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Article Title:
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Why Your Customers Lie To You

Article Description:
====================

In 1985 the Coca Cola Corporation spent gobs on the best
marketing research money could buy, and asked thousands of people
their opinion. Armed with overwhelming statistics, and clear
answers from a huge number of people, they launched New Coke.
$4,000,000 down the drain.


Additional Article Information:
===============================

829 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2007-01-16 10:36:00

Written By:     Mark Silver
Copyright:      2007
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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Why Your Customers Lie To You
Copyright (c) 2007 Mark Silver
Heart Of Business
http://www.heartofbusiness.com/



In 1985 the Coca Cola Corporation spent gobs on the best
marketing research money could buy, and asked thousands of people
their opinion. Armed with overwhelming statistics, and clear
answers from a huge number of people, they launched New Coke.
$4,000,000 down the drain.

$20 a person spent on 200,000 people in focus groups, testing,
market surveys, and the blind taste test. And the results that
came back were totally wrong.

The same thing will happen if you go asking your customers 'what
do you want?' If you ask them if they prefer to meet on the
phone or in person, or how much they are willing to pay, or what
color they want, you'll get the same answer: the wrong one.

Because they will cheerfully give you their best answers to what
they want, just like the 200,000 did. And when you offer them
what they said they wanted, they will turn their backs on it,
leaving you in the dust.

Don't believe me? Ask Coca Cola about the storm of public
protest they had to content with, and the fact that a year later,
New Coke had less than 3% of the market.

Did 200,000 people lie?

Well, no. They didn't.

Each person gave the best answer they could, sipping at different
unmarked cups of a cold cola beverage. But when was the last time
you drank a cup of cola blindfolded, while paid consultants sat
around with clipboards, measuring your response?

Asking questions of your customers is one of the absolute best
ways to get clear guidance for your business. But don't ask them
what they want.

Why don't you ask them what they want?

Because you and your customers live in different worlds. You see,
you've already travelled through the problem your business
solves. Maybe you aren't yet enlightened, maybe you still
struggle, but you understand the world of the solution, so to
speak.

Your customer, on the other hand, hasn't gotten there yet.
That's why they're coming to you. Asking them questions about
what they prefer just doesn't work.

You may ask me if I prefer a wool coat or one of those big, bulky
ski jackets. And, my preference is completely irrelevant if
you're taking me up Mt. Everest. You know what I need, I
don't.

So, if your customers have such excellent information and
guidance for you, and yet they won't follow their own advice
when you offer it back to them... how do you get clear, useful
answers from them that you can implement in your business?

The answer requires you to be a little more intimate. It also
requires you to be stronger in the captaincy of your business.
How does that work?

What, are you asking me? Read on:

Keys to Questioning Your Customers

 * Ask about problems, not solutions.

Your business solves a problem. Your customers are very familiar
with that problem. So, ask them about the problem.

They don't know the solution, yet. So, don't ask them what the
solution should look like. Not even what color it should come in.
Because whatever answers they give you, won't apply.

What are they struggling with? Where are they stuck? Where are
they frustrated? What don't they like? What are they trying to
accomplish? What would they like to be different?

These questions are powerful for three reasons: one, it creates
an empathetic connection, because they are able to be heard in
the midst of their frustrations. Two, it creates more empathy in
you as well, because you are reminded of what it was like before
you got so good at what you do.

And the third reason: the answers show where your customers have
the biggest pain, struggle, or misfortune. If you have something
that will help them with that, and it works, they'll come get
it.

So ask and ask and ask those questions about the problems. Get as
much information as you can. Don't answer, don't fix. Just
listen.

 * O Captain, my Captain.

Armed with clear answers about the struggle, your job is to
create and offer strong solutions that really work.

You are the expert in your business. People are coming to you for
care, guidance, and help. They want to be able to trust you, to
lean into your support and care. So be the captain of your ship,
and offer your customers what you know will help.

Here's a prime example: I was getting help from someone around
my health, and I asked them for their recommendation. They said:
"It's up to you."

Frustration city! It's not up to me. I don't know what's going
to help me. I want clear guidance. I may or may not take them up
on it, but I want to know what they recommend.

Remember to first ask about the problem and then to take
captaincy of the solution. Do that, and your customers will never
lie to you.

The best to you and your business, Mark Silver 




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Mark Silver is the author of Unveiling the Heart of Your 
Business: How Money, Marketing and Sales can Deepen Your 
Heart, Heal the World, and Still Add to Your Bottom Line. 
He has helped hundreds of small business owners around 
the globe succeed in business without losing their 
hearts. Get three free chapters of the book online: 
http://www.heartofbusiness.com



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