, but if you want well-being and hygiene, vote for Pulvapies.”

On election eve, the company distributed leaflets that looked like official candidate flyers:

“For Mayor: Honorable Pulvapies.”

Well-being and hygiene won the day.

You laugh.

But if you’re serious about marketing, you can learn a lot from Mayor Pulvapies.

I suspect some voters knew the deal when they cast their ballot for Pulvapies. Maybe a vote to protest rotten politicians?

But I bet many voters didn’t realize Pulvapies was powder.

We humans shop with our emotions.

If you promise me well-being and hygeine (read: attractiveness and sex-appeal), you’ll get my attention.

Never mind the sticky questions like “Is the well-being and hygiene candidate flesh-and-bones or just cornstarch and baking soda?”

Many voters don’t bother with the details. They just go for the emotion-triggering headlines.

So it goes when shopping for products and services, too.

Good messaging will trigger buyers’ emotions.

If you choose my product and service you will…

…be more attractive…
…stand out in the crowd…
…avoid embarrassment and humiliation…
…keep danger at bay and sleep safely and soundly at night…
…feel a greater sense of well-being and fulfillment…

…and so on.

Now that I have your attention, let me share the details of my product and service to prove that I can deliver.

That’s the formula for effective messaging: Start with the emotional benefit and follow with the details and proof.

In some cases, people will buy just on emotion and won’t need the details and proof. Right Mayor Pulvapies?

Thanks for reading (reply with feedback if you want to share some thoughts) and see you next time…

Tom
MarketVolt

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Weekly Story

Weekly Story 2018.02.14 – Toilet Instructions

I recently spent a couple of weeks in New Zealand. Beautiful country.

One of the most memorable things I saw there: Signs illustrating the right way to pooh.

This is not B.S. These signs were as common as fart jokes in a boys locker room.

On the right… a drawing of a person sitting on a toilet. There’s a green checkmark next to that drawing. On the left, a drawing of a person with feet on the toilet seat, squatting over the bowl. That’s a no-no. Big red “X” next to that drawing.

Toilet dos-and-don'ts diagram


One takeaway: If you’ve seen one toilet, you HAVEN’T seen ‘em all.

You’ve got your “modern” sit-down, flush toilets. You’ve got your primitive, outhouse toilets. And you’ve got your pit toilets.

For those who haven’t had the pleasure: A pit toilet is a big hole in the floor — sometimes with plumbing attached, often without. Spread your feet to shoulder-width. Bend your knees and lower your butt until you’re in position, and then…

(Who needs a thigh-master when you have a pit toilet?)

I tried to imagine what pit-toiletaires must think the first time they see a sit-down toilet…

…Why is the pit elevated?

Or the first time they figure out the operating instructions for that sit-down toilet…

…Wait a minute!? I’m supposed to sit with my bare legs on THAT!?

(Maybe squatting on a toilet rim doesn’t seem so crazy after all.)

Anyhow, the folks who run public bathrooms in New Zealand figured that some of their visitors needed crapping/peeing instructions.

(Common myth: Thomas Crapper invented flush toilets, thus pooh has a synonym in his honor. Not true. Crapper popularized the device that was invented years earlier. “Crap” had already dropped into English slang long before Thomas did his business).

Naturally, there are marketing lessons to digest here…

First, know your market.

If your market is comprised only of sit-down-toiletaires, no need for poohing instructions. But as tourism has grown in New Zealand, and the market has shifted to include pit-toiletaires, new messaging was required.

As your target market shifts, your messaging must shift.

Also, if you want to change behavior or drive action, you must deliver clear, concise, direct messages. Don’t assume your target audience will act without your direction.

That applies to emails, websites, social media posts, letters, telemarketing scripts and…and, of course, toilets.

You must deliver the call-to-action and operating instructions.

So let’s toast the public toilet operators in New Zealand who got it right. Raise your glasses and… bottoms up!

