http://dennyhatch.blogspot.com/2020/07/101-make-it-easy-to-order.html
Posted by Denny Hatch
Above Are Folks Suffering from No Orders
We love Broadway
theater—especially musicals. When Hamilton opened, it was sold out for
months. Eventually it was not sold out, because ticket prices were raised to $849.
If Peggy and I were to see Hamilton live, the ticket cost—plus round-trip Amtrak from Philly to New York, dinner at Sardi’s and a hotel room—would take the cost up to $2000+. As pensioners, we opted out.
If Peggy and I were to see Hamilton live, the ticket cost—plus round-trip Amtrak from Philly to New York, dinner at Sardi’s and a hotel room—would take the cost up to $2000+. As pensioners, we opted out.
Hamilton Comes to the Home Screen
When
Coronavirus-19 took over the planet, Broadway shut down. The entire cast of Hamilton was thrown outta work. Lin-Manuel Miranda — who wrote, composed and
starred in Hamilton—cut a deal with
Disney to market the film and TV rights. On two consecutive nights performances
had been filmed in the Richard Rogers Theater, à la the Metropolitan Opera “Met
Live in HD.”
Our
Set-up at Home
When we
downsized from a 5-story row house to a two-bedroom rental apartment, we
splurged and bought a flat-screen LG smart TV and signed up for Xfininty/Comcast
service with its array of 200+ channels, thousands of movies plus thousands
more videos on YouTube.
In addition, we
acquired one of the first voice-activated remotes. Press the “talk” button, ask for a show, movie
or specific channel, and up it pops. If scheduled in the future, press the red
“Record” button and it’s captured for our viewing pleasure whenever we care to
see it.
Most of the
stuff is free as part of the Comcast subscription. Sometimes movies and
specials cost extra (e.g. rent for $3.99). We click okay and the charge shows
up on our next bill. Easy peasy.
Buying
Additional Services
When we ask to
see programs not in the Xfinity/Comcast repertoire, they pop up onscreen. If a
subscription to a new distributor is required, the price and terms are posted. Peggy goes into the computer, does her quick magic and we’re in. The cost appears in our next Xfinity bill.
Not So
with Hamilton
With lotsa hype,
the debut of Hamilton was announced for July 3rd. I clicked on it
and we were allowed to see the trailer. But in order to see the actual show, we
had to sign up for Disney+.
The deal killer: we bought and paid
for a subscription to Disney+ and were told we could see Hamilton streaming on our computer (or laptop or iPhone).
Hamilton on my dinky computer? WTF?
We Googled
Hamilton Xfinity-Disney and here’s what came up:
To start watching
Hamilton, you can subscribe to Disney+ today for $6.99 a month or $69.99 per
year. Or you can get the service as a part of a special value bundle with ESPN+
and Hulu for $12.99 a month in total. Disney+ is available to watch through the
following
devices:
• Roku
streaming devices
• TVs with
built-in Roku
• Apple TV
iPhones, iPads, and iPod touch models
• Android
phones
• Android TV
devices
• Google
Chromecast
• Xbox One
•
PlayStation 4
• Sony TVs
with built-in Android
• See our
list of the best streaming devices
Peggy—who is very technically
savvy—spent 1-1/2 hours going all over the Internet trying to discover how to
get Hamilton onto our LG flat-screen
TV. No dice.
Our guess is Disney and Xfinity/Comcast are at war. Normally I would dive into the Internet and find what's going and report it. But it doesn't matter. I'm not going to get inside a corporate pissing match and choose sides. We want to see Hamilton.
Our guess is Disney and Xfinity/Comcast are at war. Normally I would dive into the Internet and find what's going and report it. But it doesn't matter. I'm not going to get inside a corporate pissing match and choose sides. We want to see Hamilton.
Finally Peggy’s sister told us we
could buy something called Fire TV Stick for $49.99 from Amazon and could get Hamilton up on our LG TV.
The Fire TV Stick arrived. We’re not
quite sure what to do with it. Normally we’d put in a call to Jay Hummel, our computer
whiz to come over and set us up. Alas, he is on Coronavirus-19 lockdown—as are we.
I am writing this on Bastille Day,
July 14, 2020. Hamilton is still a gleam in our eye. Meanwhile, we’re out $57.98.
Disney has our money. Amazon's Fire TV Stick has our money. We have no idea how to see Hamilton. Xfinity/Comcast hornswoggled us.
NEVER EVER do this to your prospects and customers!
