questions

Should you start a Facebook Group?

If you are on Facebook, the odds are that you are probably part of a Facebook Group. Facebook isn’t just about connecting with friends and family anymore (or people you went to high school with and haven’t seen in 20 years, lol), it’s a way to stay more connected with everything that matters in your life. Facebook Group and Facebook Pages make it possible to follow businesses you like, public figures and even common interests and hobbies. So why should you have a Facebook Group if you already have a Facebook Page for your business and a personal page – well, simply because it gives you more ways to interact.

Before you start a Facebook Group, it’s important to know the difference between a Group and a Page. Similar to a personal profile, a Facebook Page enables you to create a profile for your business. BUT, pages are visible to everyone on Facebook. Everyone on Facebook can connect to a Page by Liking it and new posts will show up in the News Feed. Facebook Groups on the other hand are a place for people to come together around a common cause, issue, activity, or interest. They allow the members to discuss issues, post photos or video, and share relevant content. You can also choose the privacy of the group: public (anyone can join), closed (requires admin approval to enter), and secret (can join by invitation only). Like Pages, new posts in the group will show up in the News Feed of it’s members.

So, the real question is, if I already have a Facebook Page, why do I need a Facebook Group? With all the changes to the Facebook algorithms, to really make a Page work, you need high engagement from your followers, so your posts keep showing in their New Feed. It sounds simple, but it’s tricky, so most businesses are forced to run paid ads that target their ideal client audience. Also, most consumers look at a Business Page on Facebook as an advertisement for the company – they are only seeing information that the company wants them to see. More and more companies are turning to Facebook Groups instead of abandoning Facebook as a whole.

Using Groups, you can create a community that isn’t based solely around your business, but a topic within your business that others will also find interesting. Say you own your own car repair business, but you love working on Corvette’s from the 1990’s – so you create a Facebook Group for 1990’s Corvette owners. With over a billion users already using Groups – it’s a win-win to keep potential clients engaged with you.

Here’s the top 5 reasons why your business needs a Facebook Group:

  1. You can engage with your followers. This is where you will get all the likes and comments vs your Facebook Page. If you are asking questions, providing good content, and encouraging others to contribute – this is where the magic will happen.
  2. You can teach and build trust. This is your group and you are the leader. After all, you started the group because you know about the topic and can explain, motivate, inspire, and teach the content that you love. This is where you can be seen as an expert and influence people’s lives. You aren’t pushing your business but are sharing your knowledge and encouraging people to share their questions, problems, and successes.
  3. Stay top of mind. With a Facebook Profile or Page, there is no guarantee that your content will be seen unless people go directly to your Profile or Page. With a group, anything that is posted in the group will 100% be seen in the members News Feed. So, the more you post, the more you are seen by potential clients.
  4. Get feedback. Within your group, you can create polls, ask for feedback, and determine what type of content is more relevant to your members and ideal clients. Your group can be a testing ground – if you get positive feedback – move forward. If you missed the mark, then you know you need to move on to the next idea.
  5. Announce special offers. If you’ve tried to announce a special offer on your Business Page, you’ve probably been met with very little engagement. Unless you put some advertising dollars behind it, the odds are most of your followers aren’t even seeing it. BUT when you post in your Group – 100% of your members will see your offer.

Building an online community is an important step for any growing business. It can help you get in touch with your key demographic, gather insights, promote your business, increase consumer loyalty and more. If you want to start building a community, look no further than the world’s most popular social network: Facebook. If you want to start your own Facebook Group from your Business Page: CLICK HERE.

Want to check our Red Barn\’s Facebook Group – Entrepreneur Masters? Click Here to Join!

Should you start a Facebook Group? Read More »

Understanding Your Customer\’s Journey

Any good marketing whiz will tell you that one of the most important parts of effective targeting is knowing your consumer inside and out. We’re talking more than their household income and gender. Truly knowing your consumer means you’re privy to everything from what their favorite drink at Starbucks may be to what their morning routine looks like. Sound a little nutty? It’s not! As business owners, we must be able to fully place ourselves in our prospective consumer’s shoes in order for our message to resonate with them. Understanding their experiences could be the difference between your prospect walking, or making the sale.

How does your consumer feel about your business now? What would drive your prospects to take action? What’s important to them? What makes them a repeat client or customer, and more importantly, what makes them walk away? Knowing the answers to these questions will keep your business not only maintained but consistently growing. Cracking the code on exactly who your consumer is can seem like a large to-do, but it’s proven to begin with something called “customer journey mapping.”

If you’re unfamiliar with the term, the good people at Big Door define it as “a framework that enables you to improve your customer experience.” We couldn’t have said it better ourselves. Your customer journey map follows your customer’s experience from their perspective to help your business understand how they are interacting with you. This in turn allows you to improve how your business interacts with them.

You want to start by figuring out how your prospects and current consumers engage with your business. Your customer journey map will pinpoint the steps they use to reach you. This is a process. It’s starts from when your consumer finds you online, to when they engage with your content, down to the moment they are being billed for your product or service. These are all “touchpoints” in their experience with your brand. Each of these touchpoints has the power to impact your consumer’s perception of you and ultimately drives their decision to conduct business with you or not. This isn’t always a linear process and it will vary from business to business.

