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The Monday Morning Memo

Marketplace Realities

July 11, 2005

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https://podcasts.captivate.fm/media/62e707de-0b19-4a42-bbc4-89bc1b0fdd9c/MMM050711-Marketplace-Reali.mp3

Marketplace Realities

Is There a Limit to How High You Can Climb?

Last week a client achieved 42 percent of his market potential. Never before had I seen a business break the 40 percent barrier. It was kind of like seeing someone run a four-minute mile. I knew it was possible in theory, but I never thought I'd actually see it.

Ben had come to Austin for his annual marketing retreat. After the usual pleasantries, he said, “Traffic is flat, sales are flat, and I'm not happy.”

“Ben, you've done everything that can be done. You've trained your staff, created a tantalizing compensation structure for them, advertised relentlessly, added every conceivable product line that might increase your attractiveness to your customer, refined your purchasing methods so that your prices are visibly better, built a fabulous new store for the comfort of your customers, and through it all, not one of your competitors has awakened.”

“Are you saying that 3 and a half million is all that can be done in my town?” he bristled.

Looking him calmly in the eyes, I carefully enunciated a single word: “Evidently.”

Business owners, I tell Ben's story to give you a glimpse of the Realities of the Marketplace:

1. Impact Quotient. How powerful is your message compared to your competitors'? This is the Impact Quotient of your message, whether it's delivered through mass media, face-to-face by your salespeople, or word-of-mouth by your customers to their friends. Advertising is more effective when you have something to say.
2. Market Size/Ad Budget Ratio. How big is your town relative to your ad budget? The more populated the trade area, the more expensive it is to advertise. How able are you?
3. Competitive Environment. How good are you at what you do? More importantly, how good are your competitors and how many of them are there? Each of them is going to retain some customers regardless of what you do.
4. Market Potential. What is the potential of your trade area? The total dollars spent in your product category is a not a number you're likely to change. The question is, what percentage of that total will be yours?

Do you know your category's market potential in your trade area? Can you name the degree of your market penetration?

Until a business achieves 4 to 6 percent of their market potential, they usually lack the financial steam to sustain a serious move on the marketplace. But when they've accumulated sufficient cash and courage, the ride to 25 percent is wooly and wonderful. Growing from 25 to 33 percent is much harder than the jump from 5 to 25. And creeping from 33 to 40 happens only when you're blessed with very weak competitors.

Ben's total trade area contains 125,000 people. Statistically, they'll spend 67 dollars per person/per year in his product category. This gives Ben a market potential of 8,375,000 dollars. Growing from half a million to 2.1 million was fun and easy. Growing from 2.1 to 3.5 required Ben to stretch his comfort zone far beyond what most business owners would have been willing to consider. No stone has been left unturned in the 7 years we've been working together.

“Ben, the way I see it, you've got four choices:
1. Fire us and hire an ad firm that will tell you what you want to hear.
2. Start a new business in an unrelated category in your town.
3. Launch your existing category in another town.
4. Shut up and be happy with what you've accomplished.”

I knew that Ben would never do number 4. I figured he'd go for number 2, or possibly even number 1. To my surprise, he immediately picked number 3. “Roy,” he said, “You may not remember it, but you told me three years ago when I built the new store that I needed to be thinking about what I was going to do next. You said building that store was the final thing I might do to improve volume in my town. It looks like you were right.”

We spent the rest of that day evaluating towns for an excited Ben to visit in 4 different states. He's on the road picking one now, and then we'll start climbing again.

Business can be fun when you work with people of courage.

Do you?

This week we've spoken about marketplace realities. Next week I'll tell you about a reality of a different sort.

Roy H. Williams

PS – Wow. A few days ago I checked with Brandi to see how many ceremonies had been held at Chapel Dulcinea since it opened April 23. Would you believe that 39 weddings have been performed and 110 have been scheduled? People are arriving daily to enjoy the free gift you so elegantly extend. Many come from far away. And each of them leaves with memories of a magical day. On behalf of all these people, I thank you for your generosity in giving the world this magnificent free wedding chapel. – RHW

PPS – Attend a Free Seminar August 4 in wonderful Tuscan Hall on the campus of Wizard Academy. Our new facility gives us plenty of room, but we need to know if you're coming so we can give the caterer a head count. My schedule isn't likely to permit me to do another of these presentations of Advertising in America until 2006. I've been told it's definitely worth a trip to Austin.

YET EVEN MORE NEWS: Wizard Academy's first online course is up and running and waiting for you to log in. Ad Writing 101 – Online is the first of what we hope will be lots of great online courses. Dean of Curricula Dr. John Davis gives Ad Writing 101 a smiling double-thumbs up. Check it out.

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Random Quote:

“The closer a book comes to being a genuine work of art, a true creation fully alive with a life of its own, the less likely it is that the author had a full control and a clear understanding of what he wrote. D.H. Lawrence, who was an exceptionally perceptive critic, summed this up in a statement which I have already quoted many times but which one should never tire of invoking: ‘Never trust the artist. Trust the tale. The proper function of a critic is to save the tale from the artist who created it.'”

- Simon Leys, The New York Review of Books, June 11, 1998

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