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Marketing leader & Wharton MBA with expertise in marketing strategy, product development & innovation

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Marketing warriors, fight for thy customer!

Whenever I need a little marketing pick-me-up, I turn to this guy, The Ultimate Warrior (the nice-looking gentleman pictured to the right). A beacon of strength, courage & determination, Ultimate fought his way to the top of the World Wrestling Federation during my youth, despite the greater popularity of Hulk Hogan. Sure, much of his energy was likely derived from illicit muscle-enhancers pumping through his body, but that's beside the point.

Much the way The Ultimate Warrior fought his way to the top through his courage & determination, I am calling on all marketers to reach into their "inner Warriors" and fight for the single most important long-term success factor of any company, your customers. It's up to you to ensure that your customer remains king within your organization.

To pull a couple of quotes from the modern-day Plato of business, the late Peter Drucker, everything begins & ends with the customer:

"The purpose of a business is to create a customer"
"The aim of marketing is to know and understand the customer so well the product or service fits him and sells itself"

Battling product-centric thinking
While the business world purports to live in the age of customer-centricity, I am convinced that we still live in an era of product-centered thought. There are numerous factors that underlie this, from organizational structure to the science of human cognition & our inability to hold onto abstract concepts such as needs (vs. far more concrete concepts like products or services).

While I find such topics fascinating, this post in not about exploring what cognitive science can tell us about business thinking. It's about making one thing clear to all marketers, and that is that within your organization you are the ultimate champion of the customer. And without your strong voice, your organization's long-term future may be put in jeopardy. It's a heck of a responsibility to have, which makes it all the more rewarding.

What I have attempted to do in previous posts is to introduce concepts to help us become more customer-centric in our thinking, and in our approach to business. Whether it be through the help of tools such as the purchase journal, talking to your mother, or the cultivating of your inner consumer voice, developing fluency in customer-centric thought is key to great marketing as well as successful business outcomes.


In closing, a few wisdoms for us to keep in mind

  • We think about about our products 100x more often than our customers ever do. The inverse is likely true with respect to their needs.
  • Our products are tools used by our customers to satisfy their given needs, problems or desires. Our products are a means to an end for our customers, not ends in themselves.
  • Deep insights about consumers is the foundation upon which great new products are built. The Field of Dreams approach (i.e., "build it and they will come") generally only works in the movies.
  • As humans (& marketers), we're wired in such a way that makes it easier for us to think about the concrete (i.e., our products) than the abstract (i.e., our customers' needs). Given this, we need to continuously work-out our customer-centric "muscles" to battle against our tendency to shift back to thinking about our products.
As always, please post your comments, questions or thoughts, or feel free to send me an email. Happy marketing, fellow Warriors.
read more

Marketing warriors, fight for thy customer!

Whenever I need a little marketing pick-me-up, I turn to this guy, The Ultimate Warrior (the nice-looking gentleman pictured to the right). A beacon of strength, courage & determination, Ultimate fought his way to the top of the World Wrestling Federation during my youth, despite the greater popularity of Hulk Hogan. Sure, much of his energy was likely derived from illicit muscle-enhancers pumping through his body, but that's beside the point.

Much the way The Ultimate Warrior fought his way to the top through his courage & determination, I am calling on all marketers to reach into their "inner Warriors" and fight for the single most important long-term success factor of any company, your customers. It's up to you to ensure that your customer remains king within your organization.

To pull a couple of quotes from the modern-day Plato of business, the late Peter Drucker, everything begins & ends with the customer:

"The purpose of a business is to create a customer"
"The aim of marketing is to know and understand the customer so well the product or service fits him and sells itself"

Battling product-centric thinking
While the business world purports to live in the age of customer-centricity, I am convinced that we still live in an era of product-centered thought. There are numerous factors that underlie this, from organizational structure to the science of human cognition & our inability to hold onto abstract concepts such as needs (vs. far more concrete concepts like products or services).

While I find such topics fascinating, this post in not about exploring what cognitive science can tell us about business thinking. It's about making one thing clear to all marketers, and that is that within your organization you are the ultimate champion of the customer. And without your strong voice, your organization's long-term future may be put in jeopardy. It's a heck of a responsibility to have, which makes it all the more rewarding.

What I have attempted to do in previous posts is to introduce concepts to help us become more customer-centric in our thinking, and in our approach to business. Whether it be through the help of tools such as the purchase journal, talking to your mother, or the cultivating of your inner consumer voice, developing fluency in customer-centric thought is key to great marketing as well as successful business outcomes.


In closing, a few wisdoms for us to keep in mind

  • We think about about our products 100x more often than our customers ever do. The inverse is likely true with respect to their needs.
  • Our products are tools used by our customers to satisfy their given needs, problems or desires. Our products are a means to an end for our customers, not ends in themselves.
  • Deep insights about consumers is the foundation upon which great new products are built. The Field of Dreams approach (i.e., "build it and they will come") generally only works in the movies.
  • As humans (& marketers), we're wired in such a way that makes it easier for us to think about the concrete (i.e., our products) than the abstract (i.e., our customers' needs). Given this, we need to continuously work-out our customer-centric "muscles" to battle against our tendency to shift back to thinking about our products.
As always, please post your comments, questions or thoughts, or feel free to send me an email. Happy marketing, fellow Warriors.
read more