You can learn a lot about marketing by listening to broadcast radio or streaming audio. You can learn even more by noticing when you’re not listening. A clear signal and music or talk you like to hear will keep you tuned in to a particular station or channel. But too much static, a connection that keeps dropping, too many ads, or programming not to your taste will overwhelm the signal, and all you’ll hear is noise. That’s when you’ll tune out. Which is pretty much the same way that our prospective clients react to our marketing messages.
Avoiding Marketing Noise
You can transmit marketing messages in a wide variety of ways: email, blogs, ezines, social media, website copy, phone calls, postal mail, print media, etc. But regardless of your medium, a transmission made up of nothing but noise will chase listeners away, and fail to attract new ones.
Here’s what noise sounds like in marketing messages:
- Buy from me, buy from me, that’s all, just buy from me.
- I’m the best and here are all the reasons why.
- Don’t buy from the other folks; they are no good.
- Here are all the fabulous things happening in my world that have no relevance to you.
- I promise I can solve all your problems with absolutely no effort on your part.
- Here are all the exciting features I offer, which you never expressed any interest in.
Your listening behavior on a long car trip can teach you even more about marketing. When you find a station or channel that suits you, you’ll listen to it as long as possible. It’s so much easier to listen to a trusted source than to go hunting for a new one. If the signal starts to get noisy, you’ll put up with it for a while, especially if there’s a song or show that you enjoy. But when the noise gets to be too much, you’ll tune out, no matter how much you like the source.
Adding More Signal
A signal with a bit of noise (i.e., promotion) can hold listeners for quite some time when the signal itself is to their liking. When you give prospects something useful with a string or two attached, or make them an offer that adds value, or throw out suggestions that might be helpful, they’ll often stay tuned as long as there’s something in it for them. Here’s what a not-yet-too-noisy signal might sound like in marketing:
- Here’s some useful, relevant information, tools, or resources you can have if you’ll listen to my promotional messages.
- Here’s a promotional message wrapped in a clever or entertaining package.
- I have a special offer which will save you money or provide extra value if you act now.
- This is how I can help you achieve a goal or solve a problem that I suspect you might have.
- These are some ways that other people have achieved goals or solved problems by working with me.
Should You Delete All Promotion?
To keep prospects listening, your signal must be compelling. Prospects want to hear messages that are directly relevant, immediately useful or entertaining, or provide value in the message itself. Here’s what a compelling, noise-free signal sounds like:
- Here’s some useful, relevant information, tools, or resources that you can have with no strings attached.
- Here is a clever, entertaining message with no promotion included.
- Here is how I can help you achieve a goal or solve a problem that you’ve already told me you have, and asked for my help with.
- Here are some ways that you can achieve your goal or solve your problem, even if we never work together.
Finding the Right Signal-to-Noise Ratio
It might seem, then, that broadcasting a completely promotion-free signal would be the way to go. After all, that’s what will attract the maximum number of listeners and keep them tuned to your station. But that’s not at all the most effective approach.
If you’ve ever tried placing follow-up calls where you don’t ask for the business, or publishing to a blog or social media account where you never tell people how they can work with you, or sending emails without including a call-to-action that prospects can act on, you’ve already discovered that a completely noise-free approach doesn’t do the trick.
No, the real key is not to eliminate promotion entirely, but to increase the ratio of signal to noise in your marketing. Add more direct value, make your communications more relevant, include more entertainment, or provide your prospects with more immediate help.
If you give away all your information, resources, or time without ever asking prospects to buy, you’ll go out of business. But if you broadcast too much promotional noise and not enough useful signal, your prospects will simply stop listening.
This is a great way to look at the marketing message.
It looks a lot like the types of emails I would send in a sales campaign. Mine would look like:
Here’s the valuable information you requested.
Here is some more valuable information.
You used to think this, but here is the truth.
You have a problem with that, but consider this.
Here are the pros, and here are the cons.
Here’s what my client says
Are these too noisy?
Thanks, Rob. Whether are not these are too “noisy” all depends on who the recipient is and what else you might be sending them. If someone has made an inquiry about buying from you, it’s appropriate to send them a follow-up sales sequence free from useful content. But if someone has requested a free bonus or subscribed to an ezine, the sales pitches need to be either combined with — or alternated with — valuable info. Otherwise, there can indeed be too much “noise.”
Perfect timing, perfect message for me. Thank you.
Thanks, Cheryl, I’m glad you found this helpful!
In 2020, with all the content produced over the internet, it’s more than important to step out the crowd and create more signals 😉
Agreed, HJ! As long as your signals are valuable ones from the perspective of the recipient.