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  • Marketing Should Underpromise and Overdeliver

    I’ll probably catch some flack from this post, but after 20 years in business I can tell you that one of the worst things you can do is break a promise. Once an expectation is set, no matter how absurd or trivial, failing to meet it is damaging to your business reputation.

    The flip side of this lesson, however, is that consistently outperforming expectations, no matter how absurd or trivial, is a great way to build a business reputation.

    Underpromising what you can actually deliver may sound a bit slacker driven, but you can also think of it terms of being realistic about what you can, in fact deliver. An eager sales person can easily fall prey to the customer demanding, for no apparent reason, same day delivery. If you can’t do it, say so, your reputation for honesty will go a long way towards landing the next order!

    Underpromising can be a powerful alley when it’s combined with overdelivering. I once had two separate clients who had ordered some printed brochures. Both claimed they were in no particular hurry, but wondered when to expect delivery. For one client I casually suggested to expect them by Wednesday. For the next, I thought better and said Friday. Both print orders were shipped on Thursday. Even though both stated they were in no particular hurry – one client was angry, one thrilled.

    Don’t take this to mean that shouldn’t set and meet demanding expectionation. Just take your marketing promises up to edge of the overdeliver cliff and take a realistic step back. Chances are you will still outperform most, you will overdeliver on expectations, but you won’t get caught failing to meet your promises.

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    Posted by: John Jantsch on Dec 01, 06 | 4:04 pm
    Category: Positioning | Tags:

    Comments
    • Funny, I was having a conversation with a colleague yesterday on how difficult it is to recover after a marketing / sales effort over promises. Great advice.

      Andrew
    • This is an excellent point. I've referred to it as the "Scotty Approach." On the old Star Trek series, Scotty always used to be able make things happen, even after he said they were impossible. As a master of underpromising, he always ended up a hero.
    • <pingback>...Advent of on-demand software product solutions reinforces … Read more: here


      Posted in terms of delivery |


      Leave a Reply Name (required) Mail (will not be published) ...</pingback>
    • John,

      How about over-promising AND over-delivering? Obviously this has to be within reason, but under-promising appears to me to be a recipe for setting the bar low. It's only when we really stretch ourselves that we reach our highest potential.
    • John Jantsch
      Ken,

      In theory, of course, I agree. The problem is that it's nearly impossible to do both. Whatever you promise and whatever you deliver becomes the new expectation and norm. No matter how many hoops you jump through the value degrades over time. I'm not suggesting you lower the bar, just systematically manage the setting of it.
    • The problem with over-promising, is sometimes it's done because of wishful thinking rather than the existing reality.

      I've managed a number of companies where we've had a lot of sincere employees that made promises to please people that were impossible to keep.

      Expectations, like everything else, needs to be managed.
    • Hi John. I'm not sure why you thought you would catch flack for this post. IMO, it's great BUSINESS advice, not just marketing (yes, I know marketing = business <g>).

      I received this same advice as a newbie CPA from my managing partner. I firmly believe this philosophy was the main driver behind a firm in Topeka, KS becoming a national leader in their niche.
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