Tag Archives: marketing strategy

Steve Miller on making your business Uncopyable – MAF185

On the show this week, I talk to author and speaker Steve Miller about his book Uncopyable.

We talk about how to make your business stand out. Being better is not a competitive advantage. You must be different.

Welcome to episode 185 of the Marketing and Finance Podcast.

Steve Miller on making your business Uncopyable - MAF185

What you’ll hear about in this episode

  • Why trying to be better than the competition doesn’t work
  • Why bench-marking helps businesses to stand out – but you must do it right
  • The 4th element of competitive advantage
  • How to create that 4th element to stand out
  • How to think outside the box and to define your box
  • What Steve would like people to take from his book

Who is Steve Miller?

Steve’s father was the co-inventor of the 8-track tape player and he learned a lot about business from his father and his business partners.

His early ambition was to be a PGA golfer and he played in a couple of tours. A friend then got him work in Hollywood doing stunts. He moved into sales and then marketing, which he found he had a talent for. He helped the largest remote-controlled toy manufacturer in Japan to expand. At a trade show, he was approached by Apple to grow their sales.

He is now an independent consultant, author and speaker.

Summary of our chat

Steve says competition doesn’t breed innovation, it breeds conformity. When companies are looking for ways to stand out, they don’t try to be different, just be better. That means they only try to improve on the competition’s offerings. Better is not a long-term strategy, because if something can be copied, it will be.

Benchmarking is to observe correct behaviour and emulate within your own context. Use the competition to assess your minimal viable product. Then, come up with new ideas to make you different and unique rather than just better. Look at companies in other industries for inspiration and relate that back to your business.

Technology has improved the quality of products, making them commodities and the same as everyone else’s. Everyone offers good customer service, so buyers are making decisions on price. The fourth element is what we can do that’s out of the typical box. You don’t want loyal customers, you want them to be attached.

In his book ‘Uncopyable’, Steve sets out three steps to stand out:

  1. Your branding is your promise to the marketplace which you then deliver.
  2. The overall experience your customers get from you, such as giving them exclusive extras.
  3. Innovation and stealing genius – coming up with ideas inspired by other industries.

People don’t make changes until they’re dissatisfied. Customers need to know why they should choose to work with you. Steve gets his clients to compare their offering to the competition. They realise they’re not that different and feel dissatisfied. Then they want to change and need Steve’s help to stand out.

Steve says businesses need to look at marketing from the correct perspective. They’re probably doing marketing backwards, and focussing on tactics and communications first. Instead, think about who your target market is. Work out how to attract them, their pain points and what they want. Decide on your message and then choose the right tool.

A Marketing Campaign or Product Which Grabbed Attention

Steve has been impressed by one of his clients, who developed software for the portable storage unit industry. The software helps small businesses track their inventory, finances and bookkeeping. The client was competing with much bigger companies, so Steve worked with them to position themselves as specialists in portable storage. They had capacity for only a few customers and a high price point. A countdown on their website showed how many spaces they had available for customers with a cut-off point. Creating scarcity allowed them to offer annual subscriptions rather than one-off payments, and their sales increased 1800% in 12 months.

Recommended business book

Steve says everyone in business should be a reader, and has a personal goal to read a book a week. Two books he’s recently enjoyed are: The Founders Mentality, by Chris Zook and James Allen, which he says gets into how owners look at their business and how they should approach it.

The other book is Monster Loyalty by Jackie Huba. It’s about how Lady Gaga turns her followers into fanatics known as Little Monsters. She’s created a huge fan club she’s very attached to, and they are attached to her.

This is Steve’s book – Uncopyable

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Links and contact details

Special Offer

Steve has put together a special white paper on three steps to speed branding your company specially for listeners of the Marketing and Finance Podcast. Visit the special webpage here.

If you enjoyed – Steve Miller on making your business Uncopyable – please leave a comment or a review on iTunes.

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Product marketing: Selling the benefits not the features – MAF184

Remember that age old sales advice that you should sell the sizzle and not the sausage?

