How Small Salons Do Big Marketing

May 06
2012

The biggest mistake many companies make — regardless of their size — is putting marketing last in the product development cycle.  It’s a holdover from the Madmen era.  In marketing’s infancy, it was, indeed, an afterthought.  Companies and entrepreneurs put all their effort into building the best offering they could develop — the best mousetrap. Then, and only then, depending on their size, would they go to an ad agency, or start to market their product or service.

Times have changed, and so has the position marketing plays in developing a new market offering.  Now, marketing must  go first, or very close to first.  It’s called building an audience.

If you only start marketing after you’ve opened your store, or fully developed you product  – you’re way too late.  Take, for example, the story of  Envy, a new nail salon that just opened in South Jersey. The young owner — 26 years old — is wise beyond his years.  He noted that if he opened his doors and then started marketing, his overhead clock would have already be ticking and he’d already be losing money.  Instead, while his store was still in the design and construction phases, he started a Facebook site.  On Facebook, he shared store designs, color schemes, and asked people to be friends. Then, before his store opened, he offered coupons and had an established “interest” base from Day One, with appointments already made though social media.

Today, only a few months after opening, he has close to 2,500 fans on Facebook, a number well in excess of many larger, more established firms.  Through social media, he gets testimonials, tracks customer feedback, takes appointments, and answers customers questions.

Nail salons are literally a dime a dozen throughout New Jersey.  Envy’s owner was conscious that he needed to differentiate himself and launch as more than another nail salon.  What could he do to differentiate himself?  Design was a key factor.  Check out the video on his web site. He prides himself on having a fire place in his pedicure room, as well as having a pedicure room!  And, he positions his store as a nail spa rather than a salon, His attention to detail, atmosphere and style, make the differentiation real rather than in name only.

More than entrepreneur, Sean, the owner, is a true marketing professional. Here’s why:

  1. He knows what media is generating what leads
  2. He started marketing months before his store opened
  3. He understands the value of a unique selling proposition
  4. He values customer feedback and has an active mechanism for listening to the voice of the customer.

But Sean is not alone. For insight into how a North Jersey nail salon also differentiated itself with an entirely different proposition — organics — see  Karma’s web site.  Similar to envy, it’s positioned as a spa.  It’s unique selling proposition (USP), however, is organics and from the moment you enter the store, you know it’s different. The spell is of fresh florals, from the geranium leaves, put in the water soaks, and the seats are cushy chairs from Ikea rather than a salon distributor.  The floors are non-allergenic wood and although the web site is not sophisticated, it does the job in positioning the owner, Naz’s, real vision in developing an new product line.  I feel so in love with his shop years ago, that I posted about in in  Duct Tape Toes on TheParentRap.net.

On the flip side, I recently met the marketing director of a new developing shopping mall.  She noted her employer had no money or time to spend on marketing as all his attention was on construction.  If Envy had time for marketing during its construction phase, it’s hard to accept that a larger concern doesn’t. It’s all a matter of mindset  and if you view marketing in the modern way as critical to pre-selling your operation, or are still in the Madmen era and only consider marketing after you open your doors and the cash register is not ringing.

Back to the Facebook

Mar 29
2012

Social media, like Marketing, never lets you rest on your laurels. No matter how expert one may be in a medium or field, changes require constant updating, relearning, and re-honing of skills. And yet, the basics always remain the same. Yes, it’s always Back to the Future, or this week Back to the Facebook.

On Friday, March 30, 2012 Facebook is forceably changing all business sites over to its new format. The change has been a boon for the webinar industry, with every social media consultant offering tutorials on how to switch a site from the old to new format. So for all of us who believed we had mastered Facebook and were on to Pinterest, Tumblr, Wanelo, or Spotify, it was, instead, of week of back to the drawing boards on Facebook.

Back to the drawing boards must be taken literally as a key change in Facebook was the need to create a cover. Yes, all of our mothers advised us not to judge a book by its cover, but our marketing professors taught just the opposite. Packaging, aka covers, is a key marketing component, without which success is less likely in the marketplace of goods, services or ideas.  Consultants were proliferating on how to create a cover that best represents your company when Facebook rules exempt most items a classic marketer would include — namely contact info and Calls to Action.  ”The cover photo is the new landing experience,” states the SocialMouths blog.  I think experience is taking it a bit far, as it’s really a pretty picture indicative of our increasingly graphic age where people seem dazzled by image rather than substance.

