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The Monday Morning Memo

The Extraordinary People Myth

September 1, 2008

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https://podcasts.captivate.fm/media/0fe14c72-3e7c-469d-8f59-ea6f78aa86bd/MMM080901-ExtraordinaryMyth.mp3


A Monday Morning Memo of the Wizard of Ads

It’s like you’ve asked him to defend his religion; the business owner who believes in growing his businesses through exceptional service delivered by extraordinary people gets testy when you ask him to name a business that has successfully employed this strategy.

It’s like trying to convince a believer there is no God.

I’ve encountered dozens of business owners who believed in their hearts they had extraordinary employees.

None of them ever did.

Properly enforced systems, methods, policies and procedures allow a company to get exceptional actions from ordinary people. If your business requires you to attract and retain extraordinary people, you’ve got a dangerous business model.

And then there’s the Exceptional Service Myth:
“If we give our customers exceptional service, they’ll tell all their friends.”

My response:
“No, they won’t. Not in large numbers, anyway.”

“But we get comments and letters every day from customers raving about the service we gave them.”

“Good service leads to customer loyalty but it doesn't breed word-of-mouth. Most people assume any plumber can fix the pipes, any electrician can solve the electrical problem and any retail store will accept the return of a defective item with a smile. We take competence for granted. We tell their boss when an employee has delighted us. That’s how we reward the employee. We tell our friends when a company has disappointed us. That’s how we protect our friends. Most people feel they’ve settled the service debt when they praise the employee to their boss. But they hesitate to tell their friends because they can’t be certain their friends will encounter the same employee.”

“But our competitors are dishonest and incompetent and we’re not! You just need to help us educate the customer.”

“I’ve been down that road dozens of times during the past 30 years. You’re not going to like where it leads.”

“What do you mean?”

“I’ve spent million of dollars of other people’s money trying to convince the public they should buy from my clients because my clients were more honest, cared more deeply and were committed to delivering an extraordinary buying experience.”

“How did that turn out?”

“Most customers assume you’re trying to direct attention away from the fact that your prices are too high. When the occasional customer does believe your claims, you’ve usually raised their expectations so high that you can’t possibly live up to the picture you’ve painted in their mind. Ads that promise exceptional service don’t increase your sales figures but they do increase your complaints.”

“So what kinds of ads will increase my sales figures?”

I’ll tell you next week.

Roy H. Williams

Accelerated Branding, coming this way fast.
Sept. 16-17. Once a year…

Write your name in fire. $12

From the Believe It or Not! department (No connection to Ripley's.)

 

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Random Quote:

“Our posterity will have to make its peace with great new religions. By a religion I mean some body of doctrine that demands acquiescence and conformity by virtually everyone, and which hunts down the non-conformists with righteous fury.

You will not be surprised when I say that one of these new religions, which is already rising to extraordinary power, is Science.

What is Science? The word simply means knowledge but now we use it to signify what experimenters can tell us about the universe in some aspect of its variety. Such knowledge is gained by experiments which confirm hypotheses, and stated very crudely it may be assumed that if an experiment can be carried through a hundred times with the same result, the hypothesis has been shown to be a fact. This of course is totally different from Art, in which nothing is ever precisely the same from one instance to another. The scientific approach to humanity is wholesale; the approach of art, and the art we are talking about here is fiction, is retail. Not masses, but individuals.

I speak of Science as a religion because of the priestlike authority it now assumes in its assertions about many things, and especially about public health. I use the world “priestlike” somewhat sardonically, because we know how brilliantly the priests of past times interpreted history, and especially the history of those who opposed them, to suit their own purposes and support their own doctrines. This was not calculated roguery; all priesthoods are certain that they know the truth and know it is their duty to protect mankind from error.”

- Robertson Davies, The Merry Heart, p. 360

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