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Your Website's Missing Ingredient
Written by: Jerry BaderArticle Overview: "My mechanic told me, 'He couldn’t repair my brakes, so he made my horn louder.'” - Comedian, Steven Wright We all want our websites to be more effective, and if you're like most business people you are constantly searching the Web for anything that will help. What you find is a cabal of experts armed with statistics, analysis, charts and graphs all pointing to how they can get you high-up on the search engines and drive more traffic to your site. The problem is that like Steven Wright's mechanic these guys are adjusting your horn when it's your brakes that need fixing.
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Your Website's Missing Ingredient
"My
mechanic told me, 'He couldn’t repair my brakes, so he made my horn louder.'” -
Comedian, Steven Wright
We all want
our websites to be more effective, and if you're like most business people you
are constantly searching the Web for anything that will help. What you find is
a cabal of experts armed with statistics, analysis, charts and graphs all
pointing to how they can get you high-up on the search engines and drive more
traffic to your site. The problem is that like Steven Wright's mechanic these
guys are adjusting your horn when it's your brakes that need fixing.
There is
little point in attracting more visitors to your site if your site has little
of interest to say. Even if your site is jammed packed with useful products,
services and solutions if it doesn't connect with your audience, they will
never invest the time necessary for you to make your case.
When websites
fail it's most often because they do not function effectively as your primary
communication tool. The Web is overcrowded with options and unless you're
prepared to deliver a compelling differentiating presentation you will be
quickly dismissed as irrelevant. Let's face it; business is tough, probably
tougher than it's ever been before.
Something
is Missing
You've done
all the technical tweaks and responded to all the research and analytics.
You're blogging, micro-blogging, social networking, and search optimizing, but
still something is not quite right, something is missing. What's the missing
ingredient? You know it's out there, but you can't for the life of you figure
out what it is.
You know the
Web offers the potential to access new markets, find new customers, and reach
new heights, but with all that opportunity, the results always seem just out of
reach. If research and analytics were the answer you'd already be rich. Of
course it was an over-reliance on research that brought us the Edsel, New Coke,
and that wonderful Wall Street goody called Derivatives, one of the greatest
investment boondoggles of our time.
There is
something artificially comforting about putting your faith in seemingly logical
yet unfathomable solutions based on indecipherable scientific modeling and
over-hyped research analysis, all brought to you by computer scientists and
mathematicians who never ran a marketing department or launched a new product
or business.
Business
leaders have adopted the attitude that, "It must be right, because I sure
as heck don't understand it." And when it all goes wrong, or results are
anemic, well, "What are you going to do? It's not my fault, it all looked
good on paper." Ad agencies and Wall Street have been getting away with
this kind of bunkum for decades, and look at the mess they've made of things.
What's It
All About, Alfie?
Business
success is all about your ability to engage your audience with a message that
compels them to action. Simply put, your business relies on your ability to
communicate. Eureka!
And your
website is the best communication vehicle you have. The question is how do you
use your website to communicate your marketing message in the most engaging,
compelling, and memorable manner? What is the missing ingredient that will turn
your scientifically sterile online cookie-cutter presentation into something
that cuts through the massive sameness of Internet clutter, and makes a
statement that your audience will respond to?
Finding
Your Emotional and Psychological Value Proposition
One of the
hardest things for tough-minded business people to accept is that sales and
marketing success is based on the subconscious emotional and psychological
appeal of a brand. That's the reason, reliance on feature selling rarely works,
and only tends to commoditize a product or service - the guy with the most
bells and whistles for the least amount of money wins, and why would you want
to play that game?
Even the most
casual market observer must recognize that all leading brands have one thing in
common, no matter what they sell: the promise of their brand is based on a
concept that is established through an emotional or psychological appeal. Apple
is about thinking and acting creatively without the worry of technical issues;
Starbucks is about reconnecting to the original coffee break ideal of a
relaxing oasis away from the hustle bustle of everyday life; and Ikea is about
stylish living on a budget. Each concept appeals to the deep-seated desires of
the targeted audience. It is this singular concept that makes each of these
companies special and different from their competition; it is the message that
all their marketing, advertising, and promotion is based upon, and it is the
true value they offer their audience that attracts interest, holds attention,
and delivers promise.
