Marketers are trained to put their best foot forward and ignore the downsides of their products. This is about doing the exact opposite: finding your weakest points and showcasing them for all to see.
3. We were trying to book a
restaurant table for a Velocity
trip a while back. Usual thing:
sent out emails to the places
that looked good.
Listed all our requirements.
(Separate room. Drinks ďŹrst.
Some vegetarians.)
4. One womanâs reply stood out.
Not because she sold hard
but because she seemed
to be trying to un-sell us.
A few of the restaurants
ignored our email.
(I know: WTF?)
A few replied.
5. She said she didnât have
a separate room but could
screen off a section of the
main restaurant.
She included a photo
to show what she meant.
6. She said they did have
vegetarian dishes but they
were a ďŹsh restaurant and
didnât want to pretend to
be otherwise.
And attached a sample menu.
7. As we corresponded
with the woman, this
pattern repeated itself
over and over again.
She kept telling us what
we might not like about
her restaurant and what
she could do about it.
8. In short, the woman
was 100% honest.
And it had a magic
effect on us.
9. Because she was so open about
the potential shortcomings of
her restaurant, we concluded
two things:
10. She really, really didnât want us
to show up and be disappointed.
She cared about us
having a great time.
11. She was honest.
Because she was so open about potential
problems, we trusted everything she said
about the positives.
13. âŚand had a fantastic
evening from the very
ďŹrst minute to the last.
And not a penny more than
they quoted (despite our
frankly excessive drinking).
Great, warm welcome.
Bubbly on arrival.
Fantastic food.
Friendly, attentive service.
14. The shortcomings
she pointed out?
They were true but unimportant
to us and utterly manageable.
If anything, they were overstated.
15. And because she had
managed our expectations,
we found ourselves actively
minimizing or completely
discounting these issues.
16. So what can marketers
learn from this little fable?
Just thisâŚ
18. They hide them.
They wheel out the
smoke and mirrors.
They lie, deny and vilify
anyone who draws attention
to the shortcomings.
Most marketers treat
their negative features
like weeping sores on
a blind date.
19. Thatâs just how sales and
marketing works, right?
Itâs called âputting your
best foot forwardâ.
They pretend the
weaknesses donât
matter (when, to some
customers, they might
matter quite a bit).
20. But every once in a while
you come across a brand
that takes another approach.
21. They expose any
potential downsides
openly and honestly.
They admit that their solution
is not for everybody â but for
the right people, itâs ideal.
22. They expose their soft spots
and show how theyâre working
to ďŹx them â or they share
strategies for minimizing
the impact.
23. Instead of inďŹating claims,
theyâre conservative about
their performance data
even when the competition
is shamelessly pufďŹng
up their numbers.
24. Try putting a paragraph on your website
that says, âWho weâre not forâ and see
how fast itâs deleted by your boss (or hers).
On Planet Marketing, this kind of
honesty is thought to be insane.
25. The thing is, when your target
audience is any subset of homo
sapiens, anything less than total
honesty is the insane thing.
34. Because hereâs a little secret:
the people you scare
away by exposing your
weaknesses are the ones
who do really care about
that little missing feature.
35. These are, by deďŹnition, the least
likely to buy from you â and, more
importantly, the least likely to be
happy if they do buy.
36. These are the people
you want to deter.
(At least until you ďŹx the issue.)
37. And for every one of these,
there will be dozens or hundreds
or thousands of prospects who
appreciate your honesty, donât
care about the downside and trust
you far more because you had
the balls to be truthful in public.
50. It focuses you on
battles you can win.
The only ones
worth ďŹghting.
51. Want to see Insane
Honesty in action?
Read this admittedly
geeky blog post.
(With examples of classic ad campaigns
and some cool newer cases.)
52.
53. Velocity is a B2B content
marketing agency.
Weâre not for the timid,
the weak or the hide-bound.
We can be annoying
by sticking to our guns
when other agencies
might have surrendered.
54. Sometimes we disappear
en masse to places like Rome
(clients who want 24x7x365
service may not like that).
And weâre big on getting
our clients to take a stand.
(Brands with stronger legal
teams than marketing teams
may ďŹnd us frustrating.)
55. Oh, and we publish
lots of content about
content marketing.
Which we hope youâll
come and eat.