Simon's a marketing expert based in Brisbane. His core business is running TwoCents, a boutique agency based in Brisbane’s Fortitude Valley that helps small to medium-sized businesses around Australia with their advertising, marketing, branding and social media needs.
After nearly 18 months of promise and false dawns, Facebook Offers (originally developed as Facebook Deals) finally rolled out worldwide for business timelines everywhere this week. Here's a quick cheat sheet of important facts for you to remember when organizing your first Facebook Offer.
Offers only works on selected timelines…
…at the moment. It will expand as Facebook iron out any issues. And deleting an offer may not necessarily void the offer. So make sure you get your terms and conditions right. See below for that!
Strong Headlines are important
You need to attract their attention, so make sure it's clear what the offer is. You don't have much space so make it count. It goes without saying that the image associated with the offer is equally important. square images 90px by 90px work best.
Limit the number of offers
If they claim an offer, they might not use it, so you need to bear that in mind too. There's no obligation to redeem it. So think about how many you limit to. You'll also understand through trial and error how good a deal you need to generate response. Facebook suggest at least 20% off your normal price.
Remember the Ts&Cs
If there are some restrictions on the offer, make sure you add these in here too. Don't get caught out with competition and promotion laws that vary from state to state in Australia. If in doubt, ask an expert.
The offer is available on your mobile phone too
On your main business page, you can see and claim the business page. So if you're a retail business and a customer claims this offer in your shop, it will show that they've done this to all their friends and they can claim the offer right away. That's real social sharing as instantly the offer appears on their timeline and all their friends can claim it too. A good offer can easily go viral.
You can link an advert right back to your offer
When you set-up a Facebook advert, you can link it to both your page or to a particular post: in this case, the Facebook Offer post.
Pin Your Offer
Your Facebook Offer can be pinned to the top of your page so everyone sees it when they arrive.
Attracting and growing your fan base is now as important as ever; Facebook Offers give you the opportunity to develop Group-on-style deals direct to your customers. And for those non-retail business, utilizing Facebook Offers for training and resources will be just as important.
Simon's a marketing expert based in Brisbane. His core business is running TwoCents, a boutique agency based in Brisbane's Fortitude Valley that helps small to medium-sized businesses around Australia with their advertising, marketing, branding and social media needs. Visit facebook agencies, Facebook Offers, facebook for business for more details.
A marketing expert colleague asked me the other day 'so they're just shutting it down?'
The answer was in the affirmative. They are, indeed, just shutting it down. With the loss of the jobs, locations, branding and all trade.
The life and death of WoW Sight and Sound is a stark lesson to all business owners and any marketing expert. A stark lesson in what not to do when running a retail store. There is much background to the collapse, a large chunk of it unrelated to the core business, as well as a lot of economic woes and shifts in business patterns. But inside all of that, there are some key lessons.
1. You never asked me for anything.
I shopped at the Brisbane WOW a fair bit. A bought DVDs and Blu-Rays there. I bought three Mac computers. I bought a set of scales. I bought a battery charger. And never once did WOW ask me for my details. An email address, my postcode - some way of tempting me back in store. What about a newsletter? Ask me to join your Facebook page? Oh no. You don't have one.
If I were the WOW Sight and Sound Marketing Manager I'd be very disappointed with myself. In fact, Google that position and you can find the digital marketing manager on LinkedIn. Guess who he used to work for? Colorado Group. Hmmm.
2. You had interest free credit.
And you never told me. I had to find out through GE Creditline. I'd have bought more and bigger if I'd known before. Why didn't you tell me? I appreciate you didn't want to get into the Harvey Norman cycle of having a permanent interest free option as the sole driver for foot traffic, but there's a way of presenting that without sounding desperate.
3. You built a hotel.
If you've learnt nothing from any marketing expert at Apple - whose products you stocked quite well actually - is that there's no need to diversify for the sake of amusing yourself. Especially when the hotel you build has something like 100 plasma screens in and gives even normal people a fit looking at them. And wasn't overly successful too.
4. Your floor space was covered with products people weren't buying.
We watched Blockbuster and HMV go out of business. Yet you still gave over massive space to DVDs and CDs. Only three months ago did it appear the marketing expert realize this wasn't a good plan, and I saw some of your stores finally catch on to the digital world and start reallocating space. Probably a bit too late by then.
