BlueCapra

Using Technology To Solve Problems and Create Solutions

  • About Alan Reeves
  • Curiosity & Learning
  • Projects

Who is your ideal customer?

September 24, 2011 by Alan R Leave a Comment

Am I your ideal customer?

Several spoons with beans in them

Photo: Naypong/FreeDigitalPhotos.net

I try to be as frugal as possible.  I do my best to eat simpler, healthier foods.  One of the foods I have chosen to base most of my meals around is legumes.  My favorites are black beans and lentils.  To save money and eliminate any extra sodium or additives, I purchase dried beans and cook them in a pressure cooker.  I normally shop at Wal-mart, but today, my quest for beans took me to Fresh Market in Mobile, AL.

While I was there, I was greeted by more than four workers.  I was told, by the cashier, that she was happy to see me today.  I was asked by the workers in the meat department twice if they could help me (the first time I was just looking).  Besides making me feel valued as a customer, it made me wonder, who is their ideal customer?  (this is not a random thought; I am going through an online class at Free Agent Academy with Jimi Gibson)

I have read that Wal-mart’s ideal customer is a single mom, working full time in a moderate paying job, with two children.  She wants to get in the store, find what she needs, and get home as fast as possible.  Obviously, all Wal-mart’s customers don’t fit that profile, but the marketing and branding of a company is dictated by their ideal customer, as defined by the company.  So, if that is the case, who is Fresh Market’s ideal customer?  Am I their ideal customer?  I may not be, but I do feel valued as a customer and look forward to shopping there again.

Who is your ideal customer (you have one, right)?

How are you using the definition of your ideal customer to improve their experience with your business?

How are you letting the customers know you are different from your competitors?

Filed Under: Marketing Tagged With: beans, customers, ideal, marketing

iPad personalization

September 21, 2011 by Alan R Leave a Comment

Product personalization is becoming more popular.  Companies are taking advantage of this trend by offering this service when you purchase their product.  One notable example is Apple.

You can now get your iPad laser engraved for free when you order your iPad or iPad 2 from Apple (2 lines with approximately 25 characters per line).  This creates a great personalized gift idea for that special someone, customer, employee, or for yourself.  While this is a great idea and option, what happens when you upgrade your iPad to an iPad 2?  Will anyone buy the iPad if it is laser etched with “Happy 14th Birthday from  Grandma” or something similar?

Well, there are so many choices.  One possibility is getting your iPad laser etched by someone other than Apple.  If you want your iPad personalized and want more than just text, there are a number of companies that do that would be happy to work with you on a design and etch it for you.  An example of those companies would be HiTech Tattoos in New York, NY and In A Flash Laser in Virginia (there are many others, just Google Laser etched iPads).

Another possibility would be to get a cover for your iPad and get the cover laser etched.  In A Flash Laser offers the option to personalize a Dodo case for your iPad (For those who are unfamiliar with Dodo cases, there is an amazing entrepreneurial story behind the business that you can read about here on the blog of Tim Ferriss).  There are wood skins for the back of your iPad as well as complete wood and leather cases.

The bottom line is that there are a wide variety of choices for you to express your personality.  Whether you choose to have your iPad personalized through Apple, have a design and/or text added from a laser design and etching company, or decide to go with a cover, the items in your life tell the world about your personality.  What would you like to tell the world?

Filed Under: Laser etching Tagged With: HiTech, In A Flash Laser, iPad, laser etching, tattoos, wood

Laser Etching and Fashion Week

September 17, 2011 by Alan R Leave a Comment

Fashion week is the ultimate springboard for aspiring designers and a showcase for established brands.  They are held in cities all over the world to let the fashion industry know what is “in” or “out” for the coming season.  Invitations are sent out to buyers and celebrities from a wide variety of companies, all vying for attention.  With a deluge of invitations, it is often the most unique that gets remembered.  This year, according to the Wall Street Journal, that prize goes to Frye.

Fashion Week 2011 invitation from Frye Co.In an effort to stand out, Frye had their invitations laser etched.  The invitations were made from 3/8 inch thick maple-wood blocks in Pennsylvania and enclosed in a cotton sack with a hand stitched label.  According to an article from the Wall Street Journal,  Jamie Laycock, the creative director of Frye, said “we really wanted something that would catch people’s attention and represent the company’s core equities of being handcrafted.”

