Don't know if this will be of any help, but until I can speak with any degree of experience in building guitars, you'll just have to settle for what little I can share on marketing.
The background - I was MD of an international marketing company for a while, only stopping when an opportunity with a salary too good to pass up presented itself at a time when I discovered I was expecting a second child. Slightly less steady money was more suited to my needs than sometimes greater, sometimes lesser dividends. Anyway back to the point.
During that time I was not only doing all the 'strategy' of marketing our own services, but also got invovled hands-on (out of choice) with 90% of our customers who came to us to market or sell their products to their percieved customer base.
There's a distinction which many people don't relise exists between 'Marketing' and 'Sales'. Many people tend to try to blend the two, and the results are never as satisfactory as when you realise that they are seperate processes with different objectives and different metrics for success.
In a nutshell - Marketing is all about getting an understanding of your market. Identifying who it is that will buy your products, then in this subset, identifying what it is they need. The final stage is identifying to these people how it is that your product(s) can meet this need.
Sales, on the other hand, is moving from this tacit understanding that you have something which your prospects need into a stage where your prospects reach into their pockets and place money on the table to satisfy their need.
It's important to understand the two different thought processes which go through your prospect's mind when they travel through this process, as if you taylor your actions to each in turn, you will get a lot more sales than if you try to jump through both hoops in one leap.
Now, this is particularly important for small companies (or luthiers). A company like Martin, Taylor, Takamine or any of the others who can make many many thousands of instruments can afford to introduce 'product lines' which are pretty much standardised, and be safe in the knowledge that given pretty much any dealer anyone who goes out to buy a guitar from will carry a selection of their instruments, there's a reasonable chance that they will hit upon a sale 'by chance'. That's all well and fine for a company of that size producing on that scale, but obviously, that's not the case for the samller company.
The samller company needs to a lot more astute in identifying their market, they can't really afford to have a huge selection of models and styles and go with a 'hope for the best' attitude (yes I know it's more complex than this, but to be honest, unless someone from martin or similar is likely to be looking at a post for large-scale marketing tips, I wont bore the rest of you all with the specifics). Instead they need to keep a close eye on the market they're selling in to. See what is making the money. There are several ways to do this. The first, and most simple, is to ask people. That's kind of what you do at guitar shows and the like. You speak to a lot of potential customers and gague what it is that's turning them on, find the features that are generating the 'buzz' and the ones which people are just ignoring.
Another way is to observe - that involves talking to each other. If Kevin Ryan told you was taking a lot of orders for his SJ type shape in a particular set of materials, and this was reflected in conversations with other builders, it would make sense to highlight this combination in your own website and adverts. You can't change a customer, you can only change yourself, after all.
Again, with guitar shows, you can learn not just from your own booth visitors, but see what other builders have done and what their visitors are talking about. If it were me there, I'd *definately* make a point of dropping questions like 'Great show this year - some amazing talent here, what have you seen in the other booths that's pressed your buttons?'
Ok so, I wont go on and on about marketing unless you guys really want more professional guidance which would be a lot more in-depth and cover a whole plethora of techniques (all the P's etc) which can help you better understand the market of custom-guitar buyers. I think you get the picture there. Find out what prospects as a 'whole' need, highlight your solutions to those needs in your public-facing areas, then talk more detail when you get a bite on the hook.
Marketing stops when you've got someone who feels they want what you offer. I often would tell my clients that marketing gets people to buy your product witout paying any money - you then move on to sales. In sales it's been said before and it's entirely correct, people buy people. If you have established a relationship of trust and people believe they have a need you can satiate, then it's only the relatively easy process of getting them to dig in their pockets which remains.
The key to sales is all about rapport. People are almost infinately more likely to buy something from someone they like than someone they dont. Bear in mind that by the time you get to this sales process, you've already got the sale in the bag so to speak. You've done your marketing to the person so you nkow that you offer something they feel that they need. Now the questions which are giong through their mind are all about how they can justify to their conscience buying your specific product from you and not buying the one which was slightly cheaper from the guy down the hall who didn't do quite such a good job of convincing them their need would be met, but may make the wife/husband back home happier. It's all a fairly complex balancing act of desire versus conscience.
So how do you tip that scale in your favour? Simple - understand the way these people are feeling and empathise. Again, there's plenty of ways to do this - I'll just offer two here for now to stop this post passing half a million words and sending all of you to sleep.
First is mirroring - very basic technique, and one which is not so well understood. Good mirroring is subtle, but very effective. In essense you're trying to copy certain elements of your customer's behaviour. The reason this works is all to do with evolutionary psychology. What you're doing is causing them to believe at a subconscious level that you are part of their 'family', or at least part of their social group. This plays on a very strong inherant feeling of trust which members of the same family or social group share implicitly.
When you are speaking to your prospect, listen to the speed at which they speak. If they spek thirteen to the dozen, speed up your rate of speaking to match slightly. Don't overdo it. You're not trying to do an impression of them, just make your natural voice a little more like theirs.
Similarly, if you find they use the expression 'noise box' instead of 'sound box', adopt the turn of phrase. It's not going to hurt so long as you both understand what you're referring to. Again, subtlety is key here. Don't ape every turn of phrase they use, just a few will do the trick.
Second tip would be the 'if...then' clauses. This one can be incredibly powerful.
So someone is saying - "I really like your OM, but I don't know if I can stretch to that price"
The thing to do here is establish what exactly is causing this reticence, so my question back would be "So what price could you stretch to?"
So they tell me "only $xxx"
You can then say "Ok, so what yo're saying is that IF I could make you an OM for $xxx, you'd buy it." Now you see, at this point they've got no choice but to agree, after all, what you're actually doing it repeating back to you something they've already told you.
Now you have a base price, and a tacit understanding of a purchase. Of course, likely as not you can't work to that price, so the trick then is to use a few other techniques to walk that price back up to a reasonable level for you, each time getting agreement from them at each stage. A lot of little 'Yes's are a lot easier to get than one big yes.
Again, I realise that I'm waffling here a little, and 90% of you are going to be bored by this encyclopaedic post. However, I do like to share knowledge when I can and it strikes me at least I have some relevant expereince here.
As I said before, if anyone is actually interested in learning more sales and marketing techniques, please don't hesitate to ask. I am practically a walking refernce book on this subject in much the same way running your own luthierie businesses has made this forum the definitive source of luthierie information on the web. :)
Ok sorry about the length of this post, I'll let you get back to your regular programming... :)
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