How to Capture Your Customer Imagination - Get Articles by Alonzie Scott

Get Articles
 
  

submit your own reprintable article

Article Categories

Accepting Credit Cards Online
Accounting and Book-Keeping
Advertising
Affiliate and Associate Programs
Articles and Article Promotion
Autoresponders and How To Use Them
Bonuses and Freebies
Branding
Business Ideas
Business Practice
Communication Skills
Competition and Your Competitors
Copywriting
Creativity and Ideas
Customer Service and Support
Domains and Domain Names
Due Diligence
E-Commerce
Ebooks and Ebook Writing
Education
Email List Building
Email Marketing
Ethics and Morals
Expert Status
Ezines and Email Newsletters
Family
Forums
Fraud and Scams
Goal Setting
Graphics and Graphic Design
Guarantees
Health
Internet Auctions
Internet Marketing
Investment and Investing
Job and Career
Joint Ventures
Lead Generation
Legislation and Legal Issues
Management and Best Practice
Motivation
Negotiation
Networking
News Releases and Public Relations
Niche Marketing
Outsourcing
Pay Per Click Search Engines
PC Security and Viruses
Pricing and Supply and Demand
Product Creation
Public Speaking
Publicity
Relationship Building
Reprint Rights
Revenue Generation
Search Engines and SEO
Site Stickiness - Getting Repeat Visitors
Software Reviews
Spam - Unsolicited Commercial Email
Statistics and Tracking
Testimonials
Time Management
Traffic Generation - Getting Hits
Travel
Viral Marketing
Web Hosting
Web Site Design
Working At Home - Starting Out
Blank Page
 
Google
 

> Get Articles > Copywriting > How to Capture Your Customer Imagination

How to Capture Your Customer Imagination


PDF icon Download as PDF

Alonzie Scott
flatrsshotmail.com

Management Consulting Methods
http://www.flatrss.com


HOW TO CAPTURE

YOUR CUSTOMERS IMAGINATION?





Here’s the perfect human interest story. As a child growing up under my grandmother’s tillage, I called her grandmama, she told me a wonderful story about my grand father. I never meet my grandfather because he died one year after I became a planet earth citizen. Grandmama told me my grandfather exuded a passion for living life and even greater compassion for helping his neighbors.



During the American South 20’s and 30’s, obtaining work or professional employment opportunities bordered on the realm of difficult if not impossible. This fact resonated as common knowledge to people of color. Besides dealing with overt discrimination and segregation, like many rural or agrarian Americans, African Americans had no or little formal education. Unfortunately, many homesteaders, laypersons and unskilled workers could not read or write.



With divine intervention, my grandfather taught himself to read and write. As a goodwill, fellowship and genuine love gesture for his neighbors, he expanded his skill by reading the Chicago Sun Times newspaper every week. What’s fascinating about my grandfather is that he shared his value added skill to not only influence his lifestyle, he helped his entire neighborhood. Every Saturday afternoon and Sunday after church, grandfather read and interpreted the Chicago Sun Times newspaper farmer’s report for his fellow citizens. He displayed a passion for excellence. He performed a feat that is a great lesson for everyone to learn. He simply captured his neighbors imagination by solving a tremendous community problem. He gave his friends and neighbors a farming marketplace education. He helped people sell their goods for the best prices and provide for their families.



Now here’s how you capture the imagination of your target customers. First, never treat every target customer the same. Remember, customers in various market segments have different interest, requirements, wants, needs or desires. Every unique customer responds differently to publicity, marketing and advertising campaigns. Follow this tested management adage, “treat people the way you want to be treated.”



A promotional strategy designed for seniors might not work on the Generation Xer’s. Your key success component or common factor for every target audience is FANAFI or FAPASI. Here’s your translation...Find a need and fill it or find a problem and solve it. Address these statements in a question format and you essentially discover some practical or innovative ways to capture your customers imagination. For example, is there a quicker, simpler, faster, safer, healthier, or cheaper way to offer a fitness and exercise program? Remove the word fitness and exercise and substitute your own issue. You get the idea.



Secondly, review your policies, procedures, processes, and tools (PPPT) used to create nothing but WOW programs, goods, products, services and facilities. Question whether those PPPT’s deliver exceptional customer service. Ask questions like these. Are your PPPT’s explicitly geared toward delivering what customers want and need? Are your PPPT’s creating customer loyalty and satisfaction? Are PPPT’s creating programs, services, goods, products or facilities everyone thinks they must have? Are your PPPT’s creating elements people can’t imagine living without in America and most of the modern world such as soap, food, fashionable clothing, homes, electricity, fun, air travel, fuel, entertainment, movies, cars, pets, television, water, glass or medical care?



Third, always ask questions about how to make what you do today better for tomorrow. Look for those durable products, programs, services, activities, events, goods and facilities no one wants do without. Home entertainment, amusement, and leisure services are SUPER hot trends revamping the world. Other model examples of change on the horizon include satellite television and internet access, world telephones, solar powered homes, windmills, cars, or hair care products or the gasoline combustion engine though you can count on the latter one changing in the next 20 years. Or why not build upon the best sources of energy the world owns today...The SUN.



