Complete Story
10/11/2024
016. Marketing Makeover: How to Fix Your Marketing and Drive More Revenue to Your Business . How to Become a Stronger Coach and Leader of Your Sales Team (morning)
Instructor: Jamie Turner
Level of Complexity: Intermediate/Advanced
9:00 AM - 12:00 PM
Several years ago, Williams-Sonoma introduced a bread maker for $275. When sales of the bread maker didn’t take off, they introduced a second bread maker that was slightly better than the $275 bread maker … but they charged $550 for it. What happened after they introduced the $550 bread maker? Sales of the $275 bread maker went through the roof. This happened because Williams-Sonoma knew about Relative Pricing which is a way to help consumers re-frame how they think about the cost of products. Bottom Line: Consumers behave in ways that are sometimes surprising. And businesses that understand these behaviors outperform their competitors. In this fun, engaging, action-oriented speech, internationally recognized author, professor, and CNN contributor Jamie Turner will take everything you know about marketing and turn it on its head. This is a top-to-bottom look at consumer behavior, insight development, and strategic thinking. You won’t learn about simple tactics in this session. Instead, you’ll learn how to re-wire your brain so that you can be more innovative, fresh, and inventive when you develop your next marketing campaign.
Learning Objectives:
- How to Think Backwards: New problems can’t be solved with old solutions. By thinking backwards, you can arrive at new, surprising solutions.
- Consumer Behavior: Consumers behave in funny ways. In this speech, attendees learn how to use those behaviors to improve marketing results.
- Neuroscience: Neuroscience helps us re-frame how we think about consumers. Understanding neuroscience is a marketer’s secret weapon.
Bookstore
Old Dog, New Clicks: Online Industrial and B2B Marketing Know-How for the 21st Century
Bob DeStefano
Two big, related dynamics are changing the field of industrial and B2B marketing: It's an ever-younger crowd with a penchant for the wired and the wireless, and they don't enjoy phone sales calls. They're likely to Google you first, pop over to your website, then check out your social media accounts. How will they find you? What will they find when they do?