Thanks for reading (reply with feedback if you want to share some thoughts) and see you next time…

Tom
MarketVolt

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Monday Mash-Up

Monday Mashup #6 – 2018.02.12

Hello: Here’s the sixth 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, February 12, 2018
MarketVolt’s Monday Mash-Up

Great Time-Saving Resource for Readers (and Non-Readers)

I’m an avid reader, but I don’t have enough time to plow through every book on my wish list. Enter Blinkist and ReadItForMe — services that provide written and audio summaries of non-fiction books. Both services cost less than $10/month.

Blinkist has thousands of titles, including non-business books. ReadItForMe has fewer books (around 150), but the service goes deeper than Blinkist, offering video summaries and workshop outlines for many titles. This is useful if you plan to share the book with co-workers or friends.

I subscribe to both services, and I recommend you try them both. They both offer free (limited) service levels that will give you an idea of how they work. 

What I’m Watching (This Made My Day)

Watching CBS Sunday Morning is a weekly ritual in my house. Yesterday, CBS told the story of companies that actively hire autistic people. Microsoft and SAP are among those that recognize their unique talents — high IQ, creative problem-solving ability, etc. But many autistic people struggle with interpersonal skills, and this struggle has damaged their job prospects.

Some companies have developed unique ways to evaluate autistic candidates (i.e. don’t rely on an interview). SAP, Microsoft and others assign mentors to autistic employees to help them adjust and flourish in the workplace.

Great lessons in this story — even if you don’t have autistic job candidates or co-workers. How do we truly recognize and leverage the unique talents of those around us? How do we accommodate those who struggle with interpersonal skills but want to be positive contributors to a team? These are questions that apply to every workplace — and many households. 

I’m Listening To…

Jackson Browne’s Running on EmptyIf I had to whittle my album collection down to 25, this album would make the list. I’ve wanted to see Jackson Browne since I first heard this live album 40(!) years ago (“Rosie” is my favorite track). I learned this morning that he’s touring in June and visiting my town (St. Louis). I’ll be at the Peabody Opera House on June 25!

What albums are on your Top-25 list? Reply to this email and lemme know…

Survey Says…

Last week, I shared a collection of the “best” Super Bowl ads, compiled by Time Magazine and asked you to vote on your favorite in a quick survey. The results are in:First Place: Tide laundry detergent.
Second and Third Place (a tie): Amazon Alexa and NFL Touchdown Celebrations. 

Thanks for the feedback. 
Sage Social Media Advice from Abe Lincoln

Our 16th president was born 209 years ago today (February 12, 1809). That’s about 195 years before Facebook was born. 

But Honest Abe offered some deep wisdom that rings true in our social media world today. He said…

Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak out and remove all doubt.
 
Reason we’re grateful…

Thousands of healthcare workers, pharmacists and others are on the front lines of the worst flu pandemic in decades. We’re grateful that they put themselves at risk to help us prevent or recover from illness.

***

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 2018.02.07 – Groundhog Day

I hope you had a joyous Groundhog Day! (It was last Tuesday, in case you missed it).

Truth be told, I can live without the holiday.

But I love the movie.

Weatherman Phil Connor (Bill Murray) wakes each morning in Punxsutawney, PA for a Groundhog Day do-over. 

On each of these days, Phil runs into an old high school classmate – Ned Ryerson.

Phil is in no mood to chat. But Ned wants to pitch products.

“Have you ever heard of single-premium life? Because I think that really could be the ticket for you,” Ned says, day after day after day after day…

(Here’s a video clip)

Then on one do-over day, Phil is ready. Before Ned can utter his pitch, Phil levels him with a right hook.

Way to go, Phil!

Like Phil, sometimes I just want to rear back and slug a Ned.

Don’t you?

All of us know some Neds. We meet them at networking events. They cold-call us. They lob unsolicited pitches. They tell us they have “the ticket” for us — when they know nothing about us. 

But I’m NOT writing this to encourage you to slug someone at your next networking event.

I’m writing this to urge you to look inward.

Deep down, we all have an inner-Ned.

