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Why Airlines Have Suffered From Such Bad Publicity Lately

May 1, 2017 by Kenny Leave a Comment

This article is NOT to debate the merits of what took place on each airline. As information continues to surface, it changes how everyone perceives each situation.

Here are two reasons airlines suffer from such bad publicity lately:

1 – Customer Service and Perceptions

ACSI or American Consumer Satisfaction Index ranked the airline industry as having the worst customer service in 2011. It’s been near the bottom ever since.

When videos of a passenger being pulled from a United Airlines flight and a mouthy United Airlines employee taunting a male passenger came out, they quickly went viral. They were dramatic, which plays a big role. Perceptions also play a role.

It’s easy for consumers to believe an airline employee did something wrong because the perception of the airline industry and customer service is already negative. Using Google search, you can type a fragment sentence and see perceptions of just about any industry. Before I finish typing the word employees, Google’s technology guesses what I am going to type based on what others have typed into Google.

 

 

Compare the airline employee question to a Chick-fil-A example.

 

 

 

I fly often, speaking at conventions and spend consulting days with clients all over the country. I’ve never been dragged off a flight nor have I threatened a flight attendant. But I have experienced many snippy, miserable flight attendants and other airline employees. It is already easy to believe that an airline employee was rude. Not necessarily because it was American Airlines – because of the industry as a whole.

In my book, Marketing Battleground I referenced the United Breaks Guitars video series. The videos are funny, but that’s not the only reason they are such a hit. The perception already exists that airlines are NOT careful with your luggage.

2 – Everyone is a Journalist

Cell phones now have better videography than huge, over-the-shoulder $10,000 cameras from years ago. Video footage adds drama to a story. Hearing that a flight attendant was rude to a passenger is one thing, but seeing an employee actually taunt an angry passenger is more impactful. Video footage also has the ability to go viral faster on Facebook, YouTube, Instagram, and other social media.

Always act as though you are being recorded, because that might be exactly what is happening.

Final Thoughts

Learn from mistakes. American Airlines took immediate action by suspending the employee in question and did NOT blame the passenger.

Mistakes will happen. How you deal with those mistakes matters too.

 

Filed Under: Case Studies, Social Media Marketing, Video Marketing Tagged With: american airlines, customer service, perceptions, united airlines, video

Links of Utopia – Dr. David L. Cook Interview

January 16, 2017 by Kenny Leave a Comment

According to Wikipedia, the term utopia was coined from the Greek language by Sir Thomas More. He used the word as a title for his circa 1516 book Utopia, which was written in Latin. It described a fictional island society in the Atlantic Ocean. Utopia literally means “no place,” or “nowhere.” With a play on words and changing the spelling to eutopia, it becomes “good place.”

In one word, how would you define utopia?

If you were to survey 100 people with the question and list their top five answers on a board a la Family Feud, the number one answer would probably be “paradise.”

Well, Utopia is a real place in Texas. With a population of just over 220 people, would I refer to it as “paradise”? I don’t know. I haven’t been there. But I plan to visit soon.

Utopia, Texas and the Utopia Golf Course were the settings for the book, Links of Utopia, authored by Dr. David L Cook. A great movie starring Robert Duval was filmed there as well.

Links of Utopia author Dr. David L. Cook
Dr. Cook

I loved the book and the movie which is suitable for all audiences.

The movie featured one of the most unique endings I’ve ever seen. I won’t even hint at it here because I don’t want to ruin it. I won’t even issue a “spoiler alert” before telling you. I just won’t tell you. Get the movie.

Dr. Cook’s variety of media and communication usage is similar to what I’ve been teaching and urging business owners to do for a long time. That is another reason I reached out to Dr. Cook and requested an interview which I can share with our readers and listeners.

Dr. Cook shares his message via book, movie, blog, a yearly in-person retreat, and more.

This article could go on – but you will get a lot more value out of the interview.

Download the interview here.

Filed Under: Articles, Case Studies Tagged With: Dr. David L Cook, links of utopia

Copy these Methods to Over-Deliver

February 2, 2016 by Kenny Leave a Comment

Always be marketing – When Texas senator Ted Cruz ran for president in 2016, he mentioned his website, TedCruz.org more than all candidates combined called attention to theirs. Cruz spouted it from short interviews to the debate stage. He even squeezed it into his winning speech in an Iowa caucus.

Don’t try to appeal to everyone – Cruz stuck with his base. The Senator did not try to appeal to people whom he knew would never vote for him. Cruz stuck to his Christian roots and conservative principles. This might have upset the “other side” but it strengthened his base. In the past, Republicans have made the mistake of trying to appeal to everyone. Some have said that many of their staunch supporters have even stayed home during past elections because they were upset about “middle roads” taken by Republicans.

Identify the common enemy and attack – Cruz spoke passionately about the “Washington Cartel” and how they have hurt America. Cruz attacked the failed politics in Washington from Democrats and Republicans. Voters from both sides are sick of politics-as-usual.