5. You sponsored the Broncos
That had very, very little bearing on whether I shopped with you. Sure the Broncos rocked up to your stores now and again, but did this drive sales? Did you analyze whether having the logo on their shirt sleeve actually put more bodies through the doors? I doubt it. Hindsight is the only exact science but maybe marketing expert could have spent the money better spent on consumer engagement and education?
6. You were online....
...but the one time I visited your website...actually, I can't remember. That's not good. If I didn't go back, it can't have been any good. And what was with the 1wow URL? I appreciate you couldn't get Wow but talk about make it harder for people to find you. Or remember you.
7. Location, location, location.
You were a destination venue, for what was fast becoming a commodity product. Bad idea. JB saw some sense and moved into high foot traffic areas. Maybe you should have done the same?
Despite the doom and gloom rubbish that spouts from Gerry Harvey, the Australian Retailers Association, any marketing expert and et al, on a weekly basis about the state of Australian retail, this channel for consumer goods is not dead. Far from it. I would suggest a re-birth is about to occur. Or an evolution. Or actually, a revolution. We're on the cusp of it right now. Consumers still want to pick things off shelves but what we've seen is how that action has evolved by the internet, home shopping, the mobile phone and growth of video.
And of course, in any revolution there are casualties. WOW Sight and Sound and Colorado Group are a couple. But any marketing expert will tell you, there will be more.
But there are ways and means of fighting back. Retail experience, price points, education, payment plans - these are things online simply cannot and will not offer, and things the consumer is willing to pay for and engage with. If back in 2008, post-GFC, a marketing expert and someone at WOW Sight And Sound had taken a long, hard look at their business and corrected the 7 points above, would they called in the administrators? Even if WOW Sight And Sound had just managed the first point, and they'd continued to engage me, perhaps that would have helped?
If you're in a similar situation, irrespective of the size of your business, then talk to a Brisbane marketing expert and get some help and direction for your business, before you end up like WOW Sight and Sound.
Simon's a marketing expert based in Brisbane. His core business is running TwoCents, a boutique agency based in Brisbane's Fortitude Valley that helps small to medium-sized businesses around Australia with their advertising, marketing, branding and social media needs. For more information about the services offered, Please click these links marketing experts, brisbane marketing experts & marketing experts in Brisbane
Disclosure: I have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours.
Instablogs are Seeking Alpha's free blogging platform customized for finance, with instant set up and exposure to millions of readers interested in the financial markets. Publish your own instablog in minutes.
Your Facebook Offers Cheat Sheet!
After nearly 18 months of promise and false dawns, Facebook Offers (originally developed as Facebook Deals) finally rolled out worldwide for business timelines everywhere this week. Here's a quick cheat sheet of important facts for you to remember when organizing your first Facebook Offer.
Offers only works on selected timelines…
…at the moment. It will expand as Facebook iron out any issues. And deleting an offer may not necessarily void the offer. So make sure you get your terms and conditions right. See below for that!
Strong Headlines are important
You need to attract their attention, so make sure it's clear what the offer is. You don't have much space so make it count. It goes without saying that the image associated with the offer is equally important. square images 90px by 90px work best.
Limit the number of offers
If they claim an offer, they might not use it, so you need to bear that in mind too. There's no obligation to redeem it. So think about how many you limit to. You'll also understand through trial and error how good a deal you need to generate response. Facebook suggest at least 20% off your normal price.
Remember the Ts&Cs
If there are some restrictions on the offer, make sure you add these in here too. Don't get caught out with competition and promotion laws that vary from state to state in Australia. If in doubt, ask an expert.
The offer is available on your mobile phone too
On your main business page, you can see and claim the business page. So if you're a retail business and a customer claims this offer in your shop, it will show that they've done this to all their friends and they can claim the offer right away. That's real social sharing as instantly the offer appears on their timeline and all their friends can claim it too. A good offer can easily go viral.
You can link an advert right back to your offer
When you set-up a Facebook advert, you can link it to both your page or to a particular post: in this case, the Facebook Offer post.
Pin Your Offer
Your Facebook Offer can be pinned to the top of your page so everyone sees it when they arrive.
Attracting and growing your fan base is now as important as ever; Facebook Offers give you the opportunity to develop Group-on-style deals direct to your customers. And for those non-retail business, utilizing Facebook Offers for training and resources will be just as important.
Simon's a marketing expert based in Brisbane. His core business is running TwoCents, a boutique agency based in Brisbane's Fortitude Valley that helps small to medium-sized businesses around Australia with their advertising, marketing, branding and social media needs. Visit facebook agencies, Facebook Offers, facebook for business for more details.