Remember that time you pitched products or services to someone without knowing whether they had a need or desire for what you were selling?
That happened because your inner-Ned escaped.

Smart marketing is about connecting you with the RIGHT people — those who want and need what you’re selling.

If you chase someone who doesn’t want or need what you’re pitching, you’re not selling; you’re annoying.

Keep your inner-Ned in his cage. Gather intelligence about your prospects. Focus on those who need what you’re selling. Pass on those who don’t.

You can do this by employing marketing strategies and tactics — such as tracking who engages with your emails — to identify your real prospects.

Thanks for reading (reply with feedback if you want to share some thoughts) and see you next time…

Tom
MarketVolt

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Monday Mash-Up Weekly Story

Weekly Story 2018.01.31 – Leonardo’s Perfection Problem

In Monday’s email, I recommended the new biography Leonardo DaVinci (by Walter Isaacson).

Great read. Lots of interesting stories. Many business lessons. 

Here’s one: 

In 1480, monks hired Leo to create a painting of the Adoration of the Magi.

Leo started the project, but he stopped before finishing.

Leo imagined the perfect painting, but he couldn’t achieve that perfection.

So he abandoned the unfinished work (Leo had lots of unfinished works).

The monks canned Leo and gave the job to Filippino Lippi.

Art historians say Lippi’s Adoration is way worse than Leo’s… except…

…it’s finished.

Leo was the better painter. But Lippi met deadlines, delivered the goods, and cashed in.

Today, we call Leo a genius and gawk at his works in museums.

But back in the day, Leo was just another starving artist who sucked at running his business.

The bottom line: Leonardo DaVinci had a perfection problem.

Do you have a perfection problem?

Action drives business. Inaction kills it.

Remember that the next time you’re thinking, “I can’t launch an email campaign because I’m not a good enough writer.”

(You’re good enough, or you can hire someone who is good enough.)

Think of Lippi cashing in the next time you re-edit content, over and over again, because it’s “not quite right.”

(It’s right enough or you can hire someone who can quickly make it right enough.)

If you wait and wait and wait and wait and wait and wait and wait…

…until your stuff is practically perfect, you choose inaction over action.

Then, like Leonardo, you will have a perfection problem that becomes a business problem.

Thanks for reading (reply with feedback if you want to share some thoughts) and see you next time…

Tom

p.s. If you want some help moving from inaction to action, here’s how I can help:  I’ve built a team of marketing almost-geniuses who meet deadlines and get the job done. Email strategic planning. Template design. Copy writing and editing. Automating follow-up tasks. Connecting your email system to other systems, such as your CRM. Sending. Tracking. Reporting. You name it, our team can do it. And it costs less than most people assume. 

Gimme a call (314-529-1431) or shoot me an email if you want to learn more or move forward. 

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Weekly Story

Weekly Story 2018.01.24 – Dump the Grammar Guide

Back in high school I had a basketball coach who didn’t win any spelling bees or grammar contests.

Once, after we failed to run the play he called during practice, he stormed onto the court, screaming:

“Jeez, yous guys! Don’t you know the American language!?”

Smart-ass kids that we were, we used to mock Coach for mangling the English language.

All these years later, though, I remember Coach fondly as a good communicator.

Sure, he used small, simple words. Sure he was grammatically challenged. But when Coach spoke, we ALWAYS got the point.

I thought of Coach recently after getting an email pitch from a sales guy who wanted me to advertise in his magazine.

Here’s how the pitch began:

“(Our magazine) has been an apex platform reaching out to 45,000 qualified subscribers in the U.S, offering a renewed aspect in understanding the latest innovations and technologies in the Education industry. Following a peer learning approach, (our magazine) spearheads in highlighting education industry’s latest trends and technologies, and brings forth the ideas and unique offerings of market leaders to assist education experts in establishing institutions alike.”

My first reaction: Jeez, thems some fancy words and big sentences!

My next reaction: What in the hell is he talking about? (Pardon my American).

I’m sorry to pick on this poor guy.

