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Bill Gallagher, Ph.D.

Over 500,000 business and salespeople have invested in Bill "Guerrilla" Gallagher's Guerrilla Selling: (Unconventional Weapons & Tactics for Increasing Your Sales) because they are serious about doing a lot more business with less hassle and frustration.

Since 1983, Bill Gallagher, Ph.D., has been in demand as one of the nation's leading authorities on sales, marketing and management, conducting thousands of training seminars and workshops throughout North America and Abroad. His informative commentary has been featured in such prestigious publications as The Wall Street Journal, USA Today, Money and Time magazines. In addition, Bill has appeared on a host of national radio and television shows, including Good Morning America, Today, CNN Headline News, and The CBS Evening News.

Bill's reputation for innovation and quality has earned him repeat engagements with over half the companies featured in the best seller In Search of Excellence. Some of his many satisfied clients include: American Express, Bank of America, Dean Witter Reynolds, Hewlett Packard, IBM, Levi-Strauss, Nortel, National Association of Realtors, Stanford University, and Tyson Foods, Inc. Co-author in the legendary Guerrilla Business series and lead author of Guerrilla Selling, Bill has also received honors for excellence in business training from the governments of Israel, Singapore, the Netherlands, and the U.S. Department of Commerce.

Who is Bill "Guerrilla" Gallagher? Quite possibly the most entertaining and knowledgeable authority on sales, marketing, and the mysteries of the human mind available today. His recommendations are new, fresh, and guaranteed to produce spectacular results for your business!

Friday, April 25, 2008

Ford's Marketing Goof

From: http://www.gmarketing.com/articles/read/93/Ford's_Marketing_Goof.html

Ford's Marketing Goof
by Bill Gallagher, Ph.D.

Many years ago, the huge Ford Motor Company made a huge marketing goof. The goof was so enormous that even though you may not have been alive at time, chances are you remember hearing about the infamous Edsel. Let's look at what happened.

Many people think that the car bombed because of its design. Not so. While the central design theme was somewhat bizarre, the car looked a bit as if it were some kind of giant fish sucking on a lemon; the look wasn't the source of the debacle. It was the marketing.

As the story goes, from the CEO's office down came the word, "We want a car with something for everyone, the Edsel." Obediently, marketing ordered lots of models with lots of prices. Over twenty models were designed, including the specialty issues. Four-door sedans to racy sports models, each sucking that lemon, and all headed for disaster.

Something for everyone, lots of models, with lots of prices spells a very big marketing mistake.

Let's contrast this gloom and doom with a success story. A Ford success, a huge Ford success. Did I say huge? Bigger than huge, enormous, gigantic, and years later, still going. Major huge. Mega big. This is a marketing blockbuster. I speak, of course, of the Mustang.

The success was due to a tightly focused sales campaign, what we call today "target marketing."

The defined or targeted market was, 1. "young," meaning 20 to 30, and 2. "second family car," meaning 30 to 50. The model was positioned as "easy to handle" and "uncomplicated." As a consequence, everyone knew what a Mustang was and who was supposed to buy it. They did, in droves.

Mustang's popularity started with a very narrowly focused target market, the young and the "young at heart." The car was designed for the wants and needs of this market alone. They knew that this market wanted an uncomplicated car that was "easy to handle."

Some of you may recall that a few years after the initial offering, the Ford management decided to widen the Mustang offering. Now it was pitched as a luxury offering and four-door models appeared. Sales, of course, dipped.

Loss of targeted marketing focus usually means a loss in sales. We in smaller businesses must learn lessons from the big guys. They can afford to make mistakes here and there and with their giant resources can recover. But we can't. Coke can lose millions on a mis-focused "New Coke." Who wanted it? What was its target? A similar mis-calculation will put most of into Chapter 11.

A final word or so, find out who wants or needs your products or services the most. Set up all your efforts to that small slice of North America. Later you can target another market segment.