1. What are the rationalizations that people use to justify using your
product? What are the real motivators driving the use of your product? How
can these hidden motivators be harnessed to increase sales?
2. Why have people recently switched to your product? Why did they reject
the competition? Why did they almost reject your product in favor of which
competitor? What are the problematic parts of your marketing that almost caused
them not to buy?
3. What are the excuses and smokescreens that people give to your
salespeople, in conventional focus groups, and in surveys, to justify not
using your product? What are the real reasons they have rejected either
during the sales process, or rejected after trial or adoption? How can these
real reasons be neutralized even before they come up?
4. What are the deep, fundamental, non-obvious needs and desires that you
can tap into? How important are the things that people don't like to admit,
such as prestige, professional image, fun, wanting a change for change's
sake, fears, and self-doubts? More importantly, how can these be used to
cement customer loyalty?
5. What are the subconscious turn-offs to your product? What are the
qualms, discomforts, negative reactions that prospects themselves don't
realize that they have? How can these negatives be circumvented at this same
subconscious level?
6. What are the turn-offs that are hidden in your ads, brochures, sales
presentations, demos, exhibits, events, and your customer service? What are
the subconscious images of your product that are killing sales? How can they
be changed?
Multiply the effects of your persuasion
7. What are the compelling arguments that will get people to change their
minds and use your product? In what order do these need to be presented? From
what sources?
8. What are the things that you can do to put your seemingly similar
product into a class by itself? How can you disqualify the competition, reset
the rules, redefine the standards, reorder priorities, change the decision
criteria and transform the game?
9. What are the seemingly petty frustrations about products in the class
that can be turned into major advantages?
10. What are the surprising things that would get people to pay 10-20% or
even 100% more for your product? What product changes are relatively
inexpensive and easy for you, but of extremely high value to the customer?
What product augmentations can transform a me-too product into a winner?
11. What are the overlooked niches that could dramatically increase
product sales?
Discover your missed opportunities
12. What are the missed opportunities that your marketing materials don't
address, but that your customers want to hear?
13. What turns customers and prospects on? What are the hot buttons, the
claims, language, concepts, promises, images, pictures, challenges, that
really get their juices flowing? What excites them about the most mundane
products, what arouses their emotions?
14. What are the deeply held fundamental beliefs, values, attitudes and
emotions that will lead customers/prospects to use your product?
15. What are the most effective things that your competitors are doing
that you should be doing or countering? What are your competitors?
vulnerabilities? What are your competitors? Achilles heels?
16. Where are you wasting huge amounts of money on worthless advertising,
sales promotion, and other marketing elements that aren't doing their jobs?
17. What are the customer empathic words, phrases and concepts that will
immediately get the prospect on your side, and gain you a receptive hearing?
What are the questions that your customers and prospects are avoiding, or
afraid to ask? How can you give them the answers that will satisfy them
without raising these questions?
18. What are the unexpressed expectations of your customers, and how can
they be brought more in line with what you will actually deliver?
19. How can negative perceptions of your product be changed without
mammoth advertising campaigns?
Capture, harness, tame and domesticate word of mouth
20. What are the users and rejecters of your product telling other
interested prospects? What are people saying behind your back and what can be
done about it? How is this word of mouth affecting adoption decisions? When
one of your customers convinces someone to use your product, what are the
actual words that are used, the concepts stressed? How can word of mouth be
harnessed?
Lock in repeat business
21. What are the specific steps that can be taken to increase customer
satisfaction? What are the non-obvious things that people are really looking
for? What are the non-obvious things that service, fast response time, and
quality really mean in the real world? How can problems be turned into
opportunities?
Increase the effects of your salesforce
22. Are your sales people really sold, or just putting on a show of
enthusiasm? What are their unexpressed qualms? What are they most
uncomfortable about? What are they not telling management? What is working
best that they are not sharing with their colleagues? What are the specific
techniques that the top 10% of the sales force are using that is working
best?
23. What do your prospects think of your sales people, their approaches,
and their materials? What negatives are they too polite to express?
These are the high-payoff questions, not the usual marketing research
questions. The answers don't come from simple responses to questionnaires and
off-the-cuff remarks in conventional focus groups. The answers come from a
fundamental understanding of the psychology of persuasion and decision
making, an ability to use special techniques that uncover subtle indications
of the answers, and skill in developing these subtleties into marketing
strategy and tactics.
Ordinary marketing research stops way short. It attempts to separate
research from development, so it is often doomed to failure. I believe in
turning data into information, and information into knowledge, and knowledge
into the strategy and tactics it takes to structure a marketing campaign into
an effective persuasion system.
I do this through face-to-face and telephone focus groups (I invented
telephone groups in 1969), the latest techniques for getting beneath the
surface (see my article 'Getting Beneath the Surface in Focus Groups,' and
'Getting to the Right Psychological Level in Focus Groups,') and other
interviewing techniques. These groups and interviews are like no others you
have ever heard, because of my understanding of the psychology of decision
making and persuasion. I use focus groups not only to uncover information,
but as laboratories in which to develop persuasion. I don't get hung up in
the superficial. I concentrate instead on developing the specific strategies
and tactics that will make the most impact on your product. We then have a
series of idea generation sessions with your entire marketing team to apply
and develop what we have learned.
Let's face it: The same old things in the same old ways don't work in
marketing anymore. Advertising, sales people, PR, and direct mail have all
drastically changed, because the customer has changed. Radically.
There is an important lesson to be learned from the besieged world of
direct mail: The changing of even a word in a headline, a different
arrangement of paragraphs, and other simple changes can cause the tripling of
response. Order-of-magnitude changes are not uncommon. I concentrate not only
on tapping into the buried information, but on developing strategies and
tactics that will leverage all elements of your marketing.
Imagine what can happen when we really tune into the above deeper issues
and dare to ask the difficult, seemingly unanswerable questions. Imagine what
can happen when we take a customer orientation and develop an approach that
is based on the psychology of persuasion and decision making, rather than the
creative hunches of someone at an ad agency.
I'll bet that there are plenty of high-payoff questions on the above list
that you and your competitors haven't investigated. I'll bet that you are not
satisfied with the answers to those that you have. When you give me a call,
I'll give you some ideas about how to approach these issues at modest cost.
By the way, if there are any other high payoff questions whose answers are
eluding you, I'd like to hear them. I love to show people how easy it can be
to find seemingly elusive answers to tough questions in difficult territory.
That's why I named our company Market Navigation!
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