It’s all about the experience

Close-up of a young woman getting a shoulder massage from a massage therapistWhy is a hotel always full while the next door one is empty, although they offer the same services at comparable prices? Why does a certain video game convince millions to play it, while others struggle with a lot less buyers, although they are a bit cheaper? Why does an IT product sell, while others don’t, although they provide similar features? Why do you need an appointment made weeks in advance for some beauty salons and you need none for others, as their personnel seems to always be waiting for customers that never come?

It’s easy; people are not buying products and services only. They buy experiences which include those products and services. Everything else going on while they are researching, testing and buying is of ultimate importance, just as how they are treated after getting the product or service and they come back to either buy more or require assistance.

It’s all part of a complex process. The experience is what matters and what makes you stand out. You need to build it, then promote it, then live up to what expectations you’ve created every time. A few quick examples! There’s no software product that’s flawless. If you start using it intensively, you will run across some bugs or some missing feature. That’s not a problem, we’ve all learned to expect it. But if the tech support fails to fix the problem once you’ve asked them to, or fail to properly explain things to you, you will change products.

Think of a spa. You pay for great products, relaxation, but could you relax if let’s say someone giving you a massage would be rude to you? Or at a hair dresser’s, if you look great in the end but the person has been pulling your hair all the time, bringing tears of pain in your eyes, will you ever come back?

It all seems easy to grasp, everyone is preaching it, but most companies seem to be overlooking this important aspect. Even if they offer these complete experiences to their customers, they fail to properly promote them. They get caught up in features and innovation and high tech and they forget to translate the benefits to their customers. They fail to explain how the entire process works and how they will be assisted every step of the way. And I have to wonder why. If the information is out there, if when we go buy something we evaluate the entire experience, why do we fail to translate everything we know in our own businesses?

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This post has 2 comments

  • Finola Prescott

    Good argument for great service.

    I suspect there’s still too many products with great service out there that don’t succeed only because there marketing isn’t great though – even though the citizen media are having an effect in this area.

    Likewise, still too many ok products that succeed because their marketing convinces us that they deliver the experience we seek – probably status.

    That said, the experience concept sounds like a wonderful way to press growing companies to grow their product and marketing.
    .-= Finola Prescott´s last blog ..Pat Charles =-.

  • Alina Popescu

    Finola, I agree with you. New businesses often think just creating the product or service and adding a good price to it is enough. The truth is customers still need to find out about it! And here’s where marketing and PR join the effort. Yes, word of mouth works sometimes, products get discovered, but let’s face it, time and attention are limited :)

    As for great marketing campaign supporting ok products…I think it also works because potential buyers just have no clue about who the competitors are. If they new, no marketing or PR campaign, no matter how smart, would be able to turn something that’s just ok into something that’s great :)

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