The Life And Death Of Wow Sight And Sound
A marketing expert colleague asked me the other day 'so they're just shutting it down?'
The answer was in the affirmative. They are, indeed, just shutting it down. With the loss of the jobs, locations, branding and all trade.
The life and death of WoW Sight and Sound is a stark lesson to all business owners and any marketing expert. A stark lesson in what not to do when running a retail store. There is much background to the collapse, a large chunk of it unrelated to the core business, as well as a lot of economic woes and shifts in business patterns. But inside all of that, there are some key lessons.
1. You never asked me for anything.
I shopped at the Brisbane WOW a fair bit. A bought DVDs and Blu-Rays there. I bought three Mac computers. I bought a set of scales. I bought a battery charger. And never once did WOW ask me for my details. An email address, my postcode - some way of tempting me back in store. What about a newsletter? Ask me to join your Facebook page? Oh no. You don't have one.
If I were the WOW Sight and Sound Marketing Manager I'd be very disappointed with myself. In fact, Google that position and you can find the digital marketing manager on LinkedIn. Guess who he used to work for? Colorado Group. Hmmm.
2. You had interest free credit.
And you never told me. I had to find out through GE Creditline. I'd have bought more and bigger if I'd known before. Why didn't you tell me? I appreciate you didn't want to get into the Harvey Norman cycle of having a permanent interest free option as the sole driver for foot traffic, but there's a way of presenting that without sounding desperate.
3. You built a hotel.
If you've learnt nothing from any marketing expert at Apple - whose products you stocked quite well actually - is that there's no need to diversify for the sake of amusing yourself. Especially when the hotel you build has something like 100 plasma screens in and gives even normal people a fit looking at them. And wasn't overly successful too.
4. Your floor space was covered with products people weren't buying.
We watched Blockbuster and HMV go out of business. Yet you still gave over massive space to DVDs and CDs. Only three months ago did it appear the marketing expert realize this wasn't a good plan, and I saw some of your stores finally catch on to the digital world and start reallocating space. Probably a bit too late by then.
5. You sponsored the Broncos
That had very, very little bearing on whether I shopped with you. Sure the Broncos rocked up to your stores now and again, but did this drive sales? Did you analyze whether having the logo on their shirt sleeve actually put more bodies through the doors? I doubt it. Hindsight is the only exact science but maybe marketing expert could have spent the money better spent on consumer engagement and education?
6. You were online....
...but the one time I visited your website...actually, I can't remember. That's not good. If I didn't go back, it can't have been any good. And what was with the 1wow URL? I appreciate you couldn't get Wow but talk about make it harder for people to find you. Or remember you.
7. Location, location, location.
You were a destination venue, for what was fast becoming a commodity product. Bad idea. JB saw some sense and moved into high foot traffic areas. Maybe you should have done the same?
Despite the doom and gloom rubbish that spouts from Gerry Harvey, the Australian Retailers Association, any marketing expert and et al, on a weekly basis about the state of Australian retail, this channel for consumer goods is not dead. Far from it. I would suggest a re-birth is about to occur. Or an evolution. Or actually, a revolution. We're on the cusp of it right now. Consumers still want to pick things off shelves but what we've seen is how that action has evolved by the internet, home shopping, the mobile phone and growth of video.
And of course, in any revolution there are casualties. WOW Sight and Sound and Colorado Group are a couple. But any marketing expert will tell you, there will be more.
But there are ways and means of fighting back. Retail experience, price points, education, payment plans - these are things online simply cannot and will not offer, and things the consumer is willing to pay for and engage with. If back in 2008, post-GFC, a marketing expert and someone at WOW Sight And Sound had taken a long, hard look at their business and corrected the 7 points above, would they called in the administrators? Even if WOW Sight And Sound had just managed the first point, and they'd continued to engage me, perhaps that would have helped?
If you're in a similar situation, irrespective of the size of your business, then talk to a Brisbane marketing expert and get some help and direction for your business, before you end up like WOW Sight and Sound.
Simon's a marketing expert based in Brisbane. His core business is running TwoCents, a boutique agency based in Brisbane's Fortitude Valley that helps small to medium-sized businesses around Australia with their advertising, marketing, branding and social media needs. For more information about the services offered, Please click these links marketing experts, brisbane marketing experts & marketing experts in Brisbane
Disclosure: I have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours.