A Tagline For An Independent Bookstore

I own a small independent bookstore named Fiction Addiction. We carry new & used books for kids & adults, including fiction & some nonfiction. We have paperbacks, hardcovers, and some gift items. I love the name of my store even though it doesn’t quite convey everything we offer and so I’m looking for a tagline that will either help fill in the blanks a bit or something very catchy that emphasizes the importance of shopping locally.

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Jay’s Answer:

  • We’ve Got 10,0000 Cures!
  • The Community Reading/Gathering Place
  • Shop Locally. Read Globally.

Health Club Membership Marketing

We have a beautiful new health club in a community of approximately 500,000. It is an upscale club, but not too pricey. Our climate offers extended outdoor activities. Any suggestions to encourage new members to join before winter sets in?

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Jay’s Answer: Have a (series of) open houses – where people can experience your club w/o pressure.

Donate some memberships to needy families in your area – or even have an essay contest for free memberships. Both can generate some great PR, but will take time to get the word out.

Adopt-a-family for the holidays. For every N people that join, you’ll donate 1 membership to a family in need. This could be a great co-promotional activity with a service organization in your area.

Also – join now for free, and only start paying after Jan 1. That will give the taster and build your numbers quickly.

Influence: Science and Practice

Buy Influence: Science and PracticeRobert Cialdini’s book is all about “click, whirr” – how we’re programmed as humans, how marketing can leverage the programming, and how as individuals we can overcome the programming. The six major influence techniques that he explains are:

1. Reciprocation: We feel indebted to people who gives us something of value. For example, when someone gives us a sample of a product to taste, we often feel that we need to stop and converse with the attendant. Salespeople know that giving something of small value can trigger higher value purchases to alleviate the imbalance (“I owe you”). A sophisticated version of this is to make a large request of a prospective buyer, with the intention of having the request be rejected. The real goal is the second “fall-back” request, which seems reasonable in contrast.

2. Commitment and Consistency: Once we make a decision (or promise), our subsequent actions maintain the sense of commitment. We don’t want to appear to be wishy-washy. We also don’t want to have to rethink the decision each time – better to be consistently wrong than overwhelmed with research. Salespeople’s goal is to get you to commit to a belief, then create arguments why you should then purchase from them based on your belief system. This psychological one-two punch is used in everything from testimonials (by going on the record, you have a vested interest in being consistent) to hazing rituals.

3. Social Proof: As social beings, we 0ften feel that the more people that like (or do) something, the better it is (whether this be a fad or canned laughter). We tend to trust the pack mentality because we’re busy (if others pre-chose, then we don’t have to think — it must be good) and we’re trusting (other people that are smarter, better-looking, etc. chose it so we’re better off being part of the “in” group than not).

4. Liking: We all want to be liked, so when a salesperson likes you (even if you know they’re just saying it), some part of us feels good. If the salesperson is well-dressed, well-groomed, and similar to us (in mannerisms) we want to believe them (all things being equal) and want to be liked by them.

5. Authority: We’re not just social beings, but we’re naturally hierarchical. We’re used to following an authority figure (who a group of people have endowed with special trustworthy qualities). A person who looks like they’re in authority (by dress, mannerisms, professional title, social standing, etc.) we naturally follow the advice of (even if they are advising something they’re not the authorities of).

6. Scarcity: This is tied to social proof – if there’s not a lot of something (whether real or imagined), then it’s perceived value is higher (we have a fear of missing out on the opportunity). This is also true in the converse – if you ban something, you increase its desirability.

Are You Selling or Consulting?

Consulting for Christmas...
Photo by makelessnoise

You’ve studied your target market (in general) and know the typical problems your prospective customers are facing. You assume that each prospect that’s looking at your marketing message fits that profile (on average) and talk to them appropriately. It’s the keystone of a marketing strategy. In your sales pitch you’re telling people: what your business is offering, why the offering is great, why your company is great, why the price is great, why the competition isn’t, why you should buy it today, what happens if you don’t buy it today, how to beat your competition, the ROI of using it, testimonials of people raving about your business, guarantees of performance, etc. Selling requires you to already understand what your prospect needs.

But what if you don’t know exactly what your prospect needs? You could continue your sales monologue, or you could ask them what they need (and why). You’re now in the process of consulting, not selling. You need to understand each of your potential customers individually to customize your offer to them. You may very well also send them your sales information (later), but first you need to listen to them and show that you’ve listened. Once you’ve engaged your potential customers in a dialogue, you’re much more likely to create a sale. And if not, you have more information about why your consulting strategy did not translate into a sales strategy.

If you don’t have the resources to consult with every prospect don’t assume that you truly understand why someone does (or does not) buy from you.

How To Drive Your Business

Driving Your business...
Photo by Kyle May

When you first learned to drive a car (or bicycle), you probably looked at the road immediately in front of you. You were looking for potholes, the edges of the road, and other obstacles/hazards that you were heading for. You were focused 10% on the distant road and 90% on the near road. Your driving was probably a bit overreactive – jerking the wheel or quickly hitting the brakes to avoid something. As your confidence and skills improved, you no doubt learned to scan the road (not just ahead, but surrounding you) and to anticipate problems. You focus shifted to 80% of the distant road and 20% to the near road.

