Where does your product fit in your customers day?

If you go in for laparoscopic surgery, you get holes in your stomach.

Four to five small incisions where a doctor will place tubes. These tubes allow her to insert her tools for work.

Then, she’ll blow up your stomach with gas to give her room to work. Lastly, she’ll place a camera in there to see what she’s working on.

After this prep work is done, she performs the surgery. It can last anywhere from thirty minutes to hours. It all depends on what needs to be done.

Once the surgery is complete, she begins to stitch up your stomach. Closing those holes properly is important. If she doesn’t close them right, you can get a hernia during recovery.

In order to close those holes properly, some doctors will use a specific tool.

That was the tool I sold.

It was used for a minute or two at the end of a surgery.

While important, the tool didn’t really take up that much of the doctor’s attention.

It was my job to make that one to two minutes seem important enough to think about using my specific tool.

The reality is, your product probably only plays a small part in something bigger.

Just like the tool I sold for the end of surgery.

If your product plays a small part, your customer will probably only give you a small piece of their attention.

As marketers, it’s good to know where we fit. Chances are, you are not the most important thing in that customers day.

We can’t market to customers like we are.

While the work we do is important, there are other important things as well.

Just like in that surgery, closing up a patient is important. But, the doctor is also concerned with removing the problem area that was the reason for the surgery in the first place.

My tool was not more important than that.

Consistently showing up like Sammy Hagar

My first concert was at the Concord Pavilion to see Sammy Hagar.

I probably saw him almost every year for 10 years after that.

If you haven’t followed his career, which it’s likely you haven’t, he’s played in many different bands and worked on many different projects.

Some of his bands and projects include:

  • Montrose
  • Sammy Hagar
  • Van Halen
  • A Mountain Bike Shop
  • Cabo Wabo Cantina
  • Cabo Wabo Tequila
  • Sammy Hagar and the Wabos
  • Chickenfoot
  • Sammy Hagar Beach Bar Rum, the rum
  • Sammy Hagar Beach Bar Rum, the restaurant
  • The Circle
  • Rock and Roll Road Trip with Sammy Hagar
  • Sammy Hagar’s Top Rock Countdown

These are just the projects I know about, which I’m sure I’ve missed some.

I’ve tried to put this list in roughly chronological order. I find two things interesting about this list.

First, he joined Van Halen – third on the list – at 38. This is basically ancient in rock and roll.

Second, the sheer volume of projects he started and was involved in after that.

While his early music career probably got him the contacts and money to do some of his later projects, the fact is he did them.

They didn’t get him on a 30 under 30 list, because he was well into his 40s by the time he started them.

He’s the kind of hustler that consistently does work over the long term.

Through his 40s, 50s, 60s, and now into his 70s, he’s continuing to do projects.

While not at the scale of the largest rock band in the world – Van Halen in the early 90s – they are projects I’m sure he’s proud of.

Like Sammy Hagar, good things can come from consistently showing up and doing our work over the long term.

How do you send an email in Germany?

Get to the point in the first line.

That’s how you format an email in Germany.

At least, according to my friend.

Not sure how it started, but my friend and I got onto the topic of email communication differences between the Americans and the Germans.

The difference is American emails begin with pleasantries and background. Then, you get to the point and your ask at the end.

German emails require your point be in line 1.

This cultural norm, while seemingly small on the surface, might have a big impact in how we communicate.

For me, I realized this might be a key reason why my email marketing campaigns were not performing as well in the European market.

It’s the translation vs. localization debate. Even if you speak the same language.

It’s easier than ever to take your company global. Thus, we’ll run into these situations more often.

Instinctively, we know these nuances matter.

But, it’s good to remind ourselves there are differences. Large and small.

And that’s ok.

We should acknowledge them. Make the necessary changes, even if we don’t agree with the difference.

Who knows, it could be why your marketing campaign is underperforming.

The Power of a Handshake

I took a Marketing class in High School. In one of the first classes, we went through how to shake hands.

Fairly simple.

My teacher – who was a woman – went around the room shaking everyone’s hands. Then, she broke down what had happened.

As we all shook her hand, many gave her a soft grip. Particularly the men. Pretty much instinctively.

What she explained, was that by not giving her a firm handshake, you are not putting her on equal ground.

This was burned in my mind. Always have a firm handshake.

Not as a power move to get the upper hand. A handshake that says, I see you, I hear you, I respect you, and with no judgement, I am glad to meet you.

This is one of the many things I admire about my grandfather.

His handshake.

No matter who you were, he gave you the best handshake.

It was firm.

He looked you in the eye and made sure you knew that you mattered. Then, he would proceed to have a conversation with you.

The conversation would flow like you were best friends. You could sense he genuinely wanted to talk to you, because he genuinely did.

Never an ounce of judgement came from him. As far as he was concerned, you were equals. And if you asked for help, having just met him, he would give it if he could.

No questions asked.

His handshake always reflected this. It never wavered.

I’m not sure I have met anyone else like that.

The world needs more people like my grandfather. But, that’s a tough ask.

At least, let’s not underestimate the power of a handshake.

Three chords and the truth

Johnny Cash released Folsom Prison Blues in 1955.

It wasn’t until many years later that he managed to actually land himself in prison, if only for a night.

While Cash sang about and played in prisons, having never been, he was speaking a truth.

At the time, not entirely his own truth, but his audiences.

He was a master at it. Wearing black as a symbol for the neglected. He was the man in black.

It was his trade mark.

It’s what he sang.

He sang a truth about an audience. And, they loved him for it.

I love him for it.

The same holds true for our marketing.

Understanding our audience. Telling a story that’s their truth.

We buy stories, so tell a great story.

All you need is three chords and the truth.