Sunday, March 31, 2013

Identifying the Questions Your Prospects Need to Answer

At the most basic level, successful B2B marketing and sales depend largely on having solid answers to four questions:
  • Why do companies and businesspeople buy products or services like those we provide?
  • How do our products or services create value for our customers?
  • What differentiates our products or services from those offered by our competitors?
  • How do our prospects make buying decisions?
Of these four issues, many B2B marketers and salespeople have the least understanding of how prospects actually make buying decisions. In the 2013 Sales Perforance Optimization survey by CSO Insights, only 9.6% of respondents said that their ability to understand their customer's buying process exceeded espectations.

Over the years, marketing and sales professionals have developed several models to describe the B2B buying process. Some still use the Awareness-Consideration-Evaluation-Purchase model that's been around for decades. The SiriusDecisions model depicted below is another widely-used representation of the B2B buying process.









Models can help us understand the buying process, but all buying process models have two important limitations. First, they inevitably make the decision-making process more linear and less complicated that it actually is. And second, buying process models don't contain all of the information you need to design effective demand generation programs or develop relevant and compelling marketing content.

Because of these limitations, I use a different approach when I work with clients on demand generation/content marketing programs. What we do is identify the questions that prospects will need to answer to feel comfortable making a buying decision. These questions are developed for each relevant buyer persona, and they are also formulated with a specific product or service in mind. These critical questions are part of what Ardath Albee called a "buyer synopis" in her great book, eMarketing Strategies for the Complex Sale.

To illustrate how this works, the table below shows some of the types of questions that would likely be included in any buying process for a complex product or service. For this example, I've collapsed the six-step SiriusDecisions buying process model into three broad buying process phases - Discovery, Consideration, and Decision. The questions in this table are general, and when you develop buying process questions, you'll want to include several that relate specifically to your product or service.




Developing an extensive list of buying stage questions helps you understand how your prospects think whey they're evaluating a prospective purchase. Just as important, it helps you design effective demand generation programs by enabling you to pinpoint the issues your marketing content resources need to address to move prospects through the buying process.

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Time Change?? ...Change your planning style

OK folks...we are two weeks into the "Spring Forward" time change.  Sunday mornings after the time change are always a bit rough...especially the spring change. We set the clocks to 'spring' forward in time, so we lost an hour of sleep...but we are closer to warmer days!

Daylight Savings Time is a welcome change and the long sunny days of spring and summer are around the corner!

However, the Time Change also signals an important time for us all... planning for the remainder of 2013 and, in particular, the mid-year strategic check up we should all have on our calendar for June/July.

Its time to look at things differently this year...and here are the TOP 3 changes you should make to your 2013 strategic marketing planning process:
  1. Make is scalable-- start with each region/business line/office and scale your marketing plan from that common denominator forward to the entire organization. Start local, targeted and one-to-one and grow into an organizational support plan.
  2. Bring in the customer voice-- whether it is focus groups, research, or simple branch intercepts, bring in the voice of the customer...what they want, the challenges they face, and the help they need from your organization!
  3. Be 3-dimensional-- in EVERY aspect of your planning, PLAN for reaching your target customer from three different angles; see, hear and touch...electronic, print and personal...in person, in the mail and over the Internet...whatever 3-dimensional means to you...make it happen EVERY time this year!
Looking forward to the rest of 2013... is an exciting time and you should engage your entire organization in the communicating and sharing of ideas.  Just remember, there is a difference between asking for input and asking for decisions...you still need to make the decisions!

Cheers!

Bruce

With nearly 193,000 visits worldwide, we hope that you enjoy this blog.  If you find it helpful, please share it with your colleagues.  Also, check out our YouTube Channel for short video blogs about financial marketing.  

We bring these marketing philosophies to credit unions and community banks nationwide, and would love to bring them to your institution too.  Contact us to see how.

MarketMatch is also a nationally and internationally requested speaker.  Contact us to bring our marketing ideas to your next conference.
937-832-7894 x101

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

But Wait! There's More!

They are marketing's used car salesmen, but they work!  They make you question your sanity when you pick up the phone, but you make the call.  We've all fallen prey to them at one time or another ... the infomercial.

When we can't sit through a 30 second ad, what is it about this scourge of media that makes us sit through a half hour of "too good to be trues?"

