Tuesday, 15 December 2009

Why door to door marketing is as bad as all the others ...

So a little rant today... :-)

I am wondering whether the x% of people companies reach through door to door marketing is worth the damage their image can suffer due to pushy and frankly crap sales people, and it's obvious opportunism. Now I assume that the recent increase of this I have experienced is due to measures to reduce that other incredibly annoying tactic - cold call telesales (in 2007, 14.8 Million numbers were registered exempt from cold calls). And, I guess one of the main reasons is that a company can be sure that they are reaching their target demographic directly, which much increase the percentage of success versus the effort they have to expend. 

In the last couple of months I have been door stepped by a couple of people from N-Power and EDF, both selling me identical services that apparently "... are only available today, on this street!" (their emphasis). Services identical to my current British Gas offer too, by the way. 

What really made me think about this though, was a visit from an Aviva salesman. Who's pitch for health insurance, was based around how bad the NHS is. Now this is an interesting departure. Never mind that I have absolutely no interest in talking about paying for my health on a cold Tuesday afternoon on my own doorstep, but to start your story by disparaging a competitor (which is what the NHS is) feels like a throwback to the pre-internet era. It feels incredibaly naive when you consider how available data and stories are today–and how much it could expose Aviva (or any other insurance provider) to extra scrutiny. 

Their attack on the failings of the NHS was based on data - as along with our schools, it is now one of the most analysed institutions around. It seems an unfair fight when Aviva are not currently subject to the same scrutiny, and are not judged by the same metrics. It also of course, opens a political debate - and I'm not too sure that the barely 20 year old lad who was selling this policy would have been ready for a heated public/private debate, had he stumbled across someone up for that fight.

Anyway - I walked away with the impression of a company attempting to profit on the (necessarily public) failings of one of our public services, and asking me to disengage from my interest in the success of that service to invest in my own private wellbeing, and ultimately, make their shareholders some more money. That does not seem a good deal to me, and it's not a good reflection on them either...

harumph!

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Friday, 23 October 2009

Reading Spa

Here is a thought: that you can't be a good shopper if you don't know what you are looking for. But what happens when you are looking to be inspired or entertained? How do you shop for ideas?

Seems to be that this bookshop has the right idea by overlaying the therapist's couch onto the proposition of book buying - and ending up with an intimate, guided customer experience.

And isn't the best bit of reading buying the book? The expectation of a beautiful cover, the smell of new pages, the tease of blurb… all that anticipation for a thrilling story - or maybe that is just me. Maybe this is a side effect of having worked in Publishing.

At Mr B's Emporium of Reading Delights in Bath (what a name!), you pay £55 and in return you have 45min chat with an expert bookseller over tea and cakes who will help diagnose your needs - likes and dislikes, info on special gems and new releases - and make recommendations. You will walk out with £40 worth of books that you have chosen during the session.

Even better, you can then sojourn to the Reading Booth to get right into the act of reading, along with a few extra treats to extend the experience into your home - a mug and hot chocolate, music, tickets to a literary event. It could be the beginning of a beautiful new relationship with paperbacks.

Seems that this level of personal attention is hard to replicate in the digital world and that despite the empowerment of being able to make our own choices in a world of proliferated content - a cup of tea and a chat is still a valid solution to finding the best content for our needs.

Friday, 11 September 2009

Distributed Technology

So not so much an emerging trend, but a long delivered promise re-localisation is apparently underway... I heard a recent story on the radio that spoke about the growing eco-power technology industry. What caught my attention was a segment that covered the principle of rewarding community contribution. In somewhere in a small German village is a scheme that does two things. 1 - pays people when they give power back to the national grid (old news) and 2 - pays for providing the local community the heat that is a by product of the energy creation. 

This technology is now at the scale where we could all become mini-power stations - but it is also smart enough to utilise the by-products as well. An finally, the government is smart enough to incentivise people to make the effort to establish these systems. Nice.

This concept of distributed technology is also showing up in the open source hardware platform - Arduino (www.arduino.cc) - which is essentially an enabler that rewards dedication and passion to learning the platform with greater results in people's experiments. The potential of the technology+passion+community+competition equation is probably huge...

Now of course there is a counterpoint to this idea of distribution, as the Swiss government looks to centralise the country's identity - http://www.brandchannel.com/start1.asp?fa_id=492 - recognising the power of brand, their response is homogenisation and consolidation. 

Although there is only a loose link between these ideas, they do throw up an interesting challenge. What is balance between the individual and the wider community in solving problems? How much is carrot (paying for power put back into the national grid), how much is stick (are Switzerland's going to mobilise a brand police?) and how much is enterprise and entrepreneurship (let's see what the community generates with Arduino that isn't just 'toys')?

RT

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