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with white napkins and white plates, a light brown colored steak, salad, rice and some rotisserie chicken. The billboard also features a well-known chef, with the price tag at the bottom of the ad, $300. Would the billboard make you see the serving spoons in a different way? Spending money on the billboard would only relay the amount of faith the manufacturer has on the serving spoons on offer. Naturally, as a consumer you would even wonder why the serving spoons deserve a billboard ad. You would however gain instant respect for the product because of the perception that has been created by the investment. Compare this to how the e-shot made you feel. I bet you thought it was spam, wondered why anybody would send you an e-shot about $300 serving spoons in the first place, and you probably unsubscribe and chose the option ‘I didn’t sign up for this email.’ Any marketing professional would not spend money on a product or service they do not believe in. If your marketing channel commands respect, a customer would immediately give it notice and connect your product with their personal need to feel respected. The flip side would be why spend so much money on a good product that has the potential to sell itself once it gains some traction from cheap marketing - online? The answer is clear. For a good product to gain trust among consumers, it has to be marketed in a way that customers expect a good product to be sold. A local example fits this theory well. We have all interacted with door-to- door or direct sales force agents who sell all kinds of household items. I recently met a lady who was selling a flask for $20. She gave me more than ten reasons why I needed to buy the flask from her. I listened to her make her pitch and the one point she stressed is that the flask was made in France and was supposedly a very expensive flask. I passed on the opportunity to be among the first people to get this very ‘expensive’ flask at a bargain price. A few days later, I was in the mall and happened to be shopping for some kitchen towels. I found the same flask at the kitchen store retailing at $65. I asked the sales lady about the flask and she gave me the same pitch about the flask. 08 MAL28/19 ISSUE Any marketing pro- fessional would not spend money on a product or service they do not believe in. If your marketing channel commands respect, a customer would immediate- ly give it notice and connect your prod- uct with their per- sonal need to feel re- spected. She also told me that the flask was new in the market and was available at select stores or among select sales agents at $20. Needless to say, I should have bought the flask from the door-to-door sales agent. I was also left wondering why such an expensive flask should be sold in that way. It is next to impossible to express credibility of the value promise unless the extent to which you promote the promise is equal to the significance of the product or service. Put in another way, for a marketing tactic to be convincing, it must contain a demonstration and a level of trust that is in line with the value of the product and the expectation of the recipient. Truth is, if I had found the flask at the mall for $20, I would have purchased it or at least considered the thought to purchase it. Marketing does not need to happen on expensive TV ads or large LED billboards that are being driven around the city to give your product the gist it deserves. It is much less about the cost of the medium but more about how you understand your customer and the mediums they trust. Marketing is a question of trust, not expense. Identification of information signals that the customer considers credible will help to close in on a sale much faster whether on digital or traditional media. Many marketing professionals are making the mistake of using digital for products that only require digital support to close a sale or direct a customer to a point of purchase. Companies like Rolex and luxury car brands still advertise in newspapers and magazine while their social media pages are thriving with followers and engagement. People would be queuing outside Apple shops hours before a phone is launched into the market to purchase the latest iPhones because it helps them display wealth and attract respect. Selling knives, tissue and lighting fixtures can also be done the same way. It simply is how you connect with the customers need to want to feel associated with a ‘luxury’ brand. At times this display of wealth and need to connect with the customer may not be the ideal approach. Customers may instead end up overwhelmed by a company’s service or product. This also ties back to the customer’s need to feel respected. Using the example of a restaurant, the issue of perception plays a significant role when less is on offer. Some restaurants are well known for their generous portions. People would often frequent these restaurants as a group, not when alone. Imagine getting into a restaurant, looking through the menu and settling for the daily specialty. The waiter happily skips into the kitchen and a few minutes later drops a full roasted chicken on the table. He quickly turns back and disappears into the corridor again before emerging with a large serving of roast potatoes and a hot salad before saying Bon appetite with a huge smile on his face. That happened to me once. I started looking around to check whether I was still alone on the table. I asked the waiter why the portions had to be so big and he explained to me that the large portion is meant to entice the customer to come back as they will have an extra portion to take home. The idea sounded very well thought through but didn’t look so great with all the food staring back at me on the table. I had to ask the waiter to take the food back to the kitchen and pack half of it. The other half was still too much for me to take down in a single sitting. It became clear to me that the portion of a meal in a restaurant and the price can be inversely proportional. Restaurants and hotels may feel like they are expected to overwhelm their customers with food as a retention strategy. Customers will definitely take note and praise restaurants that serve a lot of food. This thinking is erroneous as not all customers are looking for a mountain of serving when trying to find a place to eat. The truth is most restaurants offer a lot of food just for the sake of it. Offering large portions has however become a business strategy that companies are now embracing in trying to define value for the customer and position ‘wealth’. Telcos are offering unlimited data plans for 24 hours that a customer would ideally not exhaust, online TV companies are offering hundreds of channels to customers who do not have time to watch all the content on offer. Customers have become accustomed to expecting more for the same cost or more for a lower cost. It is however not about offering more but offering more value. Customers would spend more if they can get more value. Value does not have to be more products per se, it can be simply how it fits with a need to display wealth and command respect. Apple for example doesn’t get any cheaper by the year but Apple enthusiasts are unrelenting in keeping up with the latest release. Different audiences have a different perception of what value means to them. Tapping into the influences that drive value to a customer will help businesses save money while also having met their customers’ expectations. Reframing the buying decision around what the customer considers to be of value to them will help businesses save time and energy. The restaurant for example could have served a reasonable portion of tasty chicken rather than a whole rotisserie that instantly caused worry. As a marketer, it is fundamental to know when to do more and when to do less. The key decision is knowing what perception a customer attaches to your product and how this affects them emotionally. Being passionate and enthusiastic about your product may make you offer more to wade off competition as a subconscious decision to improve business without realizing that it will overwhelm the customer. A simple rule may apply when it comes to knowing what to do. It may help to do more when it’s a question of the perception of your product, and it may make sense to do less when it’s a question of the perception of your customer. Marketing does not have to be expensive to be effective, it has to be effective to be worth it. Diana Obath is a seasoned Public Relations and Communications Specialist. You can commune with her on this or related issues via mail on: [email protected].