This Episode: Making Deposits In The Emotional Bank Account
Are you making deposits in your customers’ emotional bank accounts? Every time you ask for something from a customer, it’s like making a withdrawal. That’s why it’s vital to balance it out with actions that add value, effectively making a deposit in their emotional bank account. Whether it’s sharing useful tips via email or creating engaging videos on the latest trends, these gestures go a long way.
By consistently providing value, you’ll find customers more willing to support your business when it counts. And speaking of adding value, Susan and I have something special planned for you. Join us for a virtual surprise birthday celebration on May 22nd. We’ll be live, sharing an incredible gift with all attendees. Click the button below to RSVP today!
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Hey. It’s Bob Negen. And in this episode of Real Retail TV, you will learn about the emotional bank account, one of the most important things that you need to consider when you’re planning out your marketing.
I first learned about the emotional bank account twenty, thirty years ago when I was reading Stephen Covey’s seven habits of highly effective people. And, Covey contends, and I agree, that for any relationship to be strong, there needs to be ten deposits for any withdrawal.
And while Covey was just talking about relationships in general, I immediately took his idea and applied it to my retail business. And so the emotional bank account holds true, with your community. It certainly holds true with your staff. You need to coach and praise ten times for every correction, every disciplinary action that you you have. But it especially holds true for marketing.
Because what we’re trying to do as marketers of independent retail businesses is we’re trying to get people to know us, like us, and trust us. We want them to feel really good about being our customers. We want them to be enthusiastic about their experiences, and we want them to tell their friends.
So when you understand this idea of the emotional bank account and you’re trying to build a strong relationship with your customers, you start to look at your marketing efforts through the lens of give or take, deposits or withdrawals.
And a deposit is anytime in your marketing that you give them something that is of value to them. If you send them an email that’s filled with a valuable tip, that is a give. Right? That’s a a deposit.
Let’s say you put a funny meme up on social media. That is a give. That is a deposit. Let’s say you, put really great information up on your website.
That’s a give. That’s a deposit. Let me give you a couple of examples.
Let’s say that you are in the women’s clothing fashion business and color trends came out. If you were to make a video about that and post it on your website, send it out in an email, post it on social media, that would be a gift. That would be a deposit.
If you were a bike store and you posted all of your favorite trails on your website, that would be a deposit.
Customers took a bike trip out west and sent you pictures that you posted on social media so that other people could live vicariously through this person who was out west. Those would all be gifts.
Anytime you ask a customer to do anything for you, that’s a withdrawal.
If you say I’m having a sale, come on in, that’s a withdrawal. If you’re having a a promotion and you’re saying, please come to my promotion, that’s a withdrawal.
So what we’re trying to do is we’re trying to proactively build the balance. Because just like a real bank account, the emotional bank account, the bigger your balance, the more you can withdraw. If you try to make too many withdrawals from a low balance, what happens? You bounce the check. But I see it happen all the time, and I’m sure you do too. Pitch, pitch, pitch, pitch, pitch, pitch, pitch, pitch, deal a day, deal a day, deal a day.
That’s not how we, as independent retailers, need to market our business. We are in the business of building relationships, and our marketing needs to reflect that desire to give way more than we get.
Givers get The emotional bank account and paying attention to the balance you have with your customers is one of the keys to your marketing success.