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Actual for You - Leave the Spam Out of Your Customer Service
Writing Effective Adverts to the moment we lie our heads down, we are exposed to spam. And since it’s gotten less effective, many mega-marketers have cranked up their output. Apparently, their strategy is “if it’s not working as well as it used to, then you should do more of it.”Advertising – Who Needs It? - Who doesn’t!Most people who read information about business or advertising are doing so because they are trying to make some kind of positive change in their life. Perhaps get a job, make money, and increase their customer base – whatever. That’s the central purpose of a classified ad. They get you what you want.This article has the same purpose, Like a classified advertisement, it will get you one of the things you want – it will show you how to write a classified advert. which gets results. Not only that, it will help to prevent you from wasting your hard-earned cash ads which never had a cat in hells’ chance of bringing you any business in the first place!This article has a focused theme (showing you how to write ads). In the same way your advertisement should have that a central and focused purpose. Your advert. should be 100% geared to achieve one thing and one thing only• If the intention of the ad is to get people to contac Some spam is so subtle, we don’t always recognize it right away as spam. Often this is because it’s done in person, not in written or broadcast format. Here’s a recent example: A couple weeks ago, I rented some movies at our local BlockBuster. Every time I rent a movie they ask me if I want candy. Or they ask me if I want to join their current monthly program. Sometimes they ask both. Every Marketing Options For Cleaning Companies - Part Two We hear a lot about spam (the technology kind, not the food product) but usually it's in the context of email. Most of us know or have heard of spam filters, spamming rules and anti-spam policies. There are even laws that seek to reduce the amount of spam we have to deal with.Part one looked at telesales, yellow pages and other directories, using mailing lists and advertising in local papers and journals. In this article I will be considering direct selling techniques, leaflet drops and internet advertising.1. Direct ApproachYou could simply cold call on a company and hope you can get to talk to somebody. My experience of this is that it is quite a daunting task and by and large relatively unsuccessful in gaining new business. A lot of time, effort and fuel can be wasted as well as damage to ones morale which could take quite a severe battering as you experience one knockback after another. Not a technique to be recommended. However with regard to builders cleans it can be successful. What this entails is visiting any building site and passing your details, normally in the form of a business card on to the site manager. You may not be successful on that site but invariably companies will hang on to your details and may contact you at some time in the futur But, we don’t typically think of spam in terms of customer service. We should though because, no matter how it’s being used, spam is dangerous and damaging to businesses that use it. Before we start, let’s define spam so we know how to identify it outside of the world of email. I define “spam” as: “Any communication, which imposes a cost on me to receive, which is forced on me, by someone whose primary intention is to serve their needs and who has no obvious reason to believe I am interested in what they offer.” Let’s break this down into its pieces so we can see what’s going on with spam. First, it’s a communication. That’s obvious. As a communication, we know spam is the result of someone wanting to deliver a message to someone else. Second, spam costs me to receive it. It might cost me by using my Internet resources. Or maybe it costs me by using my time to go through junk mail or answer junk phone calls. The resulting junk mail also imposes a cost on me to dispose of it. Third, the sender gives me no option. They intrude into my world and dump their message onto me. To avoid most spam I would have to make huge changes to my life, like cloistering myself in a north woods cabin and living off the land. Otherwise, I have no choice but to be exposed to spam. Fourth, the sender is spamming me in an attempt to serve their needs, not mine. Their primary motivation is to meet some need they have (usually to sell a product). I’m not suggesting I would not benefit by accepting their offer. I might. But the critical point here is that the spammer is focused almost 100% on meeting their needs. Anything I might get from the transaction is a distant second in their priority list. Fifth, they are completely indiscriminate in who they send their spam to. In my book, this is the worst sin spammers commit. They engage in no targeting, no filtering, no planning whatsoever. They just lock and load and blast away. Thus, most of their spam goes to people who have no interest in what they’re offering. When you look at spam this way, you realize, it’s not just in email. Spam is everywhere. For decades, marketers have been spamming us. They’ve been doing it for decade because it worked for many years. But the world has changed. It’s the 21st century and people are sick and tired of getting spammed. From the moment we wake to the moment we lie our heads down, we are exposed to spam. And since it’s gotten less effective, many mega-marketers have cranked up their output. Apparently, their strategy is “if it’s not working as well as it used to, then you should do more of it.” Some spam is so subtle, we don’t always recognize it right away as spam. Often this is because it’s done in person, not in written or broadcast format. Here’s a recent example: A couple weeks ago, I rented some movies at our local BlockBuster. Every time I rent a movie they ask me if I want candy. Or they ask me if I want to join their current monthly program. Sometimes they ask both. Every t Jobs without College Degrees me, by someone whose primary intention is to serve their needs and who has no obvious reason to believe I am interested in what they offer.”In our early youth we all take up jobs to earn money. Right. But do all of us enjoy doing whatever we are supposed to do. Remember, that is a very vital question. Unless you have internal satisfaction in doing