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Earlier