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> Get Articles > Ebooks and Ebook Writing > "Would you like an ebook with that?"

"Would you like an ebook with that?"


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Scott M. Britner
BrainWaveenhanceyourknowledge.com

Headline Creator Pro
http://www.headlinecreatorpro.com


=================================

"Would you like an ebook with that?" What

McDonald's can teach us about Internet

Marketing -- you'll be surprised!



By Scott M. Britner

Headline Creator Pro

www.headlinecreatorpro.com

=================================

(NOTE: If you'd like to use this article for your

newsletter or website, please let me know at:

BrainWaveenhanceyourknowledge.com)



In a class I just attended called "Creativity and

Innovation", we discussed the many types of

ways to brainstorm ideas.

One of the ways of brainstorming ideas is to

put yourself into another industry than the

one you are currently in and think about

your question from their standpoint.



So let's do this brainstorming activity with the

burning question on most of your minds, "How

do I make more sales?" and let's use McDonald's

as our viewpoint.



What does McDonald's do to attract customers,

keep customers and make additional back-end

sales?



* Fast Service



Some would disagree with this but in all honesty

McDonald's does create and deliver to you a

hamburger faster than at a sit down restaurant.



Is your service faster than your competition?

Do they offer downloads and you still only offer

products via CD-ROM?



* Same look and feel



All of the McDonald's staff get trained the exact

same way, dress the exact same way and the

restaurants look the exact same way. The layout

might be slightly different but you can walk into

any McDonald's anywhere in the world and

know you are in McDonald's just by looking

around.



If your potential customers go from one of your

webpages to the next do they know they are still

on your site or do they start questioning where

they are?



Trust is hard enough to earn on the internet by

default. Don't make it harder for your customers

to trust you because you are not presenting them

with a consistant look and feel. Don't let your

customers question whether you are as flighty as

a person just throwing sales pages on the

internet.



* Kids' play area/Newspapers



McDonald's uses things like newspapers and

children's play areas to keep people in their

restaurant longer. Have you ever tried to get a

4-year-old out of those tubes?



What does this have to do with profits? Simple.

The longer you stick around the more likely you

are to buy something else. The person who sits

and reads the paper for 30 minutes is more

likely to go get another breakfast biscuit. The

mother who lets her children play for 30

minutes is more likely to buy another order of

fries or an apple pie.



What do you have on your site that keeps the

customer (or for that matter brings them back).

That same paper brings the elderly widower

back each morning bright and early. The play

area brings parents back because it's the only

inside play area for their kids on a rainy day.



If it doesn't make sense to have free content,

polls or other items on your site (because it's a

sales page designed for 1 purpose only - to get

sales) then are you capturing email addresses so

you can bring the customer back?



* "Do you want fries with that?" or

"Would you like to Super-Size that order?

(Up selling)



Haven't we all laughed at one time or another at

all the jokes that have been made about "Do you

want fries with that?" Of course we have.



But what an incredible marketing strategy. In

fact, that simple question was being asked by

employees at McDonald's LONG before anyone

thought of the concept of "upselling" customers

in many other industries.



That's right - it's the classic "upsell" technique.

When you sell your customer a product, do you

offer them the chance to add something to their

order before checking out. I'm not talking about

a shopping cart where they can browse and pick

out another item.



I mean between the "buy now" action and the

"thanks for your order" do you specifically offer

the customer another item that fits with the first

product they just purchased?



For example, the customer buys a Low Fat

recipes ebook. Once they click the Buy button,

they should be presented with a page that shows

their current purchase with an offer to add a

product like a weight management membership

site or a Tae-Bo workout product.



You know they are a willing customer, what else

can you upsell them?



* The $1 value menu



A new solution that has recently been

implemented is the $1 Value Menu. First of all

the word Value is certainly a Hypnotic word. It

gives you the impression that everything on that

list if valuable.



Also the use of $1 is a "direct sales" type

advertisement. How can you not want to buy

something for $1? Well, guess what? A lot of $1

orders can really add up to a nice hefty profit. I

know I ordered our entire meal off the $1 menu

during one trip and the total still came to $13

(you figure drink, fries and a burger for 4 people

= 12 items).



Many marketers are giving away products just to

caputure email addresses. That's a great plan

because the money is certainly in the list.

However, I wonder how many of them have

tested setting up a $1 value menu, of sorts,

where customers can choose any of their items

for only $1?



I have a feeling that many of the people grabbing

free downloads would easily pick up a minimum

of 1 - 3 items off the list. The others you could

simply offer a pop-up after the fact to offer them

a freebie. Don't believe this will work? Take a

look at how profitable the "Dollar" Stores are.

There are at least three different franchise

version of that concept!



* Branding (the golden arches)



What's in a name? Everything! Branding,

Branding, Branding.



You need to create a brand for yourself.

Something that appears on all of your pages on

all of your products, etc. People need to begin

associating you with that graphic or tag line.

What if Bill Gates was to leave Microsoft?



Wouldn't the majority of people still associate

Bill Gates with Microsoft. He IS Microsoft.

Become your company.



Disclaimer: Only do this if you are offering value

and quality to the market place. The last thing

you want is your name associated with poor

quality and terrible service.



* Teaming up with Entertainment or

other Businesses



We call them Joint Ventures in the internet

marketing world.



McDonald's has teamed up with Wal-Mart and

movie theaters and the entertainment industry.

I'm not talking about advertising - I mean

partnering.



Wal-Mart let's McDonald's set up a small version

of their restaurant in the back of the store for the

Wal-Mart customers to get something to eat.

McDonald's and Wal-Mart both win with more

profits.



Look outside the normal scope. See if there are

possible Joint Venture opportunities in other

fields that are yet untapped. Look outside your

immediate niche and see if your product or

service overlaps or touches another niche. And

go for it!



* Special promotions (2 apple pies for a

$1)



The person who was teaching our Creativity and

Innovation class commented that one morning

when her husband went to McDonald's to get

breakfast, he came back with 4 apple pies in

addition to the normal breakfast items.



She said I was shocked and just had to ask, "Why

did you get apple pies for breakfast?" His

response, "The lady asked if I wanted 2 apple

pies for a $1 and I couldn't resist - I bought 4."



Cross-selling! Are apple pies a traditional

breakfast food? (I said traditional...) Of course

not. But when cross selling your products -

always test everything. You never know what

the customer is willing to buy and when unless

you ask.



* Happy Meals with toys



McDonald's does a wonderful job of

"repackaging" to take advantage of different

price levels. You can get hamburgers on the $1

Value Menu. You can get hamburgers in the $2

price range and, yes, you can even get burgers in

Happy Meals that include toys.



What's the difference? Hardly anything. The

patties are the same in many cases. The more

expensive burgers have 2 patties instead of one.

Some have all the fixings and others are just

plain - and some even come with toys.



It's the art of repackaging at its best. If

McDonald's just had a one-price burger on its

menu that you could buy, what do you think

their profits would look like?



What are you doing to repackage and resell your

products. It's not just a matter of taking an older

or outdated product and packaging it with others

to produced a "set". It may mean having a Gold,

Silver and Bronze version of the product you are

currently offering.



--------------



I'm sure some of you didn't think we could find

more than one or two things McDonald's did

that would even remotely pertain to those in

internet marketing. If we can do this with

McDonald's and come up with this many ideas,

try other companies and other industries.



Brainstorm, come up with new ideas. There is a

proven set of guidelines you must follow to be

successful on the internet. The basic function

does not change - but how you accomplish it

does. The ones who will survive the next

evolution of internet marketing success will be

those who proactively adapt new innovations to

the old proven techniques.



--------------------------------------------------------

Scott M. Britner is the creator of the extremely

powerful Headline Creator Pro software that

can produce Profit-Pulling, Winning headlines

in under 17 seconds with Push-Button Ease!

Check it out: www.headlinecreatorpro.com

--------------------------------------------------------





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