I finally gave in to the craving for latest Bright Shiny Object, the iPad. It's being shipped right now, so I've been googling just about everything I can to learn what to buy for my new baby's arrival: a keyboard, a case, how to use it for business, and more. In my cyber-meanderings, I came across this YouTube video about a guy who built an iPad into a kitchen cabinet. Quite clever.
This kitchenPad actually is pretty cool, and while I'm very tempted to build something like it in my kitchen, I'm not quite geeky enough to do it (and my wife would think I've gone over the techno-edge).
However, the video did inspire me to come up with the notion of "iPad Marketing 101: Four Lessons for Small Business Marketers."
Be an innovator. Apple is not the best-selling brand of computers, but they keep launching products that create entirely new categories. From the Macintosh to the iPod and now, the iPad. They are always innovators — never imitators. What new category or customer service process can you innovate in your business?
Build partnerships, then set them free (mostly). The myriad apps available for iPhones and now iPads is mind-boggling. Apple opened the App store, coining a new term and spawning a new industry of developers who piggy-back market to a rabid group of consumers. Yes, there are critics who say Apple controls too much software development, but the underground apps industry for "jailbroken" iPhones has no one to thank but Apple for its success. How can you leverage partnerships with your suppliers, vendors and customers to help generate demand your brand, product or service – in their voice?
Don't be boring. This video (and if you search for iPad on YouTube, you'll see hundreds more like it) have created an incredible buzz of free product promotion. What can you do to make your customers buzz about your business?
Harness Vox Populi – The Voice of the People. I was going to write "harness social media," but anymore, social media marketing is as essential to your business' survival as having a telephone number or a mailing address. The marketing funnel is broken. Through YouTube, Yelp, Blogs, Twitter and other social media tools, your customers have the power to define your brand reputation faster than a high-powered Madison Avenue ad campaign. They are vox populi – a Latin phrase that literally means "voice of the people." The term has historically been associated with broadcast journalism's "man on the street" interview. But now more than ever, the vox populi are out there in cyberspace, without anyone controlling what they say about your business, or how they say it. Start listening now to vox populi about your business by creating a Google Alerts Search today. Then get out there and spread your own social media voice by commenting, liking, rating and more.
Hmm. I watched that video again. Anyone have a jigsaw I can borrow?
Number 3 is key. Apple might be many things, but it has never been boring; Microsoft, OTOH. Number 5 might be: Be relevant. The right messaging has to go through the right channel to the right ear. The signal-to-noise ratio in today’s marketing environment is so low that relevance is a primary differentiator. (But social media will cure everything, right?;-).
Good points, Bobby. Relevance, is well, relative. For a small business being relevant can take on many forms — what problem or pain do you solve? What’s you’re outstanding offer or guarantee? What really sets you apart from your competitors (price, quality and great service don’t count.)
Number 3 is key. Apple might be many things, but it has never been boring; Microsoft, OTOH. Number 5 might be: Be relevant. The right messaging has to go through the right channel to the right ear. The signal-to-noise ratio in today’s marketing environment is so low that relevance is a primary differentiator. (But social media will cure everything, right?;-).
Good points, Bobby. Relevance, is well, relative. For a small business being relevant can take on many forms — what problem or pain do you solve? What’s you’re outstanding offer or guarantee? What really sets you apart from your competitors (price, quality and great service don’t count.)