Showing posts with label cupcakes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cupcakes. Show all posts

Monday, June 3, 2013

No More Likes Please!

I was recently pulled into a group on Facebook; the primary intention is to get more “likes” for the pages of small business owners.

We'll all “like” each other’s pages and then we'll have lots of fans!

Would you believe that I don't want your “likes”? It’s true. I don't need fans that are never going to pay any attention to what I have to say. What’s the point?

So go ahead and “like” a bunch of pages that you have no interest in and get back a lot of empty “likes” in return. The ratio between “likes” and “talking about this” for your page will deteriorate even further.  Is that what you want? 

A long time ago I read that the average “talking about this” was around 3% to 4%. That’s pitiful! Facebook doesn't make it easier since they only show your page to a very low percentage of fans. 

Who do you really want to “like” your page? Think about it:

  • People who have a genuine interest in your product or service
  • People who will engage with your posts
  • People that fit your demographic target

Of course you know all that already; it’s in your marketing plan! What? No marketing plan. Okay perhaps it is time to write one!

Oh and for the record I'll stick with the Facebook group. It was created by a friend. I'm hoping to turn things around in there a bit and have people share their social media issues, frustrations, and questions and have intelligent discussions instead. Sadly, it appears to have turned into a sales bulletin board "buy my cupcakes!" "I make handicrafts" etc. No people, this is not what it's all about about!

Dan Fogelberg sang about plans back in the 70’s (see below); how are your plans going? If you need any assistance with your strategic plans and marketing needs, stop by our website, or stop by on TwitterFacebook, or Google+ There's no obligation to "like", "follow", or "+1". 





Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Product Trend: Will Kiosks Be Key?


Seems like everywhere I go lately there’s a brightly painted metal box with mechanical stuff inside teasing me with an offer I almost can’t refuse.

I walked into Lowe’s six weeks ago to have keys made. You know what happens next: Go up to the counter in the hardware department, wait on line (always!), hand in your keys, and wait patiently while the gent behind the counter whips them up with a machine that makes lots of noise.  The big exchange? Purchasing two keys = One half hour of my life.

This isn’t what happened. Meandering  down the wide front aisle I came open a large green kiosk with a big blue and white sign proclaiming “Keys in one minute” towering above.  A “key-osk”! Feeling curious, I inserted my credit card.  Carefully reading the instructions, I inserted my key and selected the number of copies. I watched through a glass window as the mechanism within stirred to life and grinded and whirled. It was fun to see; almost as fun as playing an arcade machine at the Jersey Shore.

When the keys were completed, the machine asked for my email address. I punched it in and immediately received a receipt via email. The whole process for two keys took maybe seven minutes. For a short video, click here.

And today I found an ID tag engraving kiosk in a pet department. Didn’t try it, however, I suspect it would be just as fun as the key machine.

While traveling in Europe last year, I marveled at the airport kiosks where you could casually buy yourself a new iPod (perhaps you lost yours on the plane?) just by inserting credit card and hitting a button. Other items in the $100 to $200 range were available as well.

Last year in Las Vegas I even found a beauty product dispensing machine in a busy mall. Sorry, but Jessica Simpson was nowhere to be seen.

Now, while all of these examples are rather interesting, here’s one that truly “takes the cake”. On a nostalgic level, it perhaps harkens back to the days of Horn & Hardart automats. Think about it. You’re in a swanky city in sunny Los Angeles and you’re jonesin’ for something sweet as you stroll along. And there it is, all in pink, sweetly embedded in the wall; cupcakes dispensed in an ATM! Yum! See the video here.


How creative will businesses get with this concept? Judging by what I’ve seen so far, anything is possible and opportunity is ripe both for small businesses to put a fresh twist on their marketing to start ups with a product that hasn’t been available in an automated fashion yet.

Will these self-serve ATMs / kiosks create jobs or take them away? It may be a trade-off between jobs in the lower paying fringes of the service sector such as working behind a counter ringing up sales and new positions ranging from marketing of these devices to manufacturing them.

But will the shift in types of jobs at the very least balance out as we embrace purchasing products without human interaction? And, it’s certain we will, otherwise online giants like Amazon or Zappos, simply put, wouldn’t be giant. We seem to enjoy a shopping  experience lacking a real person’s involvement.

And perhaps the biggest advantage to these kiosks is that the purchaser receives almost instant gratification. Is that enough to purchase a cupcake from a sidewalk ATM rather than enter a shop and enjoy human contact and a pleasing atmosphere?

A most interesting trend. Let’s see how far out-of-the-box, uh, kiosk, it will go!