Business Lessons

Always be marketing – Your marketing doesn’t stop once customers arrive at your door. In-house marketing at your location and regular communications should keep them coming back and inviting others. Send email newsletters and print newsletters, and show appreciation for existing customers. Put your website on everything.

Don’t try to be everything to everyone – To earn extreme loyalty, you will most definitely turn some people away. That’s just the way it is.

Imagine the owners of the best steak house in the city deciding to remove 20% of the meat off of the menu and replace it with vegetable dishes in an effort to diversify their customer base and lure vegetarians. That restaurant might get a few extra vegetarian customers at the expense of losing happy steak lovers. Another thing to consider is that steak lovers are more likely to come back to the old menu, whereas vegetarians are still not in their favorite place and are more likely to try various locations more often than a dedicated meat lover would.

Stick it to the common enemy – Your customers have an enemy. You can fight that enemy on their behalf — or with them. If you are a tax preparer, your marketing might appeal to the emotions of pissed-off-over-taxed-hard-working small business owners who struggle because of the IRS. If you help speakers and other business professionals get books published, you can wage an appeal by attacking publishing houses that make it too difficult to publish a book.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: iowa, presidential election, republican caucus, Senator Cruz, Trump, vote

Spend your Money and Time Wisely

March 22, 2014 by Kenny Leave a Comment

Years ago we sold our services right from the start. We offered a variety of marketing services that we still offer today. But there was a big problem.

We did our part and clients were happy with our marketing services. Over a few weeks or months we would learn about a variety of other things, marketing, advertising, print and digital, that our clients were doing. We had clients who would buy a new “shiny object” or expensive media purchase then email us and say, “Check it out…isn’t it great?”

Sometimes the answer was “yes,” but other times it was, “Ooops. That was a waste.”

So we added Discovery & Diagnosis Consultation and it allowed us to dig deeper into our new client’s business.

Here is what happened:

  • I often find places within the client’s existing business to boost their profits without any extra spending. I call this the “Hidden Profit Analysis”.
  • I find areas that the client could save money or spend it more effectively…none of which has anything to do with our services, unless it’s a perfect fit.
  • Clients are steered in the right direction instead of running and spending aimlessly in the wrong direction.

It worked out great for clients and for us. Sometimes (but not always) clients end up saving money over and above what they end up investing in our services(if we move forward together.) So it’s like our services are free.

There are a few reasons why I was inspired to write this article:

  • There are media salespeople out there who are very good at hyping and selling their media to you…but they are not good at analyzing whether you will even benefit from what they offer.
  • There are wannabe marketing people who have 500 friends on Facebook and decide they are a social media expert — or worse — a marketing expert.
  • There are people with impressive technical skills for social use, website tweaking, graphics creation and more…but they have no real business savvy.

All of the above may hurt your business or your wallet; and quite frankly, it ticks me off. They take advantage of business owners who are too busy running their business to fully grasp what marketing works today…and it makes real marketing and advertising experts look bad.

So before you dive into services or buying media, talk to someone who takes a consultative-advisory approach to find out what you really need. If someone truly wants you to succeed, they should ask about your business and NOT just sell you their services. If they are really good they may be able to help you make more money or save money and effort that is currently heading out the door.

Check out our Discovery & Diagnosis Consultation.

Filed Under: Articles, Important Topics

Superbowl Seahawks Quarterback Great Example

February 3, 2014 by Kenny Leave a Comment

There were plenty of highlights in 2014 during Superbowl XLVIII if you are a Seahawks fan…not so much if you are a Broncos fan.

The game was one-sided right away. However, as a fan of individuals in the game, one of my favorites is Russell Wilson, especially after he provided my favorite sound bite.

There was a flashback video from a celebration two weeks prior. It was at a moment when most NFL players would be sending text blasts and tweets and getting ready for a party, but not Russell Wilson. Minutes after beating the 49ers in the NFC title game, Wilson was picking the brain of four time Superbowl winner Terry Bradshaw.

Bradshaw was down on the field for interviews when the Seahawks finished putting away the 49ers. Russell Wilson was caught on video asking Bradshaw, “How do you prepare for the SuperBowl? What do we need to do to win it that’s different?”

This was not a do it for the cameras, TV moment. This was a goal-driven, preparation-driven young quarterback who knew there was more work to be done.

While other players in the background had fun and celebrated the moment, Russell Wilson sought out a proven SuperBowl winning quarterback for advice, coaching, and secrets to success on the next level.

This QB makes for a great case study. He is tiny by NFL standards. He was too young to win the Superbowl. He was too new to the league (2nd year) to win this much and be this mature…and yet there he was.

Russell Wilson is a winner. Barring injury, he should continue to be one of the winningest quarterbacks in the league; he sought out Bradshaw because he had an opportunity to seek counsel from someone who could help him get to the next level, seize the moment.

Like Russell Wilson, don’t ever think you are too smart or too talented to get high caliber coaching.

 

 

 

Filed Under: Case Studies Tagged With: russell wilson, seahawks quarterback, superbowl 2014, terry bradshaw advice

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