Communicating a Service Offering in Cairns

January 31, 2010 by Mark Currey · Leave a Comment
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Because services are not touchable, marketing communications for services do more than promote services. Communications render services more tangible, and present prospects something firm to consider.

As a result, marketing communications for most services haul around a heavier burden than communications for products. A bright red Porsche 911 convertible, for example, yells loudly and beautifully for itself. Very few services speak for themselves at all.

We implicitly give trust to most products. We trust that our new tyres won’t blow out, our brown sugar will taste sweet, and our aspirin will soothe our headaches without bad side effects. But we are far less trusting and certain about most services.

We fret that our lawyers and web designers will do more than necessary, and bill more than is warranted. We are concerned that the latest weight loss service will be useless, just like the two before it. We worry that our home renovators will exceed their budget and finish weeks after they promise. We worry that the collection agency we hire for our service will badger our customers worth keeping and collect only a small part of our outstanding receivables.

So unlike communicating about products, talking about services must make the service more tangible and real, and must reduce risk for the worried prospect. It’s not like selling Porsche automobiles.

For more information about services marketing and making services more concrete, visit Rob Johnson’s Twitter page. Sponsored by Rob Johnson of http://seocairns.seovoodoo.com.au/

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