Implementing
Your Emotional and Psychological Value Proposition
In order to
implement a company's emotional and psychological value proposition, we use a
process called the ConceptCreator. It starts with various sales' points that
need to be covered. Based on the supplied information, we develop a focused
marketing concept using the Law of Dissatisfaction that enables us to discover
the experiential human subtext of why people will want what you sell. The
presentation concept is boiled-down to a movie-style logline that states the
brand story to be presented in the Web Video campaign.
How Much Is
A Concept Worth?
"Wait a
minute - did he say a movie-style logline? That sure doesn't sound
business-like, and I never heard any corporate CEO or MBA talk about movie
loglines." Maybe so, but think about it. Hollywood studios spend enormous
sums of money to produce a movie with the potential of making hundreds of
millions of dollars, and each financial investment starts with someone coming
up with a clever logline that captures the imagination. Television commercials
can cost ten thousand dollars a second to produce and without a guiding
conceptual premise they become DOA when implemented. So why wouldn't you start
your Web Video campaign using the same proven formula.
The logline,
mission statement, or elevator pitch if you prefer needs to state the
characters, goals, obstacles, differentiating factors, and resolution within
the context of a story scenario.
For
Instance…
If it works
for the movie industry will it work for the advertising and marketing industry?
Let's take a look at one of the most successful, popular, iconic marketing
campaigns of the last number of years, The MAC versus PC campaign.
Example
Logline Concept: A
stylish, pleasant, mild-mannered young man verbally spars with his geeky
competitive opposite (characters) in a series of humorous, relatable incidents (story scenario) that illustrate the people-friendly
advantages (resolution) of the brand compared to its rigid, unbending competitor (differentiating
factor) whose sheer
size dominates the market (obstacle) in an effort to win the hearts and minds of the computer buying
audience (goal). -
The MAC Versus PC Ad Campaign.
"The
Time Has Come The Walrus Said…"
- Lewis
Carroll from 'Through the Looking Glass and What Alice Found There,' 1892
The time has
come to realize that Web Video is the best communication tactic available to
deliver your marketing message to a worldwide audience; an audience that craves
answers and resolution to their every need, concern and desire. It is not good
enough to list a bunch of features and hackneyed bulleted points or even to
dump pages and pages of search engine optimized hard-to-read text, especially
when it's aimed at an audience raised on television, movies, music and video
games. We must learn to speak the language of the audience, and use the
appropriate communication tools they can understand in a way that connects on a
human level.
It all starts
with finding the emotional and psychological value proposition your product or
service promises. In a world of frustrated, cranky, attention deficit
consumers, the onus is on you to present what you offer in a way that relates
to the human elements that make your brand relevant.
Article Tags: analysis charts, audience, brakes, charts and graphs, comedian steven wright, communication tool, mechanic, nbsp, search engines, searching the web, social networking, span style, statistics, style font, technical tweaks, traffic, useful products
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About the Author: Jerry Bader RSS for Jerry's articles - Visit Jerry's website Jerry Bader is Senior Partner at MRPwebmedia, a website design firm that specializes in Web-audio and Web-video. Visit http://www.mrpwebmedia.com/ads, http://www.sonicpersonality.com, and http://www.136words.com. Contact at info@mrpwebmedia.com or telephone (905) 764-1246. About MRPwebmedia People ask, "What do you do?" You could say we inform, enlighten, innovate, and create; you could also say we deliver our clients' marketing messages in memorable ways using video, audio, webmedia campaigns and websites; all created in-house from concept to implementation, from graphic and motion design to Web-design, from script writing to video-production to post-production, from music composition to signature sound design. What do we do? We motivate action by speaking to your audience's real needs. We tell your story so your brand, your message, embeds in the minds of your clients. We are corporate storytellers. Click here to visit Jerry's website 8 BrainBranding Web Presentation Concepts Part II BrandPersonality SelfAnalysis The Brand Story A Tale Worth Telling Awaken Your Brands Cognitive Itch 11 Ways To Drive Traffic Away From Your Website |
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