"Who are those guys, Butch?" -- The Sundance Kid
And
that is the question every marketer who ever spent an online ad dollar
has asked. Who are these guys, and why do they matter to me? The
answer is often presented in terms of demographic categories. And if
your site is perceived to be the leader in a target category, you stand
to do well.
But that is where the advertiser really needs the
seller for the kinds of insight and intelligence that strengthen or
change completely their conviction.
It is an aphorism that selling begins with customer knowledge. The customer, after all, is king -- or queen, as the case may be.
May I disagree?
It is the customer of the customer who rules, after all, isn't it?
In
other words, the starting point for successful selling online is deep
audience insight. And here clickstream metrics cannot give you the
answers. There is no substitution for audience knowledge and insight.
You know, the kind of understanding that comes from actually speaking
to them, listening to them, engaging in dialogue with them.
Do
you think you do know this already? Perhaps you do. But I wouldn't be
so quick to believe that, as most sales teams I know and most online
publishers do not regularly use any of these
audience-intelligence-gathering methods:
1. Identify passionate site users and regularly speak with them.
2. Create user advisory boards comprised of passionate, engaged users.
3. Survey users on why they are there, what they are seeking to accomplish, and whether or not they were successful.
Why
speak regularly with your audience? Doesn't that question itself seem
silly? But I know it's rare that a sales, marketing, or even editorial
person consistently engages audience members on a regular basis. About
their sites, that is. And yet your customers are counting on you for
that knowledge. In another context in MediaPost, I have quoted the
golden words of Brandon Starkoff, SVP/Global Director at Starcom: "We
seek to place most of our business with online publishers who are
leaders in their category. And one of the ways that we can see their
leadership is by the extent that they know their audience."
Starkoff
emphasized in that telling conversation that Starcom relied on these
online leaders -- these audience experts -- for guidance in
understanding how their clients could be successful. And that would
include insights into the type of programs and ad units that would
work.
Does your team -- or do you as a salesperson -- offer
the advertiser guidance that they can take to the bank? If they can
look to you as such an audience expert that they can confidently place
their dollars in successful programs, well then you are in, by
definition, a leadership position.
The Zen koan I would like
you to consider then would be: What does it mean to focus on your
customer by not focusing on your customer?
And the answer to the riddle would be: You focus on your customers by first focusing on their customer. And you can do that easily.
Some practical steps to get started on the path:
1.Send a simple survey (you can do it for free via Survey Monkey) and pose questions similar to the ones that Avinash Kaushik of Google has suggested that all sites should randomly ask their users:
a. Why are you here today?
b. What were you hoping to accomplish?
c. Were you successful? Why or why not?
2.
Find users who are passionate about your site. How? If you have
registration data and can ask your tech team to help, great. Otherwise
you can use the above survey and find users that spend a lot of time on
the site.
3. Ask these users if they can spend 15-20 minutes
with you to find out more about who they are, why they come to your
site, how they feel about the content and advertising, what ads they
see or would click on, etc.
4. Create advisory boards with
your best users to offer insights into your site, your content,
programs, how advertisers can catch their attention, etc.
Once
you connect with your users in these kinds of ways, don't be surprised
if you become addicted to user feedback, advisory groups, and
relationships. The insights you capture can only make your selling,
marketing and content development exponentially better. And if you are
not already a leader, you will become one to your advertisers.


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