a job, you better quit because in the end, nobody is happy, neither you who despise the job nor your employer who finds a reluctant employee eating out of his hand, displacing a willing worker. I recall a seminar addressed by a senior vice president of an MNC, attended by me where the venerable gentleman opened his speech by stating that he started his carrier as a window cleaner and that he loved his job only too well. “I used to go out early in the morning”, he added, “and being a green horn, was much amused at what happened on the other side of the window”.So was the case of a college drop out who minted money by playing guitar in a roaring night- club. His daily tips for playing popular tunes ‘on request’ amounted to more than what a college degree holder could ever aspire. And min Let’s break this down into its pieces so we can see what’s going on with spam. First, it’s a communication. That’s obvious. As a communication, we know spam is the result of someone wanting to deliver a message to someone else. Second, spam costs me to receive it. It might cost me by using my Internet resources. Or maybe it costs me by using my time to go through junk mail or answer junk phone calls. The resulting junk mail also imposes a cost on me to dispose of it. Third, the sender gives me no option. They intrude into my world and dump their message onto me. To avoid most spam I would have to make huge changes to my life, like cloistering myself in a north woods cabin and living off the land. Otherwise, I have no choice but to be exposed to spam. Fourth, the sender is spamming me in an attempt to serve their needs, not mine. Their primary motivation is to meet some need they have (usually to sell a product). I’m not suggesting I would not benefit by accepting their offer. I might. But the critical point here is that the spammer is focused almost 100% on meeting their needs. Anything I might get from the transaction is a distant second in their priority list. Fifth, they are completely indiscriminate in who they send their spam to. In my book, this is the worst sin spammers commit. They engage in no targeting, no filtering, no planning whatsoever. They just lock and load and blast away. Thus, most of their spam goes to people who have no interest in what they’re offering. When you look at spam this way, you realize, it’s not just in email. Spam is everywhere. For decades, marketers have been spamming us. They’ve been doing it for decade because it worked for many years. But the world has changed. It’s the 21st century and people are sick and tired of getting spammed. From the moment we wake to the moment we lie our heads down, we are exposed to spam. And since it’s gotten less effective, many mega-marketers have cranked up their output. Apparently, their strategy is “if it’s not working as well as it used to, then you should do more of it.” Some spam is so subtle, we don’t always recognize it right away as spam. Often this is because it’s done in person, not in written or broadcast format. Here’s a recent example: A couple weeks ago, I rented some movies at our local BlockBuster. Every time I rent a movie they ask me if I want candy. Or they ask me if I want to join their current monthly program. Sometimes they ask both. Every How to Be Customer Unfriendly . They intrude into my world and dump their message onto me. To avoid most spam I would have to make huge changes to my life, like cloistering myself in a north woods cabin and living off the land. Otherwise, I have no choice but to be exposed to spam.One of my favorite airlines committed a customer interface blunder. They changed the automated telephone menu system for reservations, removed the 24-hour fast-access option for frequent flyers, set up the menu so it changes at various times of the day, and put long recorded messages on the system to ‘educate’ passengers while they wait.I’ve called this airline many times. My fingers know which buttons to push to get what I need without delay. Now my fingers are lost and my ears are listening to long messages. I am still trying to figure out which menu works at which time of day and which buttons I need to push.A similar experience took place when WordPerfect introduced ‘WordPerfect for Windows’ and all the function keys were changed. Long ago, WordPerfect was the word-processing program of choice.But overnight my loyalty to WordPerfect evaporated. As long as I had to re-learn a whole new set of keystrokes, I might as well learn Microsoft Word. And what happened to WordPerfect? Fourth, the sender is spamming me in an attempt to serve their needs, not mine. Their primary motivation is to meet some need they have (usually to sell a product). I’m not suggesting I would not benefit by accepting their offer. I might. But the critical point here is that the spammer is focused almost 100% on meeting their needs. Anything I might get from the transaction is a distant second in their priority list. Fifth, they are completely indiscriminate in who they send their spam to. In my book, this is the worst sin spammers commit. They engage in no targeting, no filtering, no planning whatsoever. They just lock and load and blast away. Thus, most of their spam goes to people who have no interest in what they’re offering. When you look at spam this way, you realize, it’s not just in email. Spam is everywhere. For decades, marketers have been spamming us. They’ve been doing it for decade because it worked for many years. But the world has changed. It’s the 21st century and people are sick and tired of getting spammed. From the moment we wake to the moment we lie our heads down, we are exposed to spam. And since it’s gotten less effective, many mega-marketers have cranked up their output. Apparently, their strategy is “if it’s not working as well as it used to, then you should do more of it.” Some spam is so subtle, we don’t always recognize it right away as spam. Often this is because it’s done in person, not in written or broadcast format. Here’s a recent example: A couple weeks ago, I rented some movies at our local BlockBuster. Every time I rent a movie they ask me if I want candy. Or they ask me if I want to join their current monthly program. Sometimes they ask both. Every Hello Work World, I'm Un-Retiring list.For many years, you looked forward to that day when you would bid the world of work a fond farewell and ride off into the sunset of your golden years.Initially, it