
I saw a truck the other day that was wrapped bumper to bumper in bright yellow and red, for a painting company. It was quite a change from the typical paint-drip decorated white pickup with ladders you normally see a painter driving. What stuck out to me most was the marketing effort, again rarely seen in the painting business. It made me think that this business was a marketing business whose product is painting houses.
That led me to think about some past seminars I’ve given and blogs I’ve written about “What business are you in?” That question was answered in a short list of types of businesses, identified by the ‘need’ they fulfill for their customers. For example, the need for physical health can be met at a gym. This painter’s truck made me start to reconsider that angle. While I’m not ready to change my ideas completely, I am ready to start considering that we all need to be in one of three types of business:
1. I’m in the Customer Service Business! I’ve always said that Southwest Airlines is in the Customer Service Business. Their focus is on the passenger. I’ve even contended that if you were to take away their airplanes and give them, say, running shoes, they would continue on without a hitch, because they are in the customer service business and simply use their products to deliver that special experience. One of my favorite lines is, “We don’t want to tell YOU we have great customer service, we want YOU to tell OTHERS!” Know where that came from?
2. I’m in the Sales Business. Again, this business is not about the products, but is about building relationships with its customers. The focus is on creating a finely tuned sales machine that increases that top line each month and each year. When product is considered, it is designed with the sales process in mind. I might put Amazon.com in this category. They have built a great sales machine. They keep adding new products without a hitch because their sales system works so well.
3. I’m in the Marketing Business. Proctor and Gamble is in the marketing business. They know how to create products driven by their market, get it positioned right in front of them, and get the word out so that their customers flock to purchase thier products. They are not about the ‘best widget available!’ They are about marketing.
So, am I recommending that you become a Sales, Marketing or Customer Service Business? Yes! However, I’m not asking you to abandon your core strength, which is creating products that satisfy your customers’ needs. I’m simply recommending that you make one of the three methods central to your business. That way, you’ll get a steady flow of the customers you need.
That led me to think about some past seminars I’ve given and blogs I’ve written about “What business are you in?” That question was answered in a short list of types of businesses, identified by the ‘need’ they fulfill for their customers. For example, the need for physical health can be met at a gym. This painter’s truck made me start to reconsider that angle. While I’m not ready to change my ideas completely, I am ready to start considering that we all need to be in one of three types of business:
1. I’m in the Customer Service Business! I’ve always said that Southwest Airlines is in the Customer Service Business. Their focus is on the passenger. I’ve even contended that if you were to take away their airplanes and give them, say, running shoes, they would continue on without a hitch, because they are in the customer service business and simply use their products to deliver that special experience. One of my favorite lines is, “We don’t want to tell YOU we have great customer service, we want YOU to tell OTHERS!” Know where that came from?
2. I’m in the Sales Business. Again, this business is not about the products, but is about building relationships with its customers. The focus is on creating a finely tuned sales machine that increases that top line each month and each year. When product is considered, it is designed with the sales process in mind. I might put Amazon.com in this category. They have built a great sales machine. They keep adding new products without a hitch because their sales system works so well.
3. I’m in the Marketing Business. Proctor and Gamble is in the marketing business. They know how to create products driven by their market, get it positioned right in front of them, and get the word out so that their customers flock to purchase thier products. They are not about the ‘best widget available!’ They are about marketing.
So, am I recommending that you become a Sales, Marketing or Customer Service Business? Yes! However, I’m not asking you to abandon your core strength, which is creating products that satisfy your customers’ needs. I’m simply recommending that you make one of the three methods central to your business. That way, you’ll get a steady flow of the customers you need.