Disney has our money. Amazon's Fire TV Stick has our money. We have no idea how to see Hamilton. Xfinity/Comcast hornswoggled us.
NEVER EVER do this to your prospects and customers!
Denny’s
19-Point Checklist for
A
Flawless Ordering Process
1. “Always make it easy to order.” —Elsworth S. Howell, CEO Grolier Enterprises
2. The order mechanism stands between you and the sale (or donation).
3. Always ask for an order, donation or a response of some kind.
Otherwise the recipient will have no reason to reply. If you receive no
replies, you’ll never know whether the message or mailing ever went out or if
the ad appeared in print.
Malcolm
Decker on the Order Form
4. “The
order form should be so simple an idiot can understand it.”
5. “Whether digital or print, give the order mechanism
more time and effort per square inch than any other element of the promotion.
It’s time well spent. It’s the net that secures the trout, so it can’t have any
holes in it.”
6. Create the order form in
conjunction with the people who do your online order processing, telephone sales, white mail and print response as
well as your customer service team.
7. Give them the final vote. It
must be simple, clear, direct and—if you can possibly imagine it—foolproof. Use
the combined talents of your most clever people to write it, but make sure even
a fool can understand it.
8. The order form should also
sell.
9. But basically it has a
particular job to do: It should reprise the essence of the entire sales effort
in the reader’s voice. That is, the writer (salesperson) has had his say, and
now the prospect (customer) responds in the first person. (“Yes, send me . . .
I understand that I will receive. . . “)
9. The order form should contain
absolutely nothing new. It should stand on its own feet and crystallize
everything that’s gone before it. Its purpose is to speed the action and close
the deal.
10. Beware of lawyers and bean counters mucking up your offer
and order form with a barrage of disclaimers and footnotes in gray sans serif
mouse-type causing your customers to say, “The hell with it!”
11. When asking for credit card information never use a reply postcard.
Always include a BRE (pre-paid Business Reply Envelope). Credit card
information on the back of a postcard can be stolen and sold all over the world
within minutes.
12. Make it easy to respond and order by mail, by phone, by click-thru
online or by fax—whichever is most convenient for the customer.
13.
Every step of the ordering process must be checked out. For example, dial the
800 phone number in your print and online ads to make sure it’s correct everywhere it appears.
14. People hate
waiting for a phone to be answered and/or an automated voice saying, “Your call
is important to us. All our representatives are busy with other customers.
Please stay on the line... blah, blah, blah." Make sure your phones are answered by a live,
trained representative no later than the second ring.
15. If you are running a TV commercial, expect a huge spike in orders at that moment in time. Sign up a back-up inbound telemarketing company to handle the overflow. Always alert all telemarketers to the precise date and time of your schedule so telephone sales reps are standing by to handle the overflow.
15. If you are running a TV commercial, expect a huge spike in orders at that moment in time. Sign up a back-up inbound telemarketing company to handle the overflow. Always alert all telemarketers to the precise date and time of your schedule so telephone sales reps are standing by to handle the overflow.
16. All your telephone
sales reps (TSRs) must be knowledgeable about your product or service and be
able to answer all questions. It is imperative to provide customer service
(or order intake) personnel with copies of sales material (brochures, print
ads, infomercial, etc.), so they know what specific offer/product the caller is
talking about—as well as immediate access to actual product samples — so they can
answer questions knowledgably.
17.
The people who represent you on the phone and online can enhance—or
destroy—your reputation. Have “secret shoppers” call your 800-number and or
chat lines to test the training of your reps regarding patience, knowledge and
tact.
18. When you feature a web address for a reply, do not use your general home page. Instead, set up a special satellite landing page that directly relates to the specific offer.
18. When you feature a web address for a reply, do not use your general home page. Instead, set up a special satellite landing page that directly relates to the specific offer.
19. If you supply the general home page, it forces the prospect to
rattle around searching for the specific offer and order mechanism. At which
point you’ve probably lost the order.
Takeaway to Consider
• Let me share with
you a story. By the time he was 18, Curt Strohacker had owned 18 automobiles.
In 1978 he invested $500 to form The Eastwood Company, a mail order catalog offering more than 2,000
tools, paints and parts for amateur and professional restorers of beloved antique
cars—hundreds of models going back 50 years and more.
In the early years, Strohacker would get
30 orders a day. A decade later he was generating 1000+ orders a day. His
inbound telemarketers were wildly overworked. What’s more, his telephone reps
became de facto experts and consultants giving advice on every aspect of car
restoration and suggesting precisely what was needed. When inbound orders
spiked — say as the result of a TV commercial — bells rang throughout the
building and knowledgeable executives, warehouse workers and buyers beetled
down to the telephones and became TSRs. He had to do something, or customers and prospects would desert like
rats and go elsewhere!