I'm not saying that, as respectful marketing professionals, we should don the plaid jacket and start yelling at our audience.  But, I believe that there are lessons in everything.  And, since these 30-minute scream-fests seem to work, there are lessons we can learn from them as well.

What makes infomercials so damn successful?

Identify a Problem or Need
They may invent a need that I didn't even know I had, but man do I need a kitchen knife that can cut through an aluminum can!

We are all in business for a reason and that's because we represent a better mousetrap. If we didn't, we'd fold-up shop.  Especially my credit union and bank readers!  Most days, our members want us to just not screw up ... clear their checks and make sure that their balance is what they expect.  But when they need us, they REALLY care about us.  We are their gateway to that new house, new car or retirement! It should be no problem at all for us to identify a real problem or need.

Get Their Attention
Whether it's a Shake Weight, the Magic Bullet or the George Foreman Grill, people talk about infomercials.  Maybe it's because the product is so darn amazing or maybe it's just because that Sham Wow guy is so psychotically excited.

Have you seen most credit union and bank ads?  A little psychotic enthusiasm wouldn't hurt us!

Provide a Clear Promise
It's not that the product "melts" belly fat, it's about the way your spouse looks at you and the confidence that you now have.  The BENEFIT isn't in what the product does, it's in how the product makes you feel.  We need to remember that ... FREE checking is NOT a benefit.

Infomercials also make a clear and convincing case for the benefits that they offer.  Often through testimonials or before-and-after examples.  As financial institutions, we change people's lives every day. It should be no problem sharing how we can help others.

Strong & Immediate Call to Action
This is the cornerstone of all infomercials.  I've seen the same juicer offer for 3 years now that says I need to call in the next ten minutes!

If we've made a clear case for why they should choose us over the competition than we are doing the audience a dis-service if we don't encourage them to come in today.  Every minute they don't bank with us is another minute of misery.

Provide a specific, relevant offer and create a sense of urgency.

With a little more infomercial in our efforts, maybe we too can have our audience sit through our spots, be inspired to pick up the phone and create a little buzz.


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With nearly 195,000 visits worldwide, we hope that you enjoy this blog.  If you find it helpful, please share it with your colleagues.  Also, check out our YouTube Channel for short video blogs about financial marketing.  

We bring these marketing philosophies to credit unions and community banks nationwide, and would love to bring them to your institution too.  Contact us to see how.

MarketMatch is also a nationally and internationally requested speaker.  Contact us to bring our marketing ideas to your next conference.



Sunday, March 24, 2013

Why You Need to Think Twice About Cold Calling

The effectiveness of cold calling as a lead generation tactic is still a much-debated topic in B2B marketing and sales circles. Many thought leaders and practitioners contend that cold calling is no longer an effective and efficient way to generate new sales leads. It's also clear, however, that many B2B companies still rely heavily on their salespeople to find new leads through a variety of prospecting activities, including cold calling.

Unfortunately, most of the "evidence" used to argue for and against cold calling has been anecdotal at best, and the lack of empirical data regarding the efficacy of cold calling makes the debate interesting, but not necessarily useful for decision making.

Recent research by Baylor University's Keller Center for Research takes an important step in quantifying the effectiveness of cold calling as a lead generation tool.

The Keller study involved 50 real estate agents who made a total of 6,264 cold calls over a two-week period. The agents were using a generic, random list of telephone numbers from a geographic area not previously marketed to by the agent. So, these were truly cold calls.

Here's an overview of the study's major findings:
  • Of the 6,264 calls placed, 17% were non-working numbers, 55% were not answered, and 28% were answered.
  • Of the 1,774 calls that were answered, 1,612 of the prospects (91%) were not interested in the offering or refused to provide additional information.
  • The agents involved in the study generated 19 appointments with prospective clients and received 11 referrals as a result of the calling effort.
  • The agents had to make 209 calls to obtain one appointment or referral.
  • The overall "success rate" for the calling effort was 0.5% (30 appointments and referrals / 6,264 calls placed).
  • The authors of the study assumed that "bad" calls (non-answers and non-working numbers) required (on average) one minute per call and that answered calls required (on average) five minutes per call. Based on these assumptions, it would take about 7.5 hours to make 209 calls and obtain one appointment or referral. (In other words, based on the authors' assumptions, it would take one full day of calling to get one appointment or referral.)
Does the Keller study provide the "final" answer regarding the effectiveness and efficiency of cold calling for lead generation? I don't think so. For one thing, the study involved cold calling in a B2C setting, and I don't think the findings of the study can be projected to B2B cold calling. In a B2B setting, the results might be better or worse, but we shouldn't assume they would be the same. Nevertheless, the Keller study raises serious doubts regarding how effective cold calling can be.

