Online Product Launches: Target Your Four Audience Types
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Title: Online Product Launches: Target Your Four Audience Types
Word Count: 955
Author: Stephanie Diamond
Email: sfdiamond@gmail.com
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Online Product Launches: Target Your Four Audience Types
Copyright 2005 Digital Media Works, Inc.
Introduction
Online product launches have lots of moving parts. Many
different departments have a hand in getting to the finish
line with a winning product. If you are managing this type
of launch, there are a variety of ways to plan strategy and
set goals. One way is to target your four main audience
types. Using this method, you won’t risk missing the big
target—making it easy for your customers to buy your
products.
Making your plan “customer-centric” allows you to focus on
what matters and makes it easier to revise as you progress.
You can determine which groups need more attention and
which groups are performing well.
Audience Type One —“Self-directed”
This is the easiest type to satisfy. This person is an
“early adopter” or someone with a defined need. For
example, they have determined they need a “defragmentation”
software utility. They have read some online articles,
made a decision and want to go directly to the website to
buy. To satisfy this type’s needs you must have a clearly
defined buying process with quick check out.
Areas to target:
Online Store—Make sure you have a clear, well-run shopping
cart in place. Make it easy for him to buy his product and
leave satisfied.
Customer Service—Have an e-mail confirmation process in
place that makes it clear that a product was purchased and
a credit card (or other mechanism) was charged.
Offer testing—Begin with a special offer that can be
tracked online. Make sure to tweak it during the launch
period as you see results come in.
Audience Type Two— “Tester”
Satisfying this type is very straightforward. This is a
person who wants to get his hands on the “trial version”
for a test drive. If you are a software vendor this is
easy. If you are a consumer electronics vendor or sell a
service, you must determine a way to give your “tester” a
chance to try it.
With services you can offer a free “one-time” offer. As an
electronics vendor you must be more careful. You might
have a “tester” masquerading as a buyer who will quickly
buy the product to test it and just as quickly return it.
Be fair with your return policies, but be clear that a
sub-set of this group is going to return products no matter
what you do.
Areas to target:
Downloadable software —this area needs to be operable from
the day of product launch. I have seen companies postpone
providing a trial until other areas are in place. You miss
a big opportunity if you allow that. Some testers will
show up on day one never to return.
Free limited offer—if you are a service provider, have this
in place and expect people to try it. If you need to
assign resources to it, do so. Nothing is worse than
having an online message say “check back with us later…”
They won’t.
Audience Type Three —“Fact-Checker”
You may notice we are moving to the harder audience types.
You knew they were coming. The “fact checker” is a
cautious person who weighs information very carefully and
doesn’t buy until every question is answered. This is the
person that websites were made for. If you provide a
variety of different information formats, e.g. audio,
video, PDFs, etc. it makes it more likely that this type
will find what he’s looking for and make a purchase.
Areas to target:
Multimedia Product Movies—I call these “Digimovies
(sm).”They are generally done in Flash, are no more that
three minutes in length and they provide the most “bang for
your buck.” Feature these prominently as little
infomercials wherever you want to alert your audience to
top features and benefits of the product.
Written Information—these are the most common type of
information available on new products. Provide free
articles, links to online reviews, White papers, online
brochures, anything the fact-checker can study at his
leisure.
Webinars and Tele-seminars—these are relatively new
formats, ideal for the fact checker. A Webinars allows you
to invite website visitors to an online presentation about
your new product. She can view your presentation and ask
questions via a messaging facility. If you can’t afford a
Webinars, consider a tele-seminar that allows your audience
to join a phone-conference setup to discuss the merits of
your product.
Audience Type Four—“Mr./Ms. Remorseful”
We all know and dread this audience type. This is the
person who buys on impulse, repents at leisure and obsesses
about returning the product as soon as he gets it.
Obviously, the goal here is to overcome his feeling of
being “duped” and make him feel that buying the product or
service was a good idea after all. Believe it or not, you
have more control over this than you realize. You need to
quickly contact him and reinforce his reasons for buying.
Areas to Target:
Monthly newsletter—you should have a product newsletter
(that is track able) ready as an auto-responder after
product purchase and/or registration. In this newsletter
you should have links to:
1. Step by step tutorials that are easy to follow and get
her started using the product. Don’t count on her finding
the area herself; she’s too busy regretting her purchase.
2. Community—Provide an area that brings users together to
discuss the product and share information. This idea is as
old as the Internet and is often overlooked.
3. Online help—make it clear that help exists and can be
found online. This can be in the form of FAQs, a knowledge
database and links to other helpful resources.
About the Author:
A seasoned 25+ year management/marketing professional,
founder Stephanie Diamond is experienced in building
profits in a broad range of product and services
businesses. She created a highly successful line of
multimedia software products that sold millions of copies
for America Online, and has developed unique business
strategies and products for a variety of companies,
including AOL Time Warner, Redgate New Media and Newsweek,
Inc.
Visit her website at www.DigMediaWorks.com
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