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Friday, November 06, 2009
Market With Meaning
When Rob Kaufelt bought Murrays Cheese in 1991, the Greenwich Village cheese shop was a mom-and-pop hole-in-the-wall known
mostly to the locals.
Today, Murrays Cheese is a thriving emporium that not only sells gourmet cheeses and meats
but offers everything from hands-on classes and online tutorials to catering, a cheese cave and freshly made grilled cheese
sandwiches. With eye-popping sales of $2,500 per square foot, Murrays has grown by 15 percent to 20 percent a year at its
Bleecker Street store, added two locations in New Yorks bustling Grand Central Terminal and just inked a deal with a national
chain to open mini-stores in supermarkets across the country.
Murrays has also become a well-known tourist destination
where visitors from around the world can come to get a taste of what New York City is all about. The store was named New Yorks
Best Cheese Shop by The Village Voice and has been featured on MSN Money and Today, as well as in The New York Times and Martha
Stewart Living.
So just how much did it cost Kaufelt to turn his mom-and-pop cheese shop into a national brand?
"Our advertising budget has been zero point zero zero since the day I bought the company," says Kaufelt, who grew
up in his familys supermarket business in New Jersey. "Its like my grandfather always said, 'Here,taste!'"
Adding Value
Like Murrays Cheese, companies of all kinds--from retailers to restaurants--are
discovering that it's no longer enough to blast out marketing pitches touting the virtues of your company's products and services.
You need to create a marketing campaign that entertains, educates and adds value to your customers' lives.
Whether
that means doling out mouthwatering samples from behind the counter, creating interactive games to play on the web or offering
online courses that teach people how to make their own pasta, todays marketers need to deliver more than slick sales pitches
and rock-bottom prices--or risk getting left in the dust.
"Do you know what makes people say 'wow'?" asks marketing
guru Seth Godin, author ofPurple Cow, the best-selling book
about how companies can transform themselves by becoming remarkable. "Connection, meaning, humanity, things that change them
in some way. No one is impressed by your features or even your price. What we talk about is art, generosity, and products
and services that make a difference."
Sounds like a pretty tall order--especially for a startup or small business.
Funny videos and interactive games may be great marketing tools for Fortune 1000 companies with seven-figure advertising budgets,
but how can SMB owners create the same kind of impact as Nike and Burger King?
"Actually, one of the greatest viral
videos of all time was created by a small business," says Bob Gilbreath, author of The Next Evolution in Marketing: Connect
with Your Customers by Marketing With Meaning and Chief Marketing Strategist atBridge
Worldwide, one of the nation's largest digital advertising agencies and part of WPP.
According to Gilbreath,
Blendtec was a little-known, 186-employee player in the high-end home blender category until its new marketing director, George
Wright, walked past the company lab and saw piles of sawdust on the floor. Once Wright discovered that the R&D manager
regularly tested blenders with lumber, he decided to share his discovery with the world. The first of what would become a
series of videos called Will it Blend? was shot and posted on YouTube for $50. "That first video received 6 million views
in its first week," Gilbreath says, "and Blendtec went on to see sales rise 43 percent over the next year."
How
can your business achieve similar results? In his book, Gilbreath proposes a Hierarchy of Meaningful Marketing that consists
of the following three levels (loosely based on Maslow's hierarchy of needs):
- Solution marketing:
Free offers, cash savings and loyalty rewards that offer customers real solutions to their problems. "A free sample is a no-cost
way for customers to experience your product or service," Gilbreath says. "'Free' tends to make people feel compelled to like
your product, and usually the cost is very low."
- Connection marketing: Online videos, interactive
games and social networking that connect customers with the brand. "Entrepreneurs already know their customers well and have
a right to earn a place on their 'friend' lists," Gilbreath says. Examples: One deli announces the daily specials to office
workers at 11 a.m. when they are beginning to think about where to go, while a pet boarding service uses Facebook to share
updates and pictures with pet owners while they are away.
- Achievement marketing: Online courses,
free seminars and cause-related marketing that let customers actualize their potential as human beings. "When done in a way
that clearly links to your business and is something your customers care about, cause marketing can significantly drive your
sales," Gilbreath says. "For example, Amy Adam, a real estate agent in Cincinnati, donates a percentage of her house closing
fees to the charity of her customers' choice." Much of her new business is attributable to her campaign. Besides strong post-sale
satisfaction levels, "She's [gotten] specific comments from customers who like the idea and have never heard of something
like it before," he says.
Proof is In the Results
Whats the ROI
for marketing with meaning? Ask Tara-Nicholle Nelson, an Oakland, Calif., real estate broker and founder and Chief Visionary
of {RE}Think Real Estate. Nelson projects the $75,000 she invested in positioning herself as an expert--empowering women to
buy their own homes--to yield $1 million in brokerage commissions, speaking engagements, content licensing deals and other
revenue by 2010.
Her marketing campaign included a targeted book, website and PR efforts coordinated to position
Nelson as the Dear Abby of women-owned real estate--helping female homebuyers overcome their fears and find solutions to their
real estate problems. "I can track about $250,000 in revenues directly back to the book and the original campaign," Nelson
says. "The fact that no commission or compensation [is] riding on my answer is a major credibility point."
B2Bmarketers
can use marketing with meaning to jumpstart their sales efforts, too. Elyissia Wassung, CEO of 2 Chicks With Chocolate in
Matawan, N.J., has made sampling the centerpiece of her sales pitch to corporate clients. By letting customers taste, "they
get a clearer understanding of the actual product itself," Wassung says. "Textures, flavors, the experience of it dissolving
in their mouths--it changes their participation level completely. Suddenly, they're personally involved and asking questions
whereas before it was more of a polite response."
Thats why, when it comes to marketing to todays customers, its
not enough to win a share of their wallet. Youve got to win their hearts, minds and, sometimes, their taste buds, too.
Says Kaufelt of Murrays Cheese: "When you walk into our store, we want you to walk out with an experience whether
you buy something or not."
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