Thursday, March 21, 2013

How To Make Telecommuting Work In Generating Sales Leads

After that announcement of Yahoo! CEO Marissa Mayer, telling all its employees that telecommuting is no longer allowed in the company, there has been a flurry of discussion about its merits and demerits in various avenues. For weeks, that seems to be the only topic with value. Of course, such news can have some ramifications on other business processes, like in lead generation. While there are valid reasons why telecommuting is bad for generating B2B leads, a properly arranged telecommuting team can be even more profitable. There are plenty of factors that you need to consider here, but the most important one is this: the business owner himself.

 For any major business strategy to succeed, the business owner will have to bear a big responsibility for it. The company culture, the business practices, as well as the people hired, all these will fall squarely in the lap of the business owner. Appointment setting, especially those employing telemarketing methods, can work well via telecommuting if you know how to manage it. As the business owner, you have to believe that this will work. Having doubts in your mind can be very damaging to your confidence, keeping you from fully exploring the potentials of telecommuting for your business. You should have more confidence in yourself and in your business processes. That is crucial in terms of getting more sales leads.

 Of course, telecommuting aside, you can also employ outsourced lead generation companies. These firms are a good bet if you want to reduce the costs of generating B2B leads.

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Let's End the Obsession with Marketing ROI

Periodically, I feel the urge to rant about the current obsession with marketing ROI. I say obsession, not because marketing ROI isn't a very important measure of marketing performance, but because marketers now seem to feel compelled to calculate the ROI (or a projected ROI) of almost every marketing activity - even when the ability to accurately measure ROI is questionable at best.

I published my last rant on this topic in January of last year, and Stop Trying to Measure Marketing ROI has become one of the most popular posts at this blog. I won't rehash all of the arguments here, but the biggest challenge in measuring the ROI of an individual marketing program is revenue attribution. In order to calculate the ROI of a marketing program, you must know how much incremental revenue the program produced. If you can't accurately attribute revenue to a marketing program, you can't calculate an accurate ROI.

I was thinking about this topic when I came across a post at the Harvard Business Review Blog by Alnoor Ebrahim, an associate professor in the Social Enterprise Institute at the Harvard Business School. Ebrahim's post discusses how three "social action" organizations measure the performance of their programs. The focus of the post is whether the organizations only measure the immediate outputs of their programs, or also attempt to measure ultimate impacts or outcomes.

For example, Acumen Fund is a venture philanthropy fund that invests in social enterprises in Africa and Asia. Its primary social metric is the number of lives reached in poor markets. If Acumen invests in a company that manufactures anti-malarial bed nets, it will count the number of nets made and distributed. Acumen does not try to measure ultimate outcomes such as reduction in malaria or improvements in health, because it believes that measuring ultimate outcomes is too complicated, expensive, and impractical.

Robin Hood Foundation is a grant-making foundation whose objective is to fight poverty in New York City. When Robin Hood makes educational grants, it first identifies a set of results that can be easily measured - increased school attendance, scores on standardized tests, and high school graduation rates. Then it attempts to find third-party research studies that correlate these near-term results to expected lifetime earnings or quality of life (the ultimate desired outcomes). Robin Hood uses these studies to estimate the ultimate benefits of the programs until direct measurement (or better research) is available.

Professor Ebrahim argues that organizations must be realistic about measuring ultimate impacts:  "Surely measuring impact matters but we need to be realistic about the constraints. It requires a level of research expertise, commitment to longitudinal study, and allocation of resources that are typically beyond the capabilities of implementing organizations. It is critical to identify when it makes sense to measure impacts and when it might be best to stick with outputs - especially when an organization's control over results is limited and causality remains poorly understood."

So, what does this have to do with marketing? I would suggest that the measurement challenges facing marketers are similar to those faced by these philanthropic organizations. Marketers would like to quantify the impact of every marketing program on revenue growth (the ultimate desired outcome), but that may not be realistic in some situations

In today's B2B marketing environment, prospective customers will be exposed to numerous marketing messages and programs over the course of their purchase journey. On top of that, for B2B companies that offer complex products or services, personal selling plays a significant role in driving new sales.

