Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Creating a Sense of Urgency - the science of why it matters


I had a couple of people email me to ask about my feelings on offers and what kinds of offers we use.  I do believe in doing an offer and part of the reason why is to create a sense of urgency.  I have attached the back side of a post card we use here at My Maid Service as an example. 

In a previous article I explained that effective marketing materials have three things, including a call to action.  For a really effective call to action, you have to tell your customers what to do and to make it urgent.  There is a famous experiment at Yale by a scientist named Howard Leventhal that provides proof.  Leventhal was trying to increase the number of students getting a free tetanus shot from the on-campus clinic.  So he created two brochures which were given to seniors.  The first was very descriptive with facts and data.  The second was designed to test the theory that marketing with fear would be more effective so he included lots of graphic pictures of people with tetanus and the terribly painful way they died.  Both brochures included the statement that shots were available for free at the student clinic and the phone number for the clinic.  In a survey after reading the brochure the students that read the more graphic pamphlet were three times more likely to say they were going to be inoculated.  However when he checked later in both groups only 3% of the seniors actually got the shot.

Dr. Leventhal then added to both pamphlets a map with the clinic circled and times when the shots were going to be given. This is the only thing that was changed on the brochures.  After this change both the high-fear and regular brochures led to 28% of the students actually getting the inoculation.  This one small change more than anything caused a nearly 10 times increase in the students actually getting the shots.  Remember these are seniors, they almost certainly knew were the clinic was.  The combination of the map and the times took getting a shot from a subjective idea to clear instructions to the students on how to fit this into their lives.  In the original brochure the students were convinced a tetanus shot was something they should get, eventually.  The second brochure made a tetanus shot something a student needed to have at a specific time and a place. 

This is a lot like our customers.  The scary brochure convinced the students that the shot was something they should do, when they got around to it.  They said on the survey they were 3 times more likely to get the shot but when it came down to it, only 3% actually did it, the same as the boring flyer.  Adding the date and time gave them a sense or urgency, they knew where and when they had to go to get the shots.  We need to do the same thing.  If our offers are good but they have no clear call to action, clients will throw it into their coupon box intending to get to it some day.  Some day never comes.  The idea that they may lose out on the offer encourages them to pick up the phone right now and take action.



What this tells us is that the single most important thing on any marketing material is the call to action.  You need to clearly tell the customer what to do and when.  For example we use “Call 513-934-3254 by Friday for $100 off the first time with bi weekly or weekly service”.  Not everyone will agree with this aggressive of a discount but we did it for a reason which I will explain in a future topic but you have to admit, it creates a real sense of urgency.  Call now is not enough.  You need to say to call what and when.  More than the expensive artwork and graphic designers you need to make sure you have a clear and urgent call to action.


2 comments:

Cleaningexpert said...

Thank you so much for sharing this information!

NERCA CLEANING SERVICES said...

Thank you so much Derek for sharing this info, I do flyers, and response is slow. I've been looking for other avenues, but the call to action I will try, and let you know.