Tag Archives: free

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value add

Value Add, Free, Or a Hidden Cost?

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What is your value add? Many businesses strive to deliver products or services that claim to have a significant value added. Does this cost the business or is it more of a goodwill intangible kind of value?

You may suggest that it depends.

It depends on if the value add is a tangible item or not. It might also depend on if the value add is service on a product, or a product offered with a service.

Economies today are experiencing a shift in marketing approaches. The concept of free has never been more prevalent.

Join the free webinar, get a free order of French Fries, or signup now for a free t-shirt.

It may cost nothing for a business to add your name to their email distribution list. If they add your name to their postal mail, there may be hard costs.

If you join in the free webinar, are you a potential customer or are you the product? If a popular webinar gains more and more followers for free, how is the cost of the webinar being paid for? (You just might be the product.)

Are you paying for value add? Does free stuff cost?

Value Add

Consumers are often paying for things that they don’t realize.

Free technical support feels good, but most people quickly realize that is part of the cost of the product.

What would the product cost if technical support was only found on YouTube? YouTube videos created by people at their own expense?

Is that a value add to you? Or is it a really clever way for the product developers to achieve more margin?

Value add and the concept of free has never had more hooks. It’s an intricate web of people, technology, and pyramid style events (different from illegal scheme) that shifts the costs and the benefits of value add.

Some things in life might be free, but the odds are that it is costing someone.

Someone might just be you.

-DEG

Dennis E. Gilbert is a business consultant, speaker (CSPTM), and culture expert. He is a five-time author and the founder of Appreciative Strategies, LLC. His business focuses on positive human performance improvement solutions through Appreciative Strategies®. Reach him through his website at Dennis-Gilbert.com or by calling +1 646.546.5553.


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generous customer service

What About Generous Customer Service?

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The unwritten rule today may be to give as much value as possible. Give, and give, and give, until you feel like you can’t give anymore. Generosity, like beauty, may be in the eye of the beholder. What about generous customer service, do you deliver, who says?

Generous Customer Service

Of course, we have all already figured out that getting something for nothing is probably costing someone something. Most often today, something given as free when it is on the edge of a transaction is really the underlying hope for reciprocation. As both vendor and customer, we understand.

A free baseball cap isn’t really free, it comes with the assumed obligation that you will wear it or perhaps gift it forward. The same is true for the free t-shirt with a business logo, or the stickers, magnets, or wall calendar. Everyone seems to understand, or else they really don’t care.

In our attempt to give a lot, establish the return visit, and create loyalty are we hurting our customers? Is every touch point about giving?

Do You Want It?

It might be the 24-inch long cash register receipt for the purchase of a single item. The request to go online and fill out a survey or get a coupon for a product we may want to buy on our next visit.

Could it be the extra flyers, brochures, and the new catalog that comes in the brown box, did you pay shipping and handling charges? Is free shipping really free? Perhaps but most people recognize that somehow that is built into the cost. It is an attractive gesture though.

What about the club card, the interest free loan, or the buy ten and get your next one free on your next visit?

Is It Generosity?

Are all of these things of value to us, or do we really just want the best price with quality and value that meets our expectations? Do we get what we pay for?

Do you deliver generous customer service?

Says who?

– DEG

Dennis E. Gilbert is a business consultant, speaker (CSPTM), and corporate trainer that specializes in helping businesses and individuals accelerate their leadership, their team, and their success. He is a five-time author and some of his work includes, #CustServ The Customer Service Culture, and Forgotten Respect, Navigating A Multigenerational Workforce. Reach him through his website at Dennis-Gilbert.com or by calling +1 646.546.5553.

Dennis Gilbert on Google+


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Cheap or Valued?

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Many people believe that building your email list, creating a social media following, or blogging your thoughts will get someone’s attention, and do it with little or no cost. In a world where everything is free, nothing has value, and people regard you, your message, or products and services as worth very little.

RolexByMarkRain

A twenty dollar watch keeps reasonable time, but it is not a Rolex. A five-thousand dollar used car may get you where you need to be but it is not a Rolls Royce. Of course, you may suggest that there is a market for both extremes and a lot of space to be occupied in between. True.

If you are wondering how to position yourself (your job), your products and services, or your entire business, it is important to remember that just because we have the means, the price of entry, expansion, and growth are not free. That is, unless you want to attract the market (or job) that doesn’t pay you much, the person who wants your services only if they are the lowest price, and a business that survives solely on goodwill without any income or budget.

You don’t have to change anyone’s mind. You don’t have to fight for market share. Not when you realize that your success lies at the intersection of price and value, not cheap and unwanted.

– DEG

Photo Credit: Mark Rain


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