The difference in your driving perspective applies to your business perspective as well. The difference between a small/startup business and a big/established business is planning strategy (and yes, resources as well). A new business is mostly focusing on their near-term issues (because the fear is: “if you don’t focus on near-term, you won’t have a long-term”). Long-term issues is a luxury they can’t imagine. As a result, small business mentality involves a lot of sudden stops and starts. Surprised consequences. And white-knuckled driving.

An established (big) business understands the need to be aware of the current market situation, but trusts that they can safely navigate through short-term problems. The bigger success is achieved by focusing on the long-term goals. Anticipating problems. Creating opportunities.

If you want to keep driving yourself crazy, keep focusing on short-term issues. If you want to drive like a professional, devote more resources on your long-term goals.

How To Brand My Real Estate Practice?

I need to develop a branding platform. My personal and professional mission statement is to impact and improve the lives of others. In my real estate practice I have developed excellent systems and endeavor to bring real value by active listening, solid follow through, great communication, known power partners as service providers. My question is how to develop a tag line that conveys my sincerity, passion of service, value, etc without sounding cheesy or salesy?

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Jay’s Answer: The key for any tagline is that it needs to appeal to a benefit that your target market cares about. As a real estate professional, it’s assumed that you’re honest, sincere, available, etc. That’s not so unique. So you need to dig deeper about what your really offer people. You think you know – but ask those that chose to work with you in the past. Why did they choose you over your competitors? What would they say about the best reason to recommend/refer you to others. Start there.

Business With Passion: Christopher Melville

Trailer:

Christopher Melville grew up in Mendocino County where he attended the Melville Montessori School, a school run by his parents. After years of enjoying roll-playing games like Advanced Dungeons and Dragons and Arduin, in 1994 he developed Fantasy Warplay – a local Live Action Role Playing (LARP) group where players (ages 8-60) can simulate sword play and be an adventurer, a wizard, a warrior, and even a monster. He holds a Montessori Teachers Credential for birth through age six from Montessori Western Teacher Training Program. Christopher also has two BA degrees, one in English and one in Theater Arts from Sonoma State University, as well as a California Multi-Subject Teaching Credential.

Email: christopherpuma@fanwar.com
Website: www.fanwar.com
Phone: (707) 462-6292

Business With Passion TV Show Logo

A Tagline For A Experiential Training Business?

My training/consulting business has had very good, not great, success over the past 10 years. The business is growing and we need a tagline for our website as well as marketing materials that support our face-to-face presentations in front of decision makers (corporate, educational, governmental organizations). We provide professional team-building experiences using challenge courses, active-learning workshops (as opposed to “sit n git” lectures) that occur on-site or off. We are experts in train-the-trainer programs as well as delivering direct services to clients who want to energize their teams, learn more about formal team-building, explore leadership topics, or focus on helping teams move from good to great.

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Jay’s Answer:

  • Teams That Play Together, Stay Together
  • Great Teams Made
  • Increase Your Team Productivity

What Can I Do To Succeed At My New Job?

I’m about to be hired in a company that manufacture filters, in the marketing department, i have worked mostly in the cordination of promotional events in large supermarkets like Walmart. My questions are:

  1. What are the best strategies that i can introduce in order to create an immediate impact in my superiors
  2. What is the very first thing i have to do to to coordinate my work team?

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Jay’s Answer: Start by asking questions and listening a lot. Only once you understand the various issues and needs can you truly offer solutions that the company can benefit from.

Ask for help, find out how it’s been done, why the previous person left, and what milestones are coming up that you need to pay attention to.

How Can I Promote My Online Business?

I’m just recently setup a Etsy store to sell handmade body scrubs and I am seeking tips on how to effectively promote an online business to those not on the Etsy site. Could you assist me with promoting and/ or marketing my online business. My perspective customers are that of women, but not limited to. I have found a big marketing arena within the Blog world. Do you think there is a way to expand on that?

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Jay’s Answer: Start from the inside-out:

1) Make sure that you’re first maximizing conversions (people that visit your site become customers): How many of the people that visit your site currently purchase from you? Have you looked at the analytics? How many have started to purchase from you but stopped mid-order? Why?

2) Next, focus on how easy it is to find your store/site. How does your website rank on Etsy and Google? What words do people use to find your type of products?

3) Finally, get the word out. That means identifying specific websites, magazines, newspapers, and/or clubs whose members are likely to be your customers. Not just women, but women of a certain age, demographic, location, who are looking for a specific “edge”. If you’re trying to sell scrubs to anyone, no one will find you. By narrowly targeting a niche (say, women ages 40-50, with 2 kids, also has a day-job, and is looking for something to make her feel special nights/weekends, for example) you can talk to these people in the right way (and find them).

Good luck.