Get a merchant to offer a discount on their product or service and proceed to market that discount to their audience for a set period of time or until the offer sells out. The primary sales and persuasion triggers that daily deal and coupon websites typically use is urgency, scarcity, and convenience.
4. The Primary differences to take into account
when running a deal site outside the USA:
Commission Based Workforces – The rest of the world does not tip in the same
way that the USA tips. Daily deals often depend on servers to generate wages from their
tips.
Turnover Rate – Folks often stay longer in restaurants in Paris, Amsterdam, & other parts
of world. Dinner often times IS the nights activity.
Local laws & Regulations – Due proper due diligence on local laws relating to
coupons, expiration dates, eCommerce, etc.
Language Barriers – Do you want to market to tourists?
Upsells & Strategic partnerships – Trip Advisor, tourism companies? Who
complements what you are doing?
5. Online sales numbers are crushing all past
results and NOW is the time to lock in
deals, put up offers, drive traffic, and grow.
Cyber Monday saw a 30% growth in online sales over Cyber
Monday in 2011.
More than 18 percent of consumers used a mobile device to
visit a retailer’s site, an increase of more than 70 percent
over 2011.
IBM also found that online sales on Thanksgiving grew by
17.4 percent followed by Black Friday where sales
increased 20.7 percent over last year.
6. Get More Sales
• Carefully craft your headlines and offer copy. Use
high quality and engaging images, & video…
• Adjust price points.
• Repeat campaigns: Set yourself up to run multiple
deals with a merchant you lock in. Study previous
deal and maximize effectiveness.
• Model what works , but stand apart.
7. Raising Merchant Conversion Rates
• Be different. Be innovative. Lock in Deals. It doesn’t have be a typical
daily deal scenario (any type of deal, i.e. photography, videography,
email management, website creation, marketing help, etc ).
• Separate yourself from your competition and the major players.
Businesses are much more aware of how Groupon works than they used
to be. They are also aware of the risks associated with running a deal,
most notably the possibility to lose money.
• Use this component to your advantage. You are not Groupon. You are
not Living Social. Don’t try to be. Use your smaller than 100 million
person user base to your advantage. Use your flexibility to your
advantage. Tweak your “rates,” make it work for the business.
• Put primary energy into making the merchants happy.
8. Always work to use concrete statistics
and data to push your case.
• 80% who purchase daily deals are new customers (Rice)
• 40% average upsell or "lift" (Forbes)
• 65% of new customers return to the business (Lightspeed
Research)
• 77% of businesses will offer more than 1 daily deal (Merchant
Circle)
• More than 20% never gets redeemed (Rice)
10. Primary Benefits enjoyed by
Merchants who use Daily Deals
• 1. Influx of new Customers
• 2. Increased Brand Awareness
• 3. Ability to break into newer markets
• 4. Quick Cash Inflows
• 5. Ability to increase revenues in slower periods
11. Primary Benefits enjoyed by
Merchants who use Daily Deals
• 6. Upsell Opportunities
• 7. Cheap advertising solution/ Low customer acquisition
costs
• 8. Keeps business looking busy
• 9. Social media buzz
• 10. Word of Mouth advertising from Deal Users
12. Capitalize on the benefits and
work to remove & overcome
the complaints…
14. Primary complaints from
Merchants who use Daily Deals
• 6. Pushy Daily Deal Site Salespeople
• 7. Unmanageable Influx of Customers
• 8. Inability to capture customer information
• 9. Cannibalization of existing customer base
• 10. Difficulty in tracking loyalty of deal-users
15. Help businesses overcome low
customer loyalty…
• Thank the customer for their purchase and congratulate them.
• They were excited when they bought the deal and oftentimes, folks will get
buyer’s remorse; so it’s important to keep them excited and thankful that
they ordered. When the new customer leaves the business, ask to see
them again soon and give them incentives to come back. Send them off
with a “we want to see you again” pamphlet.
16. Help businesses overcome low
customer loyalty…
• Gather feedback and testimonials as early as possible.
• When someone publically states that they are pleased with a business,
they are much more likely to internalize this feeling and stand behind the
business at all costs. Encourage and most importantly incentivize new
customers to provide a review so that you can continually better your
business.
17. Help businesses overcome low
customer loyalty…
• Provide an excellent product and service.
• This is the most important factor. The number one reason why people
become a repeat customer is because their expectations were exceeded
and they were treated with respect, courtesy, and honesty.