His note was only the latest among gazillions of rotten emails I have received. I just happened to open his as I was preparing to dream up a new weekly email.

This guy’s not unique. Rotten, overwritten, lingo-laden copy litters emails, websites, social media posts, letters, brochures, broadcast advertisements and every other form of marketing content on earth.

It’s always been like that.

And here’s what makes the problem worse: Bad copywriters think they’re good copywriters because they learned how to “write well” in school.

Forget about it. Forget about those grammar lessons. Forget about those complex sentences. Wipe from your memory the difference between a gerund and a participle. None of that helps you write good marketing copy.

Here’s the bottom line: If you want to write smart, effective marketing copy, quit trying to sound so smart.

Drop the fancy phrases and latest lingo. Don’t tell me you have an “apex platform.” Don’t tell me you offer a “renewed aspect.” Don’t say you “spearhead in highlighting…”

Just spit it out. Clearly. Concisely. Without clutter. Keep it simple…

…So anyone who understands the American language will ALWAYS get the point.

Thanks for reading (reply with feedback if you want to share some thoughts) and see you next time…

Tom

Categories
Weekly Story

Weekly Story 2018.01.17 – Fastest Surgeon

I’m not a surgeon. And I don’t play one on TV. But I know this much:

If you’re operating on ONE patient, and THREE people die, you’ve botched the job.

That really happened — to Dr. Robert Liston, who was famous in the 19th century for being the fastest surgeon around.

In those days, before anesthesia, patients sought surgeons who were all about: The faster, the better.

Think about it: You have to lie wide wide awake on a cold slab, no soothing drugs coursing through your veins…

…while a guy in a white smock is slicing you open or sawing off a limb.

I’d be thinking,

“…HURRY UP!”

So haste was not the real problem with Doc Liston.

Ego was.

Dr. Liston was a show-off. He filled his operating room with spectators. He would burst into the room and say, “Time me, gentlemen.” And then, with a flourish, he would get to it.

One time, he accidentally sliced off a patient’s privates while amputating a leg.

But that was nothing compared to the three-in-one butchery…

While cutting through a patient’s leg, Doc accidentally sliced off his assistant’s fingers.

Then, while changing instruments, he accidentally sliced through a spectator’s coat.

The spectator wasn’t wounded, but he thought he was. He freaked out and died of shock.

The fingerless assistant died from infections.

The patient didn’t make it either.

One patient up, three innocent people down.

If only Doc Liston had focused more on the desired outcome and less on showing off.

So it goes with marketing — especially with social media and other content.

It’s not about you and how important, brilliant or accomplished you are.

It’s about your followers, and how they’ll benefit from interacting with you.

Your content has to educate, entertain and inform your followers. That applies to social media, email, your website or any other content you share. 

Too much content is…

Look at us

We’re so special

Here’s our great stuff

You should buy it

That stuff is great if you’re out to stroke your ego.

Not so great if you’re out to serve your followers.

Thanks for reading (reply with feedback if you want to share some thoughts) and see you next time…

Tom

Categories
Weekly Story

Weekly Story 2018.01.10 – Bubblegum Broccoli

Here’s what McDonald’s CEO Don Thompson said when describing bubblegum-flavored broccoli that the company developed a few years ago:

“It wasn’t all that.”

Huh!?

Put yourself in the shoes of those poor kids who tasted this Frankenstein “food.” Imagine what you might have said if you sampled the stuff. 

It’s gotta be more (lots more) than, “It wasn’t all that.”

Bubblegum-flavored broccoli is not some Wonka-esque fantasy.

McDonald’s wanted (aka was pressured) to offer more nutritious vittles.

So they conjured up broccoli-shaped bubblegum — check that…I mean…bubblegum-flavored broccoli. 

The concoction “confused” kids who tried it.

So said the CEO who seems prone to understatement. 

Lotta lessons to draw from this story.

Lesson one: Bubblegum flavor belongs in just one place — bubblegum.

Lesson two: Broccoli should taste like broccoli…or maybe…

…like soy sauce.

