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Pricing Paradox

Pricing your products or services well is important for business sustainability. What happens when you lower your standards or sell yourself short just to get to your markets? Well, you get to your markets alright, but you don’t leave a lasting impact on them. Take the example of a nightclub owner about to launch his first club in town. Nobody knows about it yet, and so he fears there won’t be enough attention. The better the launch, the more successful the club will be in that part of town. To create a good launch, he may have to come up with clever group discount packages, sell drinks at a cheaper rate; he may even resort to giving away free tickets to everyone- All of this for the ‘hope’ of attracting a larger crowd and creating excitement. Hope.

This may seem like a perfectly reasonable approach to marketing, and it is. But, if he can create a larger buzz, without having to lose out on potential income, why shouldn’t he? After all, a high impact launch results in lasting memories and a consistent traffic flow thereafter. The question is, can his approach ever generate scarcity? Can it ever generate exclusivity? Aren’t both of these important factors in the success of a nightclub? In the fear of having an “empty club” launch - where nobody wants to enter, the owner sells himself short. All he really needed to do was understand what would make his potential customers pay BIG $$$ and cue in line for: It may be an attractive crowd. It may be seeing the excitement and buzz. It may be interesting stories. It may be the thrill of anticipation. It may be the chance to meet successful people. Or it may be a combination of all of these factors.

One solution for this is to throw parties with modeling agencies during launch to get the attractive crowd at the venue. Next, you could get people to cue up to create an illusion of scarcity. If you can artificially create an environment conducive to what your market perceives as “popular”, you can kick-start your club from nothing to being the hottest in a matter of days. Translate all of this to the online world and your options increase considerably. Here are a few gorilla marketing steps I’d recommend:

Simon U Ford (SUF.EDBD)

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Trigger Timing

See, just like any marketing effort, your emails are messages that are going out to your prospects. When mapping out your event launch strategies, you need to plan how to build hype and anticipation until it climaxes at launch. You launch just when the curiosity has peaked.

This is analogous to movies - we’re trained to allow the tension to build within ourselves when we are watching a thriller. A thriller movie wouldn’t work if they just give away the plot in the first ten minutes. Who would want to watch it through then? Similarly, when you are building hype towards your mega launch, make sure you spread out the campaign into weeks of little swallow-able chunks of information at a time. They need to take it in and then come back for more, until you launch and their tension is released. Until they attend your event. Until they buy your products. Until they get to benefit from whatever it is that you are offering.

So this sequential timeline is one in which you slowly build their trust, give them little bites of information, get them to share their needs, give away free things or content, work on your relationship with them. Here is another great analogy to think about: try meeting a girl (or boy) and propose to her (or him) the same day. How would they react? Well, in most normal cases, I’m guessing they’d freak out and would want to stay the hell away from you. Important things require the effort of building a relationship of trust. Your launches are as important as anything else. So invest the time to plan it well…

This post has been included in our “Event Launch Guidelines” training program. Click for more information.

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