Let’s dive a little deeper into what this process may actually look like. I’ve listed what the typical stages of customer journey map might be below.

1. Awareness – This when your customer takes notice of your brand for the first time. An email or some other form of an advertising campaign are common first steps for discovery.
2. Consideration – This may be as simple as checking out your website, or social media pages to review your message. Comparison between you and the competition happens at this stage as well. They may pursue customer review platforms.
3. Purchase – Here is where your prospect becomes a customer and makes the decision to buy the product or service you are selling.
4. Experience – Your customer now experiences your product or service for themselves.
5. Advocacy – Customer shares that experience, good or bad – with others.
6. Retention – Your business now has the opportunity to reel the customer back in using different tactics.
7. End of journey – Customer chooses to continue to use your product or service or goes to a competitor to restarts their journey there.

This journey can look very different depending on the nature of your business. There is no wrong or right way to go about accomplishing your end goal. A quick Google image search will show you different customer journey maps organizations have employed. They all look very similar to the steps listed above. Here’s ours visually:

\"customer\"

What the step-by-step list above doesn’t give you is the nitty gritty on what to look for at each stage. This is where you have to do your homework. It boils down to these four words: Action, motivation, questions and roadblocks. Here are some vital questions to ask yourself throughout the entire process.

  • What ACTIONS are your customers doing at each stage. Perhaps more importantly, what actions are they taking to move from one stage to the next?
  • What MOTIVATES them? People buy emotionally and justify those decisions logically. What motivates your customers to contact you, and to continue using your product or service? What motivates them to buy your other services or products? What emotions are they feeling? Remember – people either buy to gain pleasure or to reduce pain.
  • Are there unanswered QUESTIONS? Do your prospects have questions or concerns? When we are speaking to consumers through advertisements or written marketing material, people will have questions they want answered in real time. Are there unknowns that may scare them into perusing alternatives that may be more transparent in these areas?
  • What are the ROADBLOCKS that could prevent your prospect from moving between stages? These could include everything from cost, ease of doing business with you. Things like not so favorable yelp reviews and or lack of availability are common roadblocks that may get in the way.

Once you’ve discovered how exactly your prospects think, feel and react to your business, you’re ready to use this data for bigger and better marketing activities. You should be using your findings to both improve the efficiency of your current strategies and create new ones if needed.

Consider your company’s SWOT analysis for a moment. The term SWOT is commonly used by marketers and business owners. It reveals your brand’s Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats, but this time we want to focus on these sections solely from the perspective of your consumer. For example, a strength from a business standpoint may be securing a well-connected investor to fund HR programs. From the perspective of a consumer however, things like having your brand readily available to them in big-box stores, and being the only brand in your lane to provide live customer service are big strengths. After you’ve established the specific values related to your business within the SWOT analysis, you can then develop a strategic plan.

The four quadrants of your SWOT analysis will inform the information you gather from customer journey mapping. The only way to gather valuable and accurate data is to ASK! Consider using a business consultant at this stage for unbiased feedback. Because we business owners and internal executives can only make educated assumptions about our consumer’s experiences, surveys and focus groups become invaluable at this stage.

Your survey or focus groups will focus on the details that are crucial for truly understanding a customer’s experience. Ask your consumer to map out their journey from their perspective. You’ll find that this road is not often linear. Some consumers skip the consideration phase and jump straight to purchases. Others may spend months researching, discovering new brands and comparing before making their purchase. For them, the costs of doing business with you is an investment worth their time. They want to get it right!

A well-researched customer journey map will unlock countless questions for you in the marketing process. You’ll be able to use it to find which platforms your consumer is listening to you on and how to effectively reach them at the awareness stage.

You’ll discover how your consumers evaluate your business against competitors and what questions you can answer before they make the decision not to buy at the consideration stage.

After the purchase stage, surveys from your customer journey map will inform you how to retain your current customers and what motivates them to share their experience at the advocacy stage.

Ultimately, there is no one size fits all when it comes to a customer journey mapping. The more touchpoints your customers face, the more complicated this map will be. Your company will have to tailor this process. The fundamentals provided above should give you a jump-start!

Done carefully, your organization can take charge over how your consumers engage with you.

Understanding Your Customer\’s Journey Read More »

Understanding Your Customer\’s Journey

Any good marketing whiz will tell you that one of the most important parts of effective targeting is knowing your consumer inside and out. We’re talking more than their household income and gender. Truly knowing your consumer means you’re privy to everything from what their favorite drink at Starbucks may be to what their morning routine looks like. Sound a little nutty? It’s not! As business owners, we must be able to fully place ourselves in our prospective consumer’s shoes in order for our message to resonate with them. Understanding their experiences could be the difference between your prospect walking, or making the sale.

How does your consumer feel about your business now? What would drive your prospects to take action? What’s important to them? What makes them a repeat client or customer, and more importantly, what makes them walk away? Knowing the answers to these questions will keep your business not only maintained but consistently growing. Cracking the code on exactly who your consumer is can seem like a large to-do, but it’s proven to begin with something called “customer journey mapping.”