The issue is:  How do you accurately attribute revenues across all of the marketing and sales activities that play some role in the generation of those revenues? With the use of extensive, longitudinal testing and marketing mix modeling, it may be possible for a company to arrive at a reasonably accurate attribution of revenues. However, these techniques require significant expertise and can be very expensive to use. As a result, few companies go this far. Research by the Lenskold Group indicates that only 11% of companies use test and control groups, and only 3% use market mix modeling. Without these techniques, it can be all but impossible to accurately attribute revenues in a comlex demand generation environment.

For most companies, the more practical approach is to measure the outputs of individual marketing activities and to correlate those outputs to revenues without trying to attribute a specific dollar amount of revenue to each activity. With this approach, you can judge the value of an individual marketing activity without needing to use arbitrary revenue attribution to calculate ROI.

For a thorough and less "ranty" discussion of this topic, I recommend that you take a look at this recent post by Jon Miller at the Marketo B2B Marketing and Sales Blog.

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

The Power of the Preposterous Question!

Greetings...

Have you ever had an absolutely preposterous thought?  One that actually made you smile with the absolute outrageousness of the idea.  And occasionally, have you given it even more thought, you start to believe it can happen... thinking differently is starting to work!

think different, strategy
A Classic Example of Preposterous Ideas that came to life!

Well, I want to share the power of two words... WHAT IF.

Over the last several weeks, I have seen the power of those two little words...

What If...
- we didn't have a marketing budget, but instead we funded everything that generated a positive ROI?

What If...
- we paid our tellers like loan officers and made it a career versus an entry level position?

What If...
- we doubled the interest rate on checking accounts once a customer referred five friends?

The power of What IF...its in the nature of the question and also the process of thinking differently.  Steve Jobs is a classic example of  preposterous thinker that changed the world.

Your assignment, if you should choose to accept it, it to think of ONE...just ONE...preposterous idea and give it every effort to see if you can make sense of it.  Share it, kick-it around, noodle on it, shoot holes in it...it may never raise to the level of reality-- but then again you might just be on to something!

Perhaps our ideas won't change the World...but they CAN change OUR world!

Cheers!




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With nearly 190,000 visits worldwide, we hope that you enjoy this blog.  If you find it helpful, please share it with your colleagues.  Also, check out our YouTube Channel for short video blogs about financial marketing.  

We bring these marketing philosophies to credit unions and community banks nationwide, and would love to bring them to your institution too.  Contact us to see how.

MarketMatch is also a nationally and internationally requested speaker.  Contact us to bring our marketing ideas to your next conference.
937-832-7894 x101

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Pay No Attention To The Man Behind The Curtain (Marketing Magic)

Marketers are the Great and Powerful Oz!

In my formative years at Flynn, Sabatino & Day, a Dayton ad agency, I worked on Copeland Scroll Air Compressors.  These little suckers essentially looked like R2D2 - but in the industry, they were extraordinary!

We were responsible for many new product launches, but on one fateful day, I was amazed and astounded ... Not so much by this little metal R2D2 critter as by my creative team.  We were on an already extended deadline for a key trade pub for a full page ad that was going to announce the launch of our newest compressor technology.  The concept, copy and ad design were all approved and we were literally gathering the files to send to the publication at 5:00 the night of the deadline when it happened ...  The client called and said that they had just decided that our little black canister was going to launched in BLUE!  With no actual blue units produced and no time for a new photo shoot even if they had one, our only response was ... "What shade?"

Here's the amazing part.  Within an hour, we had a color sample from the client and the Mac Wizards magically transformed our black, shiny product into the new, (yet unproduced) compressor with the files ready to go to print.  All of the shadows and glare were in the photo - it looked like this blue beast really existed.

A few years later, while working on an international launch of the Scitex (now Kodak) VersaMark printer, we ran into a similar conundrum.  We had to include a machine in sales collateral that had not yet been produced.  Unlike our 10 pound R2D2 friend, this sucker filled a room ... existed only in prototype ... and had to be in sales materials in about a dozen languages and press releases in all major trade pubs.  Our answer ... "Lets build a model."

Through the power of styrofoam and wonder of photography, we had a quarter-sized model made and shot it to look like it's full-sized behemoth counterpart.  It was like dusting off the flux capacitor, gassing up the DeLorean and shooting into the future.