Lesson number three (the one you should heed if you’re a marketer): Test your stuff before you bring it to market.

McDonald’s got this part right. So this story has a happy ending.

They tested the broccoli before trying to sell it.

Bubblegum-flavored broccoli failed the test (another understatement!).

So McDonald’s scrapped the idea.

Aside from tainting the taste-buds of some juvenile testers, McDonald’s limited the damage.

All businesses, including yours, come up with bad ideas. 

Smart businesses test ideas.

Roll with ideas that pass the test.

Scrap ideas that fail.  

This applies to big ideas (a new product or service).

This applies to small ideas (a subject line for an email). 

The more you test, the smarter you and your business will be. 

Thanks for reading. If you have some feedback, let ‘er rip.

Until next time…

Tom

P.S.

MarketVolt recently introduced some really cool tools to split-test subject lines, “from…” names, and send times. If you’re already a MarketVolt client, contact support@marketvolt.com (or your account rep) for info on the feature. If you’re not a client, you can sign up for a free software demo here: https://www.marketvolt.com/email-software/#demo

Also…we have a team of marketing experts who can plan, set-up and execute your email campaigns for you. Of course, as part of that, we would design strategies and tactics to test tactics. Roll with the ones that work. Scrap the ones that don’t. If you want to learn more, email tom@marketvolt.com.

Later this year, I’ll be hosting some free online training sessions to reveal best email marketing practices, including strategies and tactics for testing. Stay tuned to these emails where we’ll announce dates and times soon.

Categories
Weekly Story

Weekly Story 2018.01.03 – Nigerian Scam Artists

Categories
High-Voltage Newsletter

High-Voltage 2015.07

Marketing Lessons from Lousy Airline EmailsMarketVolt President Tom Ruwitch recently opted-out of American Airlines’ email list because of the irrelevant, un-personalized Weekly Deals to Go

Tom tells the story on our blog and explains why his experience can instruct your email marketing. Read more…

Seth Godin: Email Marketing is “Priceless” Seth Godin is among the most respected internet marketing experts on the planet. So when he speaks, we listen. That’s why we were so happy to hear Godin, the father of permission marketing, endorse email marketing in a big way during a recent interview. Referring to email, Godin said, “I think showing up in a trusted way, regularly is priceless.” He said this when asked why he prefers to “stick with” email, rather than relying on social media to promote his products and services.

We dig deeper and reveal his incredible results from a recent email campaign in this article on our blog. 
Is Your Site Mobile Friendly? If Not…You probably can tell if your web site is “mobile friendly” just by looking at it. But in some cases, a site that looks mobile-friendly may not be mobile-friendly, according to the authority that matters most — Google. 

If your site is not mobile-friendly, Google will lower your ranking when people search on mobile devices. And the ranking penalty probably applies also when people search from desktops. 

Google Offers A Simple Test

Go here to run Google’s mobile-friendly test on your site. Just enter your site’s URL, and Google will give you its verdict. (MarketVolt.com’s Google test results are pictured here. We passed!)

What Should You Do If Your Site Is Not Mobile-Friendly?  

Fix it. VIsitors are leaving your site and Google is penalizing you if your site is not mobile friendly. The good news: It’s easier than ever to make a site mobile friendly — especially if you build your site with the WordPress content management system.

MarketVolt’s web site development team converts sites from mobile-unfriendly to mobile-friendly, and we also build mobile-friendly WordPress sites from scratch.

For a limited time, we’re offering a free consultation (via web and telephone) in which we will review your web site and recommend quick and affordable ways to make it mobile friendly. 

Go here to learn more and claim one of the free consultations. 
Highly Recommended…
SEO Tips from a Master
Speaking of web sites and Google, we’re big fans of Will Hanke and his firm Red Canoe Media. When it comes to search engine optimization, Will really knows his stuff. 

That’s why we’ll be attending his upcoming event: 17 Point SEO Checklist Webinar. 

This free webinar will reveal 17 things to check on your web site to help improve your rankings in the search engines. 

Details and registration here…