The story of Curt Strohacker creating a powerful
in-house technically oriented telephone sales and fulfillment operation is
fascinating. You’re
invited to check it out.
###
Word Count: #1594
NOTE FROM DENNY HATCH: Long-time subscriber Judy Colbert gave me the okay to share her email in this Comment Section —DH
ReplyDeleteDenny:
One item you didn't mention is you can sign up for Disney+ for a trial (a week or a month, I forget which). That still doesn't make it to the TV screen, but it does save the $6.99 or eliminate the annual fee.
Judy
Judy Colbert, ASJA, SPJ
Judy,
DeleteMany thanks for taking the time to write and your heads-up on the Disney+ offer. I welcome any and all comments that help clarify things that I may have missed. Thank you again. And do keep in touch!
Denny,
DeleteSigned up on my TV. Account charged. They had my credit card so it was pretty easy. Hamilton along with all the Disney content was made immediately available on my big screen. If it wasn't a pandemic I would invite you and Peggy over to watch.
Thank you for taking the time to write.
DeleteAlas, we signed up for Disney. Paid for a subscription to Disney. Have a receipt. Whereupon Peggy spent 1-1/2 hours trying to figure out how to get Hamilton on our TV. And Peggy is smart as hell.
No dice.
Damned depressing.
Hey Denny,
ReplyDeleteSince I am in Canada, it is always multiple times more complicated to opt into US-based subscriptions for our TV or computer, e.g. YouTube TV. However I found that Amazon's Fire TV Stick was fairly simple by plugging into one of the TV's HDMI slots and then let the TV do its thing. When it's set up, just make sure your TV is set to the proper HDMI slot. Hope that helps. Happy viewing!
Thanks so much for taking the time to write. Coming out 50+ years of direct mail marketing, etched in my DNA is the concept of telling the prospect/customer exactly what to do via simple, foolproof instructions.
DeleteThe smarty-pants, un-mentored little techies at Disney/Xfinity/Comcast are talking gibberish. IMHO.
Thank you again. And do keep in touch!
Good evening, Denny!
ReplyDeleteI always told my employees *and my clients*, "The easier we make it for the customer to do what we want them to do, the more likely it is that the customer will do what we want them to do." It is astonishing how many hoops marketers make customers jump through, then wonder why they can't make sales. Or worse, decide that customers are too stupid to place an order properly. If communication fails, it is ALWAYS the fault of the sender, NEVER the fault of the receiver.
Best regards!
Tim Orr
Tim,
DeleteGreat addition to the discussion. Thank you!
This is why I believe that before a promotion goes out—as a space ad with coupon, direct mail effort with order card, or digital offer with click-thru response, IT IS IMPERATIVE to hand the offer over to 3 or 5 STRANGERS (friends, family, colleagues in other non-competing organization) to study the effort, place and order and report back what happened. Hopefully, it will have been thought through so no report would be necessary beyond “Everything AOK.” Also, that “secret shopper” should report back on all the follow-up material, upsells, and delivery. This should not be gratuitous. If you don’t want to pay a fee, then at least provide generous gift certificates.
Thank you again! Always great to hear from you!
Do keep in touch.
And be well.
NOTE: Ira Hoffman said okay to my sharing his splendid email in this Comment section. —DH
ReplyDeleteOnce again, a tremendous article. I'm amazed at how many e-commerce websites make it difficult for customers to order products. After the order is complete the login and payment rituals begin. No, I don't have an account, and don't want one. If there is something wrong with my name, address, etc. tell me that, just don't keep me in the same page. I could go on. I've gotten so frustrated at times I exit, find the product somewhere else. Maybe ask you readers to vote for the worst e-commerce website. Your humble reader, Ira (94 words)
NOTE: Will Ezell gave me the okay to run his email to me. —DH
ReplyDeleteOrder forms: Many years ago (pre-internet) I hired Rene Gnam to review and make recommendations on our mail-order order form. Everything he recommended we did. It increased our orders around 10%. And what I mean from that is this: For every 1,000 mail pieces we sent out, we’d receive X number of orders. His changes increased the number of orders. But that’s not all. It also increased our average transaction value / order. Double win. I’ve tried to always focus on order forms, copy, simplicity, as few clicks as possible, etc. Your checklists are beyond valuable – they’re like the MasterCard commercials: Priceless.