These invitations were an important part of the marketing plan that Frye put in place to build buzz around the opening of their new store.  The attention to detail, from the custom laser etching, to the cotton sack and hand stitched label, shows a growing trend in companies to design unique products and marketing material.  Companies are realizing that items which are not unique and new are failing to gain consumer attention.

In business, gaining consumer attention is a major focus in many areas, including sales.  It is often said that it takes seven exposures to a product or service before a consumer makes a purchase.  Most customers are deluged with products and information that often look the same so when they are presented with something new and unique, they take notice.  If the item or information is interesting enough to keep their attention, that attention will often lead to a sale.

How can laser etching help your business?  Do you need a custom designed laser etched postcard to send to your VIP customers?  Do you need unique store fixtures and signs to show customers that your business is relevant and worthy of attention?  How would your potential customers react if your business card was embossed (with a custom laser engraved embossing die), had laser cut areas or custom cut borders, or a stamp from a custom made laser etched ink stamp?  What if your business card around if it was unique, different, and attention grabbing?  Would that business card help keep your business in a top-of-mind position to a customer?

Remember, it often takes seven exposures to a product or service before a consumer makes a purchase.  If your company pops into the customers mind when they need something, you are one step closer to making a sale.  So, how can laser etching help your business?

 

Filed Under: Laser etching, Marketing Tagged With: attention, frye, invitation, laser, sales, wall street journal

Tattoo Design – The Deathly Hallows

September 14, 2011 by Alan R Leave a Comment

I enjoy good symbols, logos, and designs.  One particular interesting design is the Deathly Hallows from Harry Potter.  Here are some great tattoos of that design from around the web:

IMPORTANT:  Do you have a minute to answer 3 quick questions about laser engraving and tattoos?  If so, click here to be taken to the survey and thanks for your time

Do you have a minute to answer 3 quick questions about laser engraving and tattoos?  If so, click here to be taken to the survey and thanks for your time

Filed Under: General Tagged With: Deathly Hallows, Harry Potter, tattoo

Saturday morning baking

September 10, 2011 by Alan R Leave a Comment

I enjoy bread.  I enjoy eating it, baking it, smelling it.  My wife decided this weekend would be a good time for me to bake some bread so of course, I just had to.

Finding a recipe

Fresh loaf of wheat breadThere are bread recipes everywhere on the internet.  Just go to Google to see.  Having a lot of choice is good, but the sheer number is often overwhelming.  Since I don’t bake all the time, it is hard to choose the right one.  This time I was looking for wheat bread and found Tammy’s Recipes and decided to give it a try.

The result

Outstanding bread.  I am still a novice bread maker but this turned out great.  It had a soft crust, great texture, and the size was just right…..well, maybe a little small but then again, all good bread recipes are too small….  Next loaf, I will take a picture of it once it is cut, but this one did not last long enough.

Filed Under: General Tagged With: baking, bread

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 45
  • 46
  • 47
  • 48
  • 49
  • Next Page »

Find what you are looking for

Books I've Read

48 Days to the Work You Love
Being Wrong: Adventures in the Margin of Error
How Doctors Think
The Art of Possibility: Transforming Professional and Personal Life
Dirty Rotten Strategies: How We Trick Ourselves and Others into Solving the Wrong Problems Precisely
Brainstorm: Harnessing the Power of Productive Obsessions
The Creative Habit: Learn It and Use It for Life
A Book of Five Rings: The Classic Guide to Strategy
Wild at Heart: Discovering the Secret of a Man's Soul
Reality Check: The Irreverent Guide to Outsmarting, Outmanaging, and Outmarketing Your Competition
Startup Guide to Guerrilla Marketing: A Simple Battle Plan For Boosting Profits
Vagabonding: An Uncommon Guide to the Art of Long-Term World Travel
Seeking Wisdom: From Darwin To Munger
Multiple Streams of Internet Income: How Ordinary People Make Extraordinary Money Online
Thomas Paine: Enlightenment, Revolution, and the Birth of Modern Nations
The War of Art: Break Through the Blocks & Win Your Inner Creative Battles
The 4-Hour Workweek: Escape 9-5, Live Anywhere, and Join the New Rich
Where Good Ideas Come From: The Natural History of Innovation
Moonwalking with Einstein: The Art and Science of Remembering Everything
Build Your Own Wicked Wordpress Themes


Alan Reeves's favorite books »

Copyright © 2021  ·  BlueCapra.com  ·  Built on the Genesis Framework and Centric child theme   ·  Affiliate Disclosure

Copyright © 2021 · Centric Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in