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Archive for May, 2010

Addressing the Customer’s Distorted Lens

Monday, May 24th, 2010

One would think we would be at the end of the era where business, even small business, see their website as a token billboard. There are billions of pages online – if you’re looking for a billboard then you couldn’t have arrived at a more crowded trailer park of disparate everybody. Business websites have to be about return on investment.

What some businesses are still missing is that a website isn’t just an extension of the push advertising model. You see it online all the time – possibly magnified when businesses embark on Facebook and Twitter marketing strategies. But the disparate everybody gets hammered with this broadcast rubbish day in and day out so the messages drone into the background.

Give the following strategy a serious attempt…

  1. Stand still for a moment and put your hand out to an individual and have a conversation
  2. Engage in an online version of normal social interaction with your target audience
  3. Accept that this is a high risk strategy but a high reward strategy

That sounds easy until you get out there and try it but that strategy is your way to cut through the billboard trailer park. But it requires you to stop seeing this as a broadcast push business model. Flip that over for a second, imagine you’re at an awesome party with movie stars and if they tapped you on the shoulder you will get more business… you obviously don’t stand on a soapbox and spruke yourself, so what do you do?

Oh you follow that little list… stand still, shake hands, engage in conversation and accept that it is high risk and high reward. You could blow it and trip over, or forget your name when Scarlett Johansson grabs your hand. So friggen’ what! She grabbed your hand, for fuck sake!

The real problem with failing to understand this simple mind-shift is that the world doesn’t see you through your own eyes – the disparate everybody see you through a distorted lens of culture and attention deficit and personal bias. They see a fraction of a moment of a glimpse of what you’re currently investing in a broadcast approach to grab their hand.

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About the Author

Steven Clark Steven Clark - the stand up guy on this site

My name is Steven Clark (aka nortypig) and my passions are business, web development, photography and writing. I have an MBA (Specialisation) and a Bachelor of Computing from the University of Tasmania. I am working as a business management consultant.

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My photography is at Steven Clark Studio and my regular photo blog presents an ongoing stream of latest images at Walk a Mile in my Shoes and I'm working on a long-term photography project called the King Island Project.

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