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The Monday Morning Memo

Actions Speak Louder Than

December 24, 2007

| Download
https://podcasts.captivate.fm/media/4c30eb6b-69eb-4780-bd20-f28a4d97932b/MMM071224-ActionsSpeakLouder.mp3

Actions Speak Louder Than

I’m a big believer in the power of words. But when words aren’t backed by corresponding actions, talk is cheap.

Have you ever felt a disconnection between what a company promised you in their ads and what they actually delivered?

I carry a list of companies in my head called the “Never Again As Long As I Live” list. I’ll bet you have one, too.

Was it the advertising of these companies that put them on our lists? Of course not.  It was their actions.

One dumb decision can undo years of good advertising.

What decisions have you made that send signals to your customers?

“Who you are speaks so loudly I can’t hear what you’re saying.”
– Ralph Waldo Emerson

1. What are you saying in your ads?
2. Who are you being in your store?
3. Is there a disconnect?

A dog doesn’t have to growl to let me know it’s dangerous. Just bare you teeth, doggie. I’ll understand. This small, direct signal from the dog overrides all the assurances of its owner: “He won’t bite, he’s a friendly dog. I’ve had him for 10 years. His breed never bites. It’s been proven. Here, watch this. See, he didn’t bite me and he won’t bite you either. What are you afraid of? Here are some testimonials from other people who have petted him. Did you know this dog was voted Most Pettable Dog of 2007? He won’t bite you, he likes you. Trust me. We care about our customers.”

What is advertising but the assurances of a dog owner?

Talk, when it costs you nothing, is cheap.

“Here are ten, hundred-dollar bills. Put them in your pocket. If this dog so much as snaps at you, they’re yours. He wasn’t baring his teeth to scare you. He was smiling at you.”

Wow. A smiling dog. I think I’ll pet him.

Actions are powerful signals when they agree with your words.

These action-signals gain credibility to the degree they cost you one or more of the following:

1. Material Wealth
2. Time & Energy
3. Opportunity
4. Power & Control
5. Reputation & Prestige
6. Safety & Well Being

What do your signals cost you? What are you risking?

Words that cost you little have little meaning.

Tom Wanek is an authority on how to use signals and counter-signals in business. Tom has agreed to speak for one very special hour on the subject during the next Free Public Seminar in Austin, Texas.

Prepare to be amazed.

Roy H. Williams

Would you like to send a signal that you appreciate Wizard Academy? Do it, and I’ll send you a signal in return.

What do you think? There was a man who had two sons. He went to the first and said, “Son, go and work today in the vineyard.”

 “I will not,” he answered, but later he changed his mind and went.

Then the father went to the other son and said the same thing. He answered, “I will, sir,” but he did not go.

Which of the two did what his father wanted?

“The first,” they answered.
– Jesus speaking to the crowd in Matthew chapter 21

What are you going to do in 2008
that you didn’t do in 2007?



 

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Random Quote:

“She was getting seen by half the town and buried in a stupid dress she only ever wore to work on Manager Appreciation Day, as her personal joke. Now she’d be wearing it for the boss-appreciating days in heaven, so the jokes go on. She probably would have wanted the dress Stoner bought her in rehab but knowing him he saved the receipt and took it back.

Oh, but he was all tore up, was Mr. Stoner. I almost didn’t recognize him in a tie, plus reflector sunglasses for the extra effect. People lined up to pay their respects, with Stoner standing at the casket so the ladies could hug him and tell him what a tragedy to see her taken so young, and him a widower. Then they’d walk away and say whatever shit they actually thought of mom. I could see their faces change, heads leaning together, hustling back to the living.

The church was not one the Peggots or any of us had ever gone to, except for some of Stoner’s family. Sinking River Baptist. Maybe that made it Stoner’s home court, but I didn’t see how it was his place to be up there beside the casket. He had barely known mom a year. It was me that had mopped her vomit and got her to bed and hunted up her car keys and got her to work on time, year in, year out. I could have put her together one last time, but nobody was asking.”

- 11-year-old Damon Fields, Demon Copperhead, p. 108

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