Speaking of serious marketing – Facebook should, in many cases, be part of the mix, but let’s stay focused on marketing that works. In a recent sales seminar given by Mike Blinder, he unequivocally noted that for most small businesses Facebook is like a billboard in a basement. There’s tons of hype and, therefore, a strong sense that a business owner should somehow be involved in this Facebook thing, but with 25-125 followers, largely of relatives and friends, the marketing potential is limited. Blinder (pronounced Blyn-der), doesn’t wear blinders.  He calls himself a street fighter and is one of the most motivational, clear sales trainers I’ve ever heard.  As a street fighter, he believes in qualifying prospects, having a clear story to tell, doing homework on a client, and closing sales. Anything that helps him do that more successfully is marketing, but his marketing is his story of success. There’s no better kind.

There are exceptions to any rule, and Facebook marketing does have its place for some entrepreneurs– namely realtors.  Many, if not most, are women, who thrive on personal connections and local contacts.  Facebook has evolved from a teenage silo with as many moms and a growing number of grandparents Facebooking to keep up with the kids, if nothing else.  I get personal pleasure on watching my own young adult kids suddenly delving into my professional arenas on Twitter and LInked In.  If you’re talking business to business contacts, these latter two have much more to offer.

So lets Facebook the facts. Facebook was not started to be a marketing tool, but a social interaction tool. If you’re young, single and on the “meat ” market, yes it might help you market yourself.  If you’re a serious, committed entrepreneur or small business owner, it’s really the minor leagues.  The majors are playing in larger arenas, to bigger crowds (called reach), and on a consistent basis (called frequency).  They are packaging themselves as serious players, commanding well-deserved prices, and have followings that many Twitter and Facebook dabblers would crave.  Find them, and watch what they’re doing. They are your true North stars.

 

 

No Free Lunches or Media

Aug 20
2009

Despite the obvious implication in Chris Anderson’s new business bestseller Free, there is no such thing as Free Marketing.  Not really.  I know CEOs and CFOs want low cost/no cost Marketing, but the saying “You get what you pay for,” is true across all marketing channels including social media.

On the surface, social media appears free. You can get a Twitter site or Facebook page for free. You can even set up a blog for free. But, consider this:

  • Some blog services are free but limited. Free blog services don’t allow you to monitor stats to see how many visitors you may be attracting, or enter key words to maximize search.
  • Facebook is free, but ads are not. If you are using Facebook for business, you should have a business page, be building a fan base, and considering targeted ads. I read somewhere that Starbucks, a leader in the use of a Facebook business page, has six people on its social media staff.  As of July 09, they were reported to have 3.5 million registered Facebook fans.  They may be closing stores, but they aren’t closing down Facebook pages anytime soon.
  • Twitter is free, but your time isn’t. You have to post, research posts, and monitor inbox requests. Social media guru Guy Kawasaki has a team of 2-3 twitter ghost writers.  Ever wonder why?

Speaking of Twitter, according to WACO (the World Advertising Research Center, not the city in Texas), earlier this year Dell computer reported that it generated $3 million in sales through microblogging services, and that’s after it had to recover from previously  bad press in the blogosphere!  That kind of revenue potential deserves some investment, wouldn’t you say?

A Marketing Truth: Media costs. We always knew it costs money to take out a TV ad. Why do we suddenly think other marketing channels are free?  There are hard costs and soft costs, but getting your message in front of the right people is a science that takes talent, effort, staff time, creativity, and execution according to plan.  That science, by the way, is  called Marketing.

Another Truth: Planning Saves Time and Money. There are ever-increasing low cost (ahem free) channels for getting your message out to the right people, but the cacophony of choices means you need to wisely invest your time and resources on those outlets that maximize your positioning.  Guess what?  That’s what an executed Marketing Plan is!

Bottom line: Make sure you have the resources at your disposal to make the right choices, keep your messaging consistent in your chosen medium, and measure response.  It takes time, effort and potentially staff resources unless you really want to do it all.  But your time is valuable isn’t it?  I assume you’re “not free.”

P.S. I’m currently working my way through Anderson’s Free. It’s a must read for all business and marketing types. Lot’s of good food for thought.  In keeping with the spirit of the book, I took it out for free from the library.