If you’re unfamiliar with the term, the good people at Big Door define it as “a framework that enables you to improve your customer experience.” We couldn’t have said it better ourselves. Your customer journey map follows your customer’s experience from their perspective to help your business understand how they are interacting with you. This in turn allows you to improve how your business interacts with them.

You want to start by figuring out how your prospects and current consumers engage with your business. Your customer journey map will pinpoint the steps they use to reach you. This is a process. It’s starts from when your consumer finds you online, to when they engage with your content, down to the moment they are being billed for your product or service. These are all “touchpoints” in their experience with your brand. Each of these touchpoints has the power to impact your consumer’s perception of you and ultimately drives their decision to conduct business with you or not. This isn’t always a linear process and it will vary from business to business.

Let’s dive a little deeper into what this process may actually look like. I’ve listed what the typical stages of customer journey map might be below.

1. Awareness – This when your customer takes notice of your brand for the first time. An email or some other form of an advertising campaign are common first steps for discovery.
2. Consideration – This may be as simple as checking out your website, or social media pages to review your message. Comparison between you and the competition happens at this stage as well. They may pursue customer review platforms.
3. Purchase – Here is where your prospect becomes a customer and makes the decision to buy the product or service you are selling.
4. Experience – Your customer now experiences your product or service for themselves.
5. Advocacy – Customer shares that experience, good or bad – with others.
6. Retention – Your business now has the opportunity to reel the customer back in using different tactics.
7. End of journey – Customer chooses to continue to use your product or service or goes to a competitor to restarts their journey there.

This journey can look very different depending on the nature of your business. There is no wrong or right way to go about accomplishing your end goal. A quick Google image search will show you different customer journey maps organizations have employed. They all look very similar to the steps listed above. Here’s ours visually:

\"customer\"

What the step-by-step list above doesn’t give you is the nitty gritty on what to look for at each stage. This is where you have to do your homework. It boils down to these four words: Action, motivation, questions and roadblocks. Here are some vital questions to ask yourself throughout the entire process.

  • What ACTIONS are your customers doing at each stage. Perhaps more importantly, what actions are they taking to move from one stage to the next?
  • What MOTIVATES them? People buy emotionally and justify those decisions logically. What motivates your customers to contact you, and to continue using your product or service? What motivates them to buy your other services or products? What emotions are they feeling? Remember – people either buy to gain pleasure or to reduce pain.
  • Are there unanswered QUESTIONS? Do your prospects have questions or concerns? When we are speaking to consumers through advertisements or written marketing material, people will have questions they want answered in real time. Are there unknowns that may scare them into perusing alternatives that may be more transparent in these areas?
  • What are the ROADBLOCKS that could prevent your prospect from moving between stages? These could include everything from cost, ease of doing business with you. Things like not so favorable yelp reviews and or lack of availability are common roadblocks that may get in the way.

Once you’ve discovered how exactly your prospects think, feel and react to your business, you’re ready to use this data for bigger and better marketing activities. You should be using your findings to both improve the efficiency of your current strategies and create new ones if needed.

Consider your company’s SWOT analysis for a moment. The term SWOT is commonly used by marketers and business owners. It reveals your brand’s Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats, but this time we want to focus on these sections solely from the perspective of your consumer. For example, a strength from a business standpoint may be securing a well-connected investor to fund HR programs. From the perspective of a consumer however, things like having your brand readily available to them in big-box stores, and being the only brand in your lane to provide live customer service are big strengths. After you’ve established the specific values related to your business within the SWOT analysis, you can then develop a strategic plan.

The four quadrants of your SWOT analysis will inform the information you gather from customer journey mapping. The only way to gather valuable and accurate data is to ASK! Consider using a business consultant at this stage for unbiased feedback. Because we business owners and internal executives can only make educated assumptions about our consumer’s experiences, surveys and focus groups become invaluable at this stage.

Your survey or focus groups will focus on the details that are crucial for truly understanding a customer’s experience. Ask your consumer to map out their journey from their perspective. You’ll find that this road is not often linear. Some consumers skip the consideration phase and jump straight to purchases. Others may spend months researching, discovering new brands and comparing before making their purchase. For them, the costs of doing business with you is an investment worth their time. They want to get it right!

A well-researched customer journey map will unlock countless questions for you in the marketing process. You’ll be able to use it to find which platforms your consumer is listening to you on and how to effectively reach them at the awareness stage.

You’ll discover how your consumers evaluate your business against competitors and what questions you can answer before they make the decision not to buy at the consideration stage.

After the purchase stage, surveys from your customer journey map will inform you how to retain your current customers and what motivates them to share their experience at the advocacy stage.

Ultimately, there is no one size fits all when it comes to a customer journey mapping. The more touchpoints your customers face, the more complicated this map will be. Your company will have to tailor this process. The fundamentals provided above should give you a jump-start!

Done carefully, your organization can take charge over how your consumers engage with you.

Understanding Your Customer\’s Journey Read More »