18 Feb 2008 04:53:04 | Bob McElwain
There has been a major change in the American social structure.
For the first time, many older citizens have significant
discretionary income. Among younger people with children, the
mode now is both parents working. Many couples have very little
discretionary income.
Different Folks Need Different Strokes
You simply can not talk the same way to Xers and Senior
Citizens. It won't work because the value structures differ
between these groups. And so do their attitudes. More important,
they respond differently to a given stimulus.
For the most part, buy decisions are made emotionally, then
justified later with "reason." On a website the emotional
response that triggers the buy decision comes from what is said
in the sales presentation.
This means you must know precisely who you are talking to. It
means understanding their values, attitudes, and goals. And it
means understanding what motivates them to buy.
Voice Matters
Grab a Western novel, a thriller, a mystery, and maybe a tale
of romance. Read a bit in each. Writers speak about voice, and
struggle to get it right in all of their work.
Voice is a casual term that includes style, imagery, and
emotional triggers effective with the reader. It also includes
selection of vocabulary, and such simple things as sentence
length. In short, anything that helps project a specific tone or
feeling is part of the voice that produced it.
As suggested above, the voice appropriate for Xers is
inappropriate for Seniors. And conversely.
Off-Target Input Can Mislead
Input from off-target visitors may distract you. It's possible
given sufficient input of this sort, you may be persuaded to
introduce a new product to take advantage of apparent interest.
In doing so, however, you have broadened your focus, rather than
narrowing it. This is always the wrong thing to do.
What's more, the off-target product will strike targeted
visitors as being off key in some way, if not in fact
negatively. In the end, you are likely to drive away more
targeted traffic, than you are able to generate with the
off-target product.
An Aside: If you stumble across something that seems of
interest to a significant off-target group, rather than
weakening an existing site, consider building another which can
be totally targeted to this newly defined group.
A Target Within A Target
Suppose you have decided to target Seniors. And you know enough
of their convictions and motivations to be effective in talking
with them. That is, you can relate to them in an appropriate
voice. An additional step can be helpful.
Define a subset of this group and thus narrow your target even
further. Then adjust your manner of speaking accordingly. While
you don't mind if others listen in, you write to and for only
those within your target. You use a voice specific to this
narrowly targeted subset.
For example, among seniors there are those who graduated from
college. Others have educated themselves. Many have been locked
into the business world as owners, managers, or employees. And
still others, never held a high paying job. Further, to many
women, family is all that ever mattered.
If you can define a subset of Seniors, the proper voice may be
quite different from what is needed for a different set. Adjust
accordingly.
Xers Versus Seniors
The more profitable market may be Seniors. However, if you are
an Xer, it may be best to ignore this group and target a subset
of Xers. Why? Because you hold their values and attitudes. It
will be much easier for you to find the right voice with which
to relate to your target. Seniors, on the other hand, are likely
to ignore you, unless you can adapt their values and attitudes,
and thus a voice appropriate to them.
Direct your newsletter, site content, and sales presentations
as specifically as possible to your target. Continually seek to
narrow this target even further. That some off-target visitors
may buy, is a bonus. But it in no way suggests broadening your
target to include them. Or changing the voice.There has been a
major change in the American social structure. For the first
time, many older citizens have significant discretionary income.
Among younger people with children, the mode now is both parents
working. Many couples have very little discretionary income.
Different Folks Need Different Strokes
You simply can not talk the same way to Xers and Senior
Citizens. It won't work because the value structures differ
between these groups. And so do their attitudes. More important,
they respond differently to a given stimulus.
For the most part, buy decisions are made emotionally, then
justified later with "reason." On a website the emotional
response that triggers the buy decision comes from what is said
in the sales presentation.
This means you must know precisely who you are talking to. It
means understanding their values, attitudes, and goals. And it
means understanding what motivates them to buy.
Voice Matters
Grab a Western novel, a thriller, a mystery, and maybe a tale
of romance. Read a bit in each. Writers speak about voice, and
struggle to get it right in all of their work.
Voice is a casual term that includes style, imagery, and
emotional triggers effective with the reader. It also includes
selection of vocabulary, and such simple things as sentence
length. In short, anything that helps project a specific tone or
feeling is part of the voice that produced it.
As suggested above, the voice appropriate for Xers is
inappropriate for Seniors. And conversely.
Off-Target Input Can Mislead
Input from off-target visitors may distract you. It's possible
given sufficient input of this sort, you may be persuaded to
introduce a new product to take advantage of apparent interest.
In doing so, however, you have broadened your focus, rather than
narrowing it. This is always the wrong thing to do.
What's more, the off-target product will strike targeted
visitors as being off key in some way, if not in fact
negatively. In the end, you are likely to drive away more
targeted traffic, than you are able to generate with the
off-target product.
An Aside: If you stumble across something that seems of
interest to a significant off-target group, rather than
weakening an existing site, consider building another which can
be totally targeted to this newly defined group.
A Target Within A Target
Suppose you have decided to target Seniors. And you know enough
of their convictions and motivations to be effective in talking
with them. That is, you can relate to them in an appropriate
voice. An additional step can be helpful.
Define a subset of this group and thus narrow your target even
further. Then adjust your manner of speaking accordingly. While
you don't mind if others listen in, you write to and for only
those within your target. You use a voice specific to this
narrowly targeted subset.
For example, among seniors there are those who graduated from
college. Others have educated themselves. Many have been locked
into the business world as owners, managers, or employees. And
still others, never held a high paying job. Further, to many
women, family is all that ever mattered.
If you can define a subset of Seniors, the proper voice may be
quite different from what is needed for a different set. Adjust
accordingly.
Xers Versus Seniors
The more profitable market may be Seniors. However, if you are
an Xer, it may be best to ignore this group and target a subset
of Xers. Why? Because you hold their values and attitudes. It
will be much easier for you to find the right voice with which
to relate to your target. Seniors, on the other hand, are likely
to ignore you, unless you can adapt their values and attitudes,
and thus a voice appropriate to them.
Direct your newsletter, site content, and sales presentations
as specifically as possible to your target. Continually seek to
narrow this target even further. That some off-target visitors
may buy, is a bonus. But it in no way suggests broadening your
target to include them. Or changing the voice.
About Author :
Bob McElwain Want to build a winning site? Improve one you
already have? Fix one that's busted? Get ANSWERS. Subscribe to
"STAT News" now! mailto:join-stat@lyris.dundee.net Web marketing
and consulting since 1993 Site:
Phone: 209-742-6349