felt wonderful not to have to go somewhere each morning. Days, weeks, months of leisure lay temptingly before you. At last there would be time to do everything you wanted. No stress, no strain, just pleasing yourself for a change.You can't quite remember when everything started to change. Maybe it was when you realized that you couldn't really afford to do all the traveling you had planned. Maybe it was the third day of puttering around in the garage trying to ignore the boredom and emptiness you felt inside. Maybe it was when you looked around the mall in the middle of the afternoon and realized that you were one of the youngest people present. Maybe it was when you watched the evening news and suddenly felt like an alien in a strange world in which you no longer belonged.Whatever happened, you wake up one morning a Fifth, they are completely indiscriminate in who they send their spam to. In my book, this is the worst sin spammers commit. They engage in no targeting, no filtering, no planning whatsoever. They just lock and load and blast away. Thus, most of their spam goes to people who have no interest in what they’re offering. When you look at spam this way, you realize, it’s not just in email. Spam is everywhere. For decades, marketers have been spamming us. They’ve been doing it for decade because it worked for many years. But the world has changed. It’s the 21st century and people are sick and tired of getting spammed. From the moment we wake to the moment we lie our heads down, we are exposed to spam. And since it’s gotten less effective, many mega-marketers have cranked up their output. Apparently, their strategy is “if it’s not working as well as it used to, then you should do more of it.” Some spam is so subtle, we don’t always recognize it right away as spam. Often this is because it’s done in person, not in written or broadcast format. Here’s a recent example: A couple weeks ago, I rented some movies at our local BlockBuster. Every time I rent a movie they ask me if I want candy. Or they ask me if I want to join their current monthly program. Sometimes they ask both. Every How Creative Branding can Help Boring Businesses to the moment we lie our heads down, we are exposed to spam. And since it’s gotten less effective, many mega-marketers have cranked up their output. Apparently, their strategy is “if it’s not working as well as it used to, then you should do more of it.”I come across a fair number of clients who apologize for their companies… “We’re sorry that manufacturing label paste is not the most interesting thing in the world.” Or, “There’s nothing we can do to stand out… we’re in the business of finding cheaper ways to for demolition customers to dump trash. We don’t dump the trash. We just research the cheapest way for them to dump their own trash. It’s really dry stuff.”Yes, neither of these companies is selling gourmet food, creating colorful board games, or packaging imported tea. Photographers often hear, “I’m not remotely photogenic,” to which they usually respond, “It’s my job to take a good picture—you just be you.” Design is the same. You do your job well and you know your market. It is a designer’s job to make you look interesting.The potential for creativity is everywhere. Just because you’re in a boring industry doesn’t mean you can’t be creative and use design to make your organization more effective and successful. Industries tha Some spam is so subtle, we don’t always recognize it right away as spam. Often this is because it’s done in person, not in written or broadcast format. Here’s a recent example: A couple weeks ago, I rented some movies at our local BlockBuster. Every time I rent a movie they ask me if I want candy. Or they ask me if I want to join their current monthly program. Sometimes they ask both. Every time I say “no”. In fact I say it multiple times because they usually don’t listen. They’re so focused on their spiel they don’t bother to notice I’ve said “no” 8 times before they’ve finished. Then, they often end with a smart-aleck remark like “you don’t like getting free movies?” Great strategy! Insult the customer. That should bring me back. I know they use a computer to track every customer transaction. So, why can’t they look at their screen and see that I have NEVER responded positively to any of their offers? All the information they need is right there. In fact, why can’t they put a note on my account that says “don’t ask about special offers anymore – customer is not interested.” Because I’m not interested. I’m an adult. If I want a candy bar, I’ll decide that for myself and I’ll buy one. Heck, you don’t even have to be an adult to do that! I’ve been doing it since I was 7 years old. Same for their monthly programs. I’m fully capable of learning more about them on my own. If I’m interested, I can ask. They have signs and banners everywhere so it’s not like I’m unaware of the current promotion. The fact is they COULD note my purchase record and easily determine I was not a good candidate for their offer of the day. And they could EASILY flag my account screen (as I have asked them to do) to inform the clerks to NOT waste their breath or my time with their unwanted spammy sales pitch. But they don’t flag my account. And they do continue to pester me with their sales pitches. Because they don’t care what I want or what I think. They are totally focused on their needs. They are spamming me. When the BlockBuster clerk asks me if I want candy or if I want to join their “movie club” they are spamming me. Their communication meets all five spamming criteria. 1. It’s a communication. (A question is asked) 2. They waste my time with their questions. 3. I have no option. If I am to rent a movie I have to listen to their offers. 4. They are trying to sell more product, not help me have a better customer experience. If BlockBuster was interested in my customer experience, they would do as I ask and stop asking me if I want to buy things I am not interested in. 5. They ask everyone the same questions. They use none of the customer data they have available. They simply blast their incessant pitches at everyone who gives them money. What I find amazing is that if I walk into their store and I leave WITHOUT spending any money, then they don’t pitch me. They never ask me if I want to buy candy or join a movie club. Apparently, if I don’t spend money,
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