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About C.B. Whittemore

About C.B. Whittemore

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Flooring The Consumer History

Flooring The Consumer is a marketing blog about improving the consumer experience, particularly in flooring.


The blog was launched in June 2006. It is featured as a case study on this site with more detail on the Simple Marketing Blog.

It is also where you will find the Bridging New & Old social media interview series which led to Social Media's Collective Wisdom: Simplifying Marketing With Social Media, an e-book, based on the first 26 interviews.

If you're curious about our archives from 2006 to 2011, visit Flooring The Consumer.

Flooring The Consumer Explores Getting Found In-Store, aka the Customer Retail Experience

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Simple Marketing at Retail and Getting Back to Basics

  
  
  
Simple Basics
What retail examples have you come across where businesses deliberately try, not to obsure, but rather to simplify the experience for you especially with the basics?

Given how busy, time pressed, and stressed we are as we deal with greater complexity from every perspective, I'm surprised that I don't see more in the marketplace.

I yearn for solutions and messages that simplify. When I do, I'm delighted and grateful.

Unfortunately, I usually encounter the opposite. 

For example, this made me cringe over the weekend.

I received an email from a large, well-established and extremely profitable financial institution I do business with. The message alerted me about needing to modify an account setting and included what seemed like straight-forward directions.

Do you know that the written instructions had nothing to do with the steps I wound up taking? What looked originally simple [expectation set], took considerably more time than expected and created negative feelings as I painstakingly figured out how to piece together a path for resolution.


My conclusion: no one at that institution bothered to go through the basics and experience what a customer would actually have to do. Simple marketing not done.

At the heart of simple marketing is a sincere desire to understand the world our customers live in, to appreciate the complexities and difficulties they face as they make decisions, and to determine how to simplify the process for them.

Simplifying decisions is a very happy-making solution as Bernd Schmitt explains in Happiness and Customer Experience: Interview with Bernd Schmitt. He specifically mentions simplicity as a value which brings happiness to customers. 

Furthermore, as I detailed in Simplicity Matters in Brand Marketing: BRITE Conference 2012, "people will pay for relationships which are simpler to understand and more direct to the tune of a "simplicity premium" that ranges from 2.5 to 5.5%!" Yes, a premium because you make life simpler and easier for customers!

I bet you pay attention to the retail experiences which have made life simple for you. Here are a few examples which come to mind: 
  • Amazon reviews help customers obtain context and perspective before making a purchase [by the way, here are the top Amazon reviewers].
What other memorable retail experiences have you come across?

The common element to all of these stories is that these businesses have spent time getting back to basics; they have made sure to do a remarkable job delivering on those basics. Of course, the basics are meaningless unless they provide value to customers. That's the 'simple marketing' part of it...

How are you simplifying your retail experience? How are you creating a distinct difference for customers by helping them make sense of the complexity in your category?

I'd love to hear what you're doing.


You might also enjoy previous articles I've written with Simplifiers and Simplicity in mind:
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Comments

Christine, Keep It Simple is essential to business success. Add Keep it real, keep it consistent, keep it responsive,& keep it attractive. 
Time to talk about holistic customer experiences and who is doing this well (Anthropologie, Container Store, & REI come to mind). 
Please look atwww.illuminee.com. My friend, Isabelle, owns this lighting store that also sells hair accessories, jewelry, & gift items. Keeping the store simple, inviting, & understandable is a daily challenge. all the best, Arthur
Posted @ Thursday, February 21, 2013 9:44 AM by Arthur Corbin
Arthur, as usual you have marvelous examples and insights to share. Many thanks. 
 
Best, 
Christine
Posted @ Friday, May 17, 2013 5:29 PM by Christine Whittemore
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