Several weeks ago, I attended a meeting held by the Navy Morale, Welfare and Recreation (MWR) leaders and heard a dazzling speech from the Master Chief Petty Office of the Navy better known in the Department of Defense vernacular as the “MCPON” pronounced as “MICK PON.” His speech inspired me to think about the possibilities instead of the impossibilities. His speech delivery gestures reminded me how my grandmother frequently conveyed her miraculous stories about my grand father. What came after the MCPON’s speech and during his intuitive question and answer session, reminded me of the stories I heard as child.



Without hesitation, one of my esteem colleagues asked the MCPON, what could MWR professions do to get sailors involved in what bases offered them. The brawny statured MCPON pondered this questions as the entire room went as silent as an infant sleeping a crib. The MCPON responded, you have to do things that capture sailors imagination. Later, he added a few examples of vacation get-a-way trips the Navy coordinated via a Navy wide contest. Now unlike most leaders in the room, the words, “capture sailors imagination” resonated with me like the great soul music singer James Brown singing his world famous song, “ I feel good.” GMC now calls JB’s music “Fuel for the soul” in its new 2003 marketing and promotional campaign.



Later, I created a cause and effect five part service organizational fishbone chart. In the head section, I labeled “How to Capture Sailors Imagination.” The four support vertebrate boxes contained a modified service organization credo for discovering change and innovation from the letters PPPT...procedures, policies, programs/processes and tools. Then, I started asking questions. For example, What policies prevent us from capturing sailors imagination? Are there procedures we can improve, change, rearrange, combine, alter, revamp, revise or eliminate to capture sailors imagination? Can I offer commercial leisure industry programs to capture sailors imagination? What tools prevent us from capturing sailors and their family members imagination?



Now how does all this management pontification impacts the leisure industry? Simple. As society and its abundant time saving tools enter the marketplace, leisure preferences, ideas, interest and participation change. The more people do to become more productive and efficient, the more people will find ways to enjoy leisure in a multitude of new and exciting programs, services, products, goods and facilities beyond our wildest imagination. Innovative leisure concepts will run the gauntlet of both constructive preferences and those society frowns upon.



To capture your customers imagination, the effort demands that you work with people who are innovative change leaders, agents, thinkers, facilitators, experimenters, testers, fascinators, and imitators. You want people who will constantly see the status quo as challenging “humanity’s comfort zones.” These Ponce de Leon’s explorers need to rejuvenate or revamp how people produce, deliver, evaluate and reprocess information. Their miraculous outcome leads to management SMART...specific, measurable, achievable, responsible and timely...actions.







Article by Alonzie Scott III is recognized Leisure Industry specialist with 18.5 successful years of experience. For more articles, subscribe to “InnovationsWork by visiting www.flatrss.com or email flatrsshotmail.com





How useful did you find this article?

Not at all
A little
Averagely
Fairly
Very
 


This article can be downloaded freely from http://www.get-articles.com and used on your website or in your ezine so long as the author is credited and their resource box left intact. You should not change any links in the article, and where the article is used on a website it's links should be clickable. Please see our terms and conditions page for more information: http://www.get-articles.com/authors-publishers-terms.php
 

Get Articles


Top Articles

  • Stop Saving Money!
    By Leo J Quinn Jr
    Rating 89 / 110
  • Insider Rollout Secrets Review
    By Alex Poole
    Rating 47 / 50
  • The MSN Ranking Code Loophole
    By Chris Rempel and Dave Kelly
    Rating 32 / 40
  • Useless Resume Objectives
    By Rita Fisher, CPRW
    Rating 5 / 35
  • Hacker Prevention Techniques
    By Aaron Turpen
    Rating 26 / 30
  • Preventing Fraud On Your Website
    By Aaron Turpen
    Rating 24 / 30
  • 7 M's of Every Highly Effective Manager
    By Alonzie Scott
    Rating 24 / 30
  • 6 Steps to Great Customer Service
    By Aaron Turpen
    Rating 20 / 30
  • Seven "Secrets/Tips" to Becoming a Millionaire
    By Craig Lock
    Rating 20 / 25
  • 10 tips for choosing a stained glass artisan
    By Mark Prettyman
    Rating 20 / 20
  • Acne Cleansers
    By Phil Phine
    Rating 18 / 20
  • $4.95 Or Die!
    By Ade Martin
    Rating 15 / 20
  • Entice Your Reader With These 5 Headlines
    By Alexandria K. Brown
    Rating 15 / 20
  • Banish Boring Photos
    By Jessica Albon
    Rating 10 / 20
  • How to Hire an Escort without Worry or Embarressment.
    By Lovely LeaH
    Rating 15 / 15
  • Lowering Your Business Overhead
    By Aaron Turpen
    Rating 11 / 15
  • How You Can Deliver a Memorable Public Speech
    By Bea Fields
    Rating 11 / 15
  • How to write a communication plan
    By Matt Eliason
    Rating 10 / 15
  • The Top Ten Reasons For Being Honest
    By Monique Rider
    Rating 10 / 15
  • Spice up your E-zine with PERSONALITY.
    By Aaron Colman
    Rating 10 / 10

    November 19, 2008 © www.Get-Articles.com. All Rights Reserved.