• Serving someone who only paid 50% of your normal cost oftentimes can
feel like you are getting ripped off and make you subconsciously not
deliver as well as you normally would. The exact opposite needs to
happen. Blow expectations out of the water. Go out of the way to make
that new customer feel special. Ensure service is delivered at peak
performance.
18. Help businesses overcome low
customer loyalty…
• Offer upsells and one-time offers that make sense.
• I always like to discuss GoDaddy, the domain registrar, when speaking
about upsells. You visit GoDaddy to buy a domain name and expect to
pay around $10. Before all is said and done, GoDaddy has offered you
over $1200 of additional services to add to your order. The important
component is that each of the upsells that they offer actually makes
sense. What additional products or services would make sense for your
business to upsell a customer? After buying a hotel stay, it would make
sense to be upsold various activities to do surrounding the hotel,
transportation, or an upgraded room. The easier you can make the upsell
process, and the more complimentary the upsell is, the more likely folks
will buy your upsell.
19. Help businesses overcome low
customer loyalty…
• Follow up with the new customer.
• Communicate with your new customers. Be real with them. Provide
updates, coupons, announcements, and always work to reinforce value
and a reason to re-visit your business and bring friends with
them. Whenever communicating with a customer, offer something
extra. Don’t miss opportunities to remind people what’s new and good
about your business. Following up properly means that you need to
develop a customer database and use it often. Follow up via multiple
channels such as email, Facebook, text messages, Twitter, LinkedIn,
Pinterest, etc.
20. Help businesses overcome low
customer loyalty…
• Paint a picture of future purchases.
• Let your customers visualize what new purchases with your company will
be like. Remind them how much they enjoyed buying from you initially
and ask for them to purchase again. When you help a customer relive
their initial experience through pictures and videos, it compels them to
want to experience it again.
21. Help businesses overcome low
customer loyalty…
• Develop customer reward programs.
• Offering promotions that are only available to previous customers can help
grow and nurture loyalty and get those folks back in your door. You can
offer this via direct mail postcards, letters and phone calls, and many
online channels.
22. Help businesses overcome low
customer loyalty…
• Stand behind your business.
• Offering guarantees on your products and services forces you to always
strive to provide the most value and the best service. The best way to
capture a customer for life is to offer a refund when needed. Product
guarantees should be at the forefront of customer support
programs. Offering quality customer service and support goes directly
with this.
23. Common Merchant Related Questions
• Have your merchant materials always ready to give away.
Business cards, coozies, pamphlets, mission statement,
guerilla marketing, etc.
• Current percentages being charged to the merchants are
often times hurting the merchants. BE flexible. Strive to
please your merchants.
• Investigate local laws and standard local rates to find out
typical pay scale & / or commission for sales reps.
• Assemble Your "Street Teams“ and have them hit the ground
running.
24. Once you are in the door…
• Get Contracts signed.
• Negotiate price points. Typically, businesses offer 50%-90% off a
product or service on a daily deal. Please get creative.
• Coupon redemption. Have merchant print out voucher numbers and
empower employees to mark coupons as redeemed – either online or just
physical paper.
• Merchant follow up. Help merchant come up with a great plan to
squeeze visitors email addresses and work up a great follow up plan to get
them back in the door. (2nd tier potential)
• Request deliverables. High quality picture(s) of product or service,
original price points, and fine details that will help you formulate the best copy
for the merchant.
25.
26. Strategic Partners
• Find 3 strategic partners who have a list built up of your
target market.
• Search for folks successfully using an optin form with your keyword
credentials (search engines, LinkedIn, Facebook, Forums)
• You can also potentially work out blast or advertising arrangement with
merchants on your potential partner list.
• Looking for an email blast / blog post / advertising arrangement with
them.
• Affiliate percentage / future ad space / future email blast / what can you
do for them in exchange?
28. Search Engine Optimization & Traffic
• Guest contributing to high trafficked blogs.
• Use Virtual Assistants for lead generation, link-
building, and mundane tasks that waste your time.
• Use the HC Traffic Pro software and regularly
syndicate high quality content & media across the
web.
• Issue relevant and important press releases every
couple of weeks. Contact news sources.
29. If you are not yet a Daily Deal Builder
client, we invite you to join us and
launch a daily deal site by visiting:
dailydealbuilder.com/go
Thank you,
Marc Horne & Tyler Horne
support@hcdesk.com | 800-794-7192