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Here's How to Listen to Your Customers & Go From Good to Great

Here's How to Listen to Your Customers & Go From Good to Great | Building a Tribe | Scoop.it

This piece was written by Bolivar J. Bueno for MarketingProfs. I selected it because I thought the suggestions were excellent.

 

Jan Gordon:

 

Whatever you're doing to build an audience, customer or client base, listening at deeper levels is crucial for your business success.

 

Engaging online with customers is not unlike real life. The difference is we have social media/networks and great tools to help us really get to know them and speak to their listening, then deliver solutions

 

Intro:

 

"Years of research have revealed that the single most important factor that separates the good companies from the great companies Adidas from Nike is the ability to listen to their customers. That's the starting poing".
 

 

Excerpt:

 

"Dominant organizations, are those that can discern meaning from the information given. In other words, they're doing more than listening. They're hearing. And they're deriving their direction from what they hear".


How, exactly, does such effective listening work?

 

Here is what caught my attention:


Understand the unconscious


**A vast majority of human experience, communication and thought take place on an unconscious level - this is the first step to listening to the customer.

 

**We're continually taking note of the enviornment around us - how people interact within that enviornment and what role we play as individuals

 

**That information has a profound role in guiding customer behavior

 

**Truly effective communication means being able to listen on

multiple levels to what is said and what is left unsaid



Access Archetypal Images: A single image is worth a thousand words for a simple reason:

 

**The unconscious mind does not bother with language. Symbols, pictures, and iconography speak directly to your customer's psyche,

 

**bypassing and transcending all other forms of communication to take on the leading role in influencing your customer.

 

Listening, then, also means understanding which archetypal images resonate most with your customers and are the most relevant to them.


Selected by Jan Gordon covering "Content Curation, Social Business and Beyond"

 

Read full article here: [http://bit.ly/PA0xBk]


Via janlgordon
janlgordon's comment, September 17, 2012 12:49 PM
Thanks Karen, love your feedback, made my day!!
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East Palo Alto adds personal touch to planning process by asking residents to tell their stories

East Palo Alto adds personal touch to planning process by asking residents to tell their stories | Building a Tribe | Scoop.it
As they draft a new Comprehensive General Plan, East Palo Alto officials are collecting oral histories of residents — a process praised as a novel approach to…

Via Karen Dietz
Tribe Pictures's insight:

Story telling makes for good city planning

Karen Dietz's curator insight, January 16, 12:53 PM

Love this story! It's about a city using the power of storytelling to chart their future. Hooray!


Don't you wish more organizations -- whether businesses, nonprofits, or governments -- would do the same? I know everyone's experience would be much richer with better outcomes, too.


My only little criticism of the process the City of East Palo Alto is using are the questions they are asking. They are OK. But if they reaslly wanted stories they would be using story prompts to make sure they really heard stories. The questions they are now using will get them information or opinions and maybe not stories.


Instead of asking, "How do you make use of the city's parks?" they could ask, "Tell me about some of the best times you've had in the city's parks..."  The first question gets you information like, "We go picnicing, we use the playground, I like running in the park..."


If you ask the second question you actually get a very rich story that tells you more. "I really like to run in the park every morning. The scenery is beautiful and I like how the city replants its flowers each season so the park is constantly changing and pleasant to be in. I run with my buddies. It is easy to find parking and we can hang out at the picnic tables afterward."


You get the idea. We now have meaningful experiences to help guide decision-making about plant maintenance, parking facilities, places to congregate, etc. that we never would have gotten by asking the first information-based question.


So if you plan to do something similar in your organization, focus on the "Art of the Question" and investigate story prompts and the Appreciative Inquiry process for more help.


Many thanks to fellow curator Bill Palladino @LocalEconGuy for sending this article my way!


This review was written by Karen Dietz for her curated content on business storytelling atwww.scoop.it/t/just-story-it

Karen Dietz's comment, January 17, 4:30 PM
It certainly does! And it is a much more rewarding experience for all involved.