I learned early in my career that there is literally NOTHING that we can't do!  If we can pull off this type of magic with technical equipment, image what you can do with a checking account or auto loan!

As marketers - especially at credit unions and community banks - we can do some pretty amazing things.  We can give the gift of courage (or confidence), a heart (taking care of our communities), a brain (financial education) and home (mortgages).  

Our tactics may occasionally involve smoke and mirrors, but in the end we do great things.



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With nearly 189,000 visits worldwide, we hope that you enjoy this blog.  If you find it helpful, please share it with your colleagues.  Also, check out our YouTube Channel for short video blogs about financial marketing.  

We bring these marketing philosophies to credit unions and community banks nationwide, and would love to bring them to your institution too.  Contact us to see how.

MarketMatch is also a nationally and internationally requested speaker.  Contact us to bring our marketing ideas to your next conference.


Sunday, March 10, 2013

Three Questions Your Content Marketing Plan Must Answer

It's now abundantly clear that content marketing is a core marketing tactic for many companies. Research by the Content Marketing Institute suggests that nine out of ten B2B companies are using content marketing in some form.

Developing a content marketing program is a significant undertaking for any company. Not only does it require the creation of new content resources and the implementation of new marketing tactics, it also involves a fundamental shift in the philosophical approach to marketing.

When I'm talking with clients about implementing a content marketing program, one question that always comes up early in the conversation is: "How do I get started?" I always answer this question by saying that the first step is to develop a content marketing strategy and plan for the business. That answer usually leads to a second question:  "What should be included in a content strategy/plan?"

A complete content marketing plan will address numerous issues and contain significant detail, but at the most basic level, a content plan must answer three fundamental questions:
  • What issues or topics will the content resources address, and how will the resources be made relevant for potential buyers?
  • What digital and/or physical formats will be used for marketing content resources?
  • When and how will content resources be published, distributed, or otherwise brought to the market, and how will they be promoted?
Like the proverbial three-legged stool, the answers to these three questions define the core elements of your content marketing strategy and plan. What makes these three questions particularly critical is that they apply both to the overall content marketing plan and to individual content resources. In other words, every time you contemplate the creation of a new content resource, you need to determine what issues it will address and how it will be tailored for a specific target audience, what format will be used for the resource, and how the resource will be published, distributed, and promoted.

Of these three questions, the first is by far the most important. One of the biggest content marketing mistakes that I see companies make is allowing format, rather than message, to drive the content development process. Marketers sometimes say, "We need a white paper [or an eBook or a Webinar]," rather than, "We need a content resource that communicates message X to audience Y." If you want to create an effective content marketing program, think messaging first, and then format and distribution.

I've published several posts here that discuss how to make content messaging more effective. In case you missed those posts, here are the links:

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

8 Life Stages You Should Market To

Do you remember when Gen X was a bunch of flannel-wearin', Nirvana-listenin', baristas living in Mom and Dad's basement -- and that was the extent of their ambition?

Fast forward to today, when Gen X is driving a minivan to their kid's activities, meeting a monthly mortgage payment, trying to save for a seemingly nonexistent retirement and ... well ... writing an amazing weekly blog about financial marketing and consulting credit unions and community banks on how to better utilize their marketing resources!

As marketers, we understand that segmentation is little more than politically correct stereotyping.  

It's our job to stick everyone in the world into some kind of bucket.  Traditionally, we've done this based on generational criteria: The Greatest Generation, Baby Boomers, Gen X, Gen Y, Millennials, Gen Next.

The problem is that generations grow up - they evolve.  Segmentation based on generation is a moving target.


Now, consider this ... when Ben, my first child, was born, EVERYTHING changed!  That week, I picked up the phone and started learning about life insurance.  We bought a minivan for the power sliding doors.  During the "nesting" phase, we remodeled the house, prepares a nursery and did all but pad the walls in child-proofing.  All of this had some financial and banking ramifications.  And you know what?  My needs as a new parent were essentially the same in 2003 as a new parent's needs in 1983 and will likely be in 2023.

As bankers (and credit unioners), we are needed MOST during life's big changes.  Our job is to identify those needs and translate them into product solutions.

If you've been a long-time reader of this blog, you've read it; if you've heard me speak, you've heard it; if you are a client, you're likely implementing it.  Consider segmentation based on Life Stage.

