Are You Passing the Bathroom Test with Your Clients?

I’ve been thinking about bathrooms lately.  Bathrooms speak volumes about your business!  It gives an intimate look into your thought process and perceived work ethic and can be easily overlooked by a busy business owner.  (Stay with me – I promise this will make sense!!)

It was Monday morning and I was busy cleaning and getting ready for an afternoon meeting.  Time was getting short and I was running through my head what absolutely needed to be done and what could get away “with a wink and a promise”.  Looking at the rug in the meeting room I knew I could literally sweep the dirt under it and my client would never ever know.  Likewise I could put all the unread newspapers under the couch and she’d be none the wiser (neither of which I did by the way).  But what I knew, without fail, was the bathroom had to get a complete head to toe cleaning.  I also knew, it was highly likely that my client would never even catch a glimpse of my bathroom.  That didn’t matter, the bathroom had to spotless.

Years ago, I went to a newly opened hair salon.  They had beautiful signage, obviously thought about the decor and layout and made every effort to insure a great customer experience.  Until it got to the bathroom….  In the bathroom so many extra robes were hanging from the door it made it difficult to open and close, some of the bulbs were burnt out and the pedal garbage can was broken so you had to open it with your hands.  I was just happy I didn’t have to contend with the bathroom doing double duty as a storage room full to the ceiling with boxes.  With this one experience my perception of this salon changed.  Where before, I was impressed with their attention to detail – their lack of attention in the bathroom had me wondering where else things had fallen through the cracks.  Now I was on the alert and subconsciously looking for areas to find fault.  Before my bathroom experience, the small flaws wouldn’t have even hit on my radar.

Now if you think I’m making to much of a big deal over this, I bring before you Mohegan Sun and Foxwoods casinos.  Their business is all about the experience.  The lavish decorating didn’t stop at the bathroom door.  The huge mirrors, upholstered chairs and thoughtful lighting is carried all the way into the room and it is always spotlessly clean.  These bathrooms even have actual, breathing bathroom attendants – when was the last time you saw a bathroom attendant!  Their business model is to promote escape and luxury.  Now imagine your at the one of the casinos and the bathroom you walk into was the same as your local McDonald’s.  Your experience and perception of the casino has now changed hasn’t it?

(PS: This is not a slam against McDonald’s bathrooms!!  As any world traveler knows – they almost always have the cleanest, free bathrooms in the world – and yes it is part of their marketing and customer experience strategy!)

My point is:  Every business has a “bathroom” – a place that is accessible to all clients but where few may actually enter.  Once a client accesses these areas, it’s vitally important for the overall company experience and message to show through.  People can and will make judgements on your company and service based on your “bathroom”.  Go run and take a look at your bathroom – is it passing the test?

The Words that Define You

Words are powerful.  They send messages, convey emotions and bring people to action.  In my post about Lululemon and their remarkable social media efforts I touched on the core words that clearly define who they are.

A quick visit to their website and you will find the words – goals, outgoing, upbeat, energetic and fun – permeate the site.  Here’s the really cool thing – had I only ever gone to their Facebook fan page, blog or Twitter feed I still would have received that message.

I want to revisit that thought.  Think of one of your favorite brands.  What words come to mind?  Do these words come from the root of who they are?  To more clearly demonstrate what I mean, I took three brands (Apple, Harley Davidson and Richard Branson’s Virgin) and matched them up to their core words – many of them taken directly off of their own websites.  Here’s what I found:

Applecreative, fun, user friendly, cool, revolutionary

Harley Davidsonrebel, American, tough, distinct, power, bold

Richard Branson’s Virginrule breaker, innovative, quality, fun

Now step back and think about it.  These companies use the words that define them to clearly send out their message.  They stay true to their definitions and use them as a guide to help them see what paths to take.  The definitions of themselves are their core and everything else radiates from that point.  Those words are the foundation for everything that follows.  Defining yourself is a fabulous thing!  It helps you narrow down the choices when making decisions.  The choice is either part of who you are or it isn’t.

Now take a look at your own business.  What words define you?  Are you being true to that definition?  Do you keep that definition in the forefront of your mind when you make new business decisions?  I think you’ll find that if you have a clear definition and stay true to that definition, the decisions that follow will be much easier to make.  Now go grab pen and paper and start defining!

Show AND Tell – the Mabel’s Labels Way

There is an old saying in business – “You can’t sell it if you don’t show it.”  Let’s look at this in relation to the photography business.  A majority of photographers will find that their clients gravitate to the 8×10 and smaller print sizes.  It’s what they grew up with – in their head they carry a picture of what that looks like.  Now say you really, really want to sell 20×24 and larger wall prints.  They are featured in your pricing brochure yet no one seems to buy.  To make those sales happen somewhere in your studio you have to display that size print in a way that your client can envision it in their home.

A few weeks ago this was brought back home to me when I was reading a post called Show, Don’t Tell on Jonathan Fields’ blog – Awake at the Wheel.  He was commenting on how the ipad that is being released by Apple won’t have flash.  I had registered that the new ipad wouldn’t have flash but I hadn’t really pictured what that would mean.  In his post Jonathan posted an image from The Flash Blog that showed me quite clearly what that meant.  Before it was words and talk that I heard but didn’t connect.  With this one visual I finally got it.

Where does Mabel’s Labels fit in all this?  Not long after I read Jonathan’s post the crew at Mabel’s Labels posted this fun video.  One of the benefits they tout is that their – “labels are designed to stick – no matter what!”  To prove this they started creating fun videos challenging that statement.  They attach their labels to something and run it through its paces.  One such challenge is to run the labels over with a car, another to drop them off a roof, but my favorite by far is when they attach them to a hockey puck and have kids use the puck in practice.  Love it!!  The Mabel’s Label crew completely understands the show it to sell it theory and put it into action in a fun creative way.

*Disclaimer – I know I’ve mentioned Mabel’s Labels in the past.  However I have no connection to them.  Well.. my sister does buy them for her kids, which is how I found out about them in the first place.  Or maybe it’s just that I have a thing for Canadian companies.  Looking at my twitter followers – I’m HUGE in Canada.  Possibly it’s all my connections to North Sydney, Nova Scotia… Nahh really don’t think so. :) *

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