Archive for the 'Steve McKee' Category

28
Sep
09

Heading to Orlando: Society for Healthcare Strategy and Market Development (SHSMD) 2009

Wednesday is the start of SHSMD 2009. While not exhibiting this year, I will be attending as a participant. I am looking forward to hearing speakers Bert Jacobs, founder of Life is Good ® and my new favorite speaker, Steve McKee, author of “When Growth Stalls.”

Picture 15I’ll be attending sessions about hospital development and physician relations as well as participating in discussions about healthcare marketing and public relations practices. I am sure I will discover some new best practices and gain more insight into what is going on around the country marketing-wise in urban and rural hospitals.  I will be blogging about my experiences and tweeting from @tracyweise important updates from the conference. Be sure to stay tuned to get the overview from SHSMD 2009.

If you are attending SHSMD, let me know so we can grab a drink and chat about the new guiding principles in healthcare communications and swap our best practice stories. I am looking forward to seeing old friends and meeting new ones.

For those of you more familiar with Orlando, how about some travel assistance?

1. What is your favorite place to visit in Orlando? (you can’t say Disney World!)

2. Where is a great place to pick up Orlando souvenirs for my staff? (you can’t say Disney World!)

3. Is there anything to do in Orlando besides visit Disney World?

16
Sep
09

Improve your advertising with personas

In a recent BusinessWeek article by Steve Mckee, he outlines seven reasons why your advertising may not be working. This is no. 6:

You like it. O.K., this one may sting a bit, but you are not the best judge of your own advertising. You can’t be, because you simply know too much about your brand and have too much affection for it to remain objective. Look at Burger King. Its advertising over the past few years has been quite successful in appealing to the company’s core target audience of young men, but many Burger King franchisees could personally do without it. The smart ones recognize that they’re not the target and leave it alone. Your advertising is not only not about you, it’s not for you. Both points seem counterintuitive, but that’s why this stuff isn’t for amateurs.

McKee is right on track. But getting past your personal tastes is often difficult, or as Mckee stated, counterintuitive and not for amateurs.

So how do the professionals do it? They start by developing personas.

A persona is the model of your target audience. Personas have a name, a face, a personality. They have likes, dislikes and motivations. They are created to remove the personal biases of the designers, copywriters, CEOs, their spouses, the secretary…. Anyone who may have an opinion about an advertising campaign is removed from the equation. This enables you to honestly ask, “Will this message motivate our target audience?”

Perona Example

Perona Example

If you want your advertising message to work, make sure it’s speaking to the right people.

05
Jun
09

Does your business need a jump start?

I just returned from a compelling conference in Palm Springs, Calif. One of the keynote speakers at the event was Steve Mckee, author of the new book, “When Growth Stalls”. His presentation was an overview of general business and marketing issues that may derail your company or prevent your company from growing. I recommend anyone who is concerned about his or her business growth stalling, or wants to prevent that from happening, consider reading Mckee’s book.

Below are the highlights, based on my point of view, from Mckee’s presentation:

You company will cease to move forward when any of the following four things occur:Steve McKee, Author of When Growth Stalls

1.    Your business suffers from a lack of consensus – Your board of directors, executive team and managing personnel need to be in agreement on where the business is going and how you are going to get there. Any break in that unity will derail your plans.
2.    You lose focus on your business model – This concept should be taken to heart, especially in our current economy. Remain true to your core business model. Sure, you might need to tweak it some – you should be doing that regularly anyway. But trying to do everything for everybody just to get business…? You won’t do anything right or well if you take that approach.
3.    You lose your nerve – This issue can arise in many areas of your business, but most importantly in your pricing. Mckee said it takes two minutes to cut your rates and two years to get them back.  I recognize that many companies are currently reducing fees to gain sales, but be careful how you market the reduced rates or you could suffer the consequences when there is more money to spend down the road. Remember, don’t sell your service or product short just because you are afraid.
4.    You are inconsistent in you business and in your communications – From a marketing and public relations point of view; remember to make sure your message is integrated and consistent so that your target audience hears you loud and clear. If your current campaign is working, don’t make big or random changes to it. Make sure your public relations message and your marketing message are integrated – consumers don’t differentiate between a message they hear in paid placement (advertising) versus earned placement (public relations), so make sure you are consistent in what you are telling them.

Regardless of the size of your business or the type of product or service you are selling, you might want to consider if one ore more of these issues exist within your company and if it is holding you back from reaching your growth potential. McKee stated that recovery begins when you figure out where you are failing and you fix it. If your growth has stalled, how are you going to jump start it?




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