Some marketing still focuses on features which makes the message about the product and not about the customer. Let’s have a look at getting back to the sizzle.

Welcome to episode 184 of the Marketing and Finance Podcast.

 

Product marketing: Selling the benefits not the features – MAF184

What you’ll hear about in this episode

  • Selling benefits rather than features
  • Framing the benefit in the context of the customer problems you are solving
  • Lessons from Fast Moving Consumer Goods (FMCG)
  • Using the “problem agitate solution” marketing communications formula
  • Keeping messages simple and free from bloat and jargon

If you enjoyed – Product marketing: Selling the benefits not the features – please leave a comment or a review on iTunes.

And if you know anyone who would enjoy the show – please share it with them. You can use the buttons below to share on social media.

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Get more from your conference speaker: 5 ways I help conference organisers promote their events

Ask me to speak at your event and I’m all in to give you and your guests a motivating and memorable experience.

You can expect:

  • Live at your IN-PERSON event, live or pre-recorded (or both) for your VIRTUAL event
  • No death by bloody PowerPoint (in fact hardly any slides at all)
  • Real personal stories
  • Real strategies, from real business, that produce real results
  • No pitch speeches. Just value for your guests
  • Easy to work with. I’m here to help you make your event a success
  • Audience interaction and participation
  • Infectious Enthusiasm
  • Energy

But if you book me I’ll do more than deliver a speech. I don’t just turn up 15 minutes before the gig, expect a posh green room with champagne and perks, and then dash off to the airport as soon as I exit the stage.

Conference organisers love it when I get involved in promoting their events.

Here’s what you can expect when you hire me to work with you.

  • The talk
  • Me at your event all day
  • Teaser video
  • Social media promotion
  • Live video

Get more from your conference speaker. 5 ways I help you promote your event on top of the talk.

The Talk

Although I offer more than just a speech for your event, the talk is the main reason you want to work with me. Keeping marketing simple. Fighting complexity in marketing. Putting together a content marketing strategy. These are the topics I can inspire and motivate your audience with.

But I’ll work with you to fit my talk to your audience. Let’s have a video call well in advance to make sure the talk hits all the spots want it to.

I’m your’s for the day

I’d love to spend time getting to know your guests, answering their questions, and simply hanging out.

You don’t need to hide me in a green room behind the scenes and pamper me with rose petals and champagne (I’m told some speakers expect this). I don’t have an ego you need to massage. I’m not the kind of speaker that arrives with only 15 minutes to spare, delivers his talk, and then does a quick runner for the airport.

You book me and you’ve got me all day.

Want me to have a one to one with selected guests? Perhaps run a workshop? Maybe chat to your sponsors and to the press? I’m happy to do audio or video interviews if it helps you build your business.

Get more from your conference speaker. 5 ways I help you promote your event on top of the talk.

Teaser video

Once we’ve agreed on the topic of my talk, I’ll put together a teaser video for you. Lasting 1-2 minutes and in the style of my “RogVLOG” and “Marketing Made Simple” videos on YouTube, I’ll shoot it specifically for your event. You can use the teaser video on your website. On social media. On your YouTube channel. And I’ll share it on social media as well.

Social media promotion

In the run-up to your event, I’ll help your promotional activities on social media. Tell me the event hashtag and I’ll engage with your guests in advance. Maybe get to know some of them a little. It’s a great ice breaker. Guests love being able to see and chat to speakers in advance.

During the event itself, I’ll be using social media, mainly Twitter and Instagram, to tell people about my experience at the conference. Sharing photos, videos and quotes – all using the event hashtag of course.

Live video

The day before your event, or when I arrive in your city, I’ll broadcast live on Twitter, Instagram or Facebook to further promote the conference and engage with the guests. If there’s time, we can talk about putting on a live broadcast during the event as well.

Here’s an example from Content Experience in Serbia, June 2018.

Now it’s your turn:

If you’re looking for more than just a speech for your event I’d love to talk to you.

Check out my main speaker page (including bio, photos and testimonials), here.