There are certain events in nearly everyone's lives that we can predict and that generate specific financial needs.  This list may not be definitive, but it's a great start to get your brain moving:

School Years
From high school through college, they are building a base for their financial future.  It's time to establish great savings habits and manage any debt accrued in school.

Marriage
As two lives become one, there is often a consolidation of checking accounts, a new home, wedding and honeymoon expenses.

New Home
If you're not automatically bundling a credit card with your mortgage, start today!  Old stuff is never good enough for a NEW home.  They also need to start saving for those surprise expenses that homes have a tendency to through our way.

New Baby
Nothing changes financial priorities faster than the pitter-patter of little feet!  

Empty Nest
With fewer mouths to feed, empty nesters often enjoy extra disposable income.  Will change savings habits and often will looks to downsize their home.

Grandparent
They may want to help secure the future of a whole new generation by helping their children and spoiling their grandchildren.

Retirement
With more time to focus on themselves and on their loved ones, retirees look to stretch the savings that they've worked decades to build.

Owning a Business
Though there are similarities, business banking and personal banking are different.  These entrepreneurs are looking for sound advice and ways to better manage their money.


Once you've identified the relevant Life Stages, think about these folk's needs.

  • How do they save and spend?
  • How do they borrow and for what?
  • What are their needs in the near future?
  • What conveniences do they want and need?

Finally, assign the most likely products and services to fulfill those needs, then you can:
  • Bundle products, 
  • Package your bundles in ways that will differentiate you and facilitate meaningful conversation with your customers (see samples from the above photos),
  • Train your sales staff to narrow the focus of their discussions and
  • Fine tune your targeting of external and internal communications


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With nearly 185,000 visits worldwide, we hope that you enjoy this blog.  If you find it helpful, please share it with your colleagues.  Also, check out our YouTube Channel for short video blogs about financial marketing.  

We bring these marketing philosophies to credit unions and community banks nationwide, and would love to bring them to your institution too.  Contact us to see how.

MarketMatch is also a nationally and internationally requested speaker.  Contact us to bring our marketing ideas to your next conference.

Sunday, March 3, 2013

What if you didn't have to guess?

In decades past, the success of a marketing director depended heavily on his or her ability to predict the future, often times by guessing. Guess well, and you were a success. Guess poorly, and your marketing career was short-lived. Marketers became adept at reading the tea leaves, and depending upon their gut and experience to make educated guesses.

As my friend Rick Lester says, "prayer should not be a marketing strategy." On this blog, I've written several times about the importance of using data to make decisions. Often times companies have years of transactional data that can be invaluable when developing strategy for future campaigns. That said, I've somewhat neglected another important tool that I've used throughout my career to help guide decision-making - market research. Combined, market research and data analysis form a formidable team. One should not be chosen over the other, but they should be used in tandem, and if done so, the need to guess is almost virtually eliminated.

Data analysis is best used to help inform future operating decisions that closely align with past performance. For example, when rescaling a house, marketers can be relatively certain which seating sections can withstand a price increase by analyzing sales patterns and looking for sections that are in constantly high demand. We can also tell which households are most likely to subscribe and what package and price point to pitch based upon their interactions with us. But what happens when you are faced with the unknown? Over the years at Arena Stage, I've been faced with challenges that have very few, if any, precedents. There wasn't any data to pull from, either internally or from other companies. We were in uncharted waters. And that's when market research became critical.

Since moving to Washington, DC seven years ago, both at Americans for the Arts and Arena Stage, I've depended on the wise counsel of Mark Shugoll, CEO of Shugoll Research.  Throughout the years, Shugoll Research has conducted many studies that have helped inform my decision-making, and below are just a couple of instances where market research was invaluable:

Arena Restaged. In January 2008, Arena Stage moved from its SW DC home into two temporary locations - a theater in the basement of a Marriott in Arlington, VA and the Lincoln Theatre in NW DC on U Street. We would remain in these temporary locations for two years and eight months while the Mead Center for American Theater was built. During that time, we had to minimize patron attrition caused by the move, and work to grow our audience base, as the new building would require a significantly increased patron base. I searched the country for a good precedent to learn from, but not a single one surfaced. Feeling on our own, I turned to Shugoll Research to help map out a strategy. I wanted to know what barriers existed for our patrons in moving to our temporary locations. What would motivate them to stay with us through the construction years? What competitive advantages existed at our temporary locations that were good selling points? How we could make the move less onerous? We tested messaging, sales strategies and tactics. From that, I learned a great many things. I learned that if our patrons got lost on their first trip to our new theaters, they wouldn't return. I learned that we had to make sure that parking and public transportation was readily available. I learned that dining options were incredibly important. From this, I spent months on signage plans. With the Crystal City Business Improvement District, we installed more than 100 new directional signs within a two mile radius of our temporary theater in Virginia. In coordination with the MidCity Business Association, we aggressively marketed the restaurants on U street and offered valet parking for every performance, as the neighborhood had very few parking options. We sent out personalized websites to each of our subscribers which among other things offered up step-by-step directions from their house to the new theaters. For these efforts, Arena Stage was recognized with the Box Office of the Year Award from INTIX and the Helen Hayes' Washington Post Award for Innovative Leadership in the Theatre Community. More importantly, we were budgeted to experience 7% attrition during the move and only realized 1.9% - and it all started with market research.

Branding. Forget the high gloss, four color brochures that list your mission statement and vision. We all know that our brands, regardless of what we say, actually live in the minds and hearts of our customers. Over the years, I've almost always found a disconnect between what an institution thinks their brand is and what their customers view their brand as being. In 2008, Shugoll Research conducted a series of brand focus groups for Arena Stage. Only two years later, we would be opening the Mead Center for American Theater, so as a new marketing director, I wanted to test the current state of our brand before launching a rebranding campaign repositioning Arena Stage as a national center for American theater. Inside the company, it was clear to most at the time that Arena Stage was a home for American voices, something that Molly Smith had focused on since coming to Arena Stage in 1998. But when tested in focus groups, less than 20% of our subscribers and donors knew that we focused on American voices, and almost none of the single ticket buyers. We had to be much more aggressive in marketing our brand, so we developed a tag line ("Where American Theater Lives"), commissioned a series of spotlight articles on the American voices in each season, developed a new color palette which was a play off of red, white and blue, and eventually put the word "American" in our new logo and name. Two years later, we retested and found that more than 80% of those asked knew our American focus.

Customer Service. As I've written about previously, I view customer service as a very valuable competitive advantage. So, how is your organization doing? Beyond diligently tracking and responding to complaints, what are you doing to monitor customer satisfaction? We've hired Shugoll Research to develop and deploy customer satisfaction surveys, and benchmark us against peer organizations and ourselves for the past several years. I'm proud to report that we've received "industry leader" marks every year since 2008.  But more importantly, each year we learn where we can improve, and we know where we should invest time and resources to improve our customers' experience. For example, in our first year in the new building, we received exceptionally high marks for our parking lot; we were delighted to see that our parking attendants were routinely going above and beyond to take care of our patrons. And the patrons noticed. That said, some of our elderly patrons reported that it was a challenge to walk up the ramp from the parking garage to the main lobby. So we responded by offering valet parking at the same price as standard parking for those who needed some extra assistance.

Pricing. We spend a lot of time discussing pricing at Arena Stage. As marketers, we want to devise strategies that keep our institutions accessible to our communities all while developing price points that lead to sold-out houses. Get too aggressive with your prices, and your percent paid capacities will drop (hence why the Metropolitan Opera announced that it would be lowering prices next year). But if your prices are too low, then you are leaving money on the table, something that most non-profit arts organizations can't afford to do in today's economic climate. So are you charging the right price for the right seat at the right time? To help us navigate pricing, we sought the assistance of TRGArts and Shugoll Research. TRGArts created heat maps, advised us on the rescaling of our halls, and analyzed sales data to determine optimal price points. Shugoll Research conducted focus groups and surveys to determine price elasticity, and to procure feedback from customers. Did our patrons think we were over-priced? would they be willing to pay more for certain dates/times? what could we do to make our pricing more attractive to our patron base? One of the most interesting questions we ask is how satisfied patrons are with the value we provide. Each year we ask the question, our satisfaction ratings on value are in the "industry leader" range indicating that customers perceive that they are getting good value for the money they spend on a ticket. Something every marketing director loves to hear.

The days of reading tea leaves, consulting the gods, and leaping into the unknown are over. A healthy combination of data analysis and market research allow modern day marketers to make informed strategic decisions. I for one am thankful, as I've never been particularly lucky when it comes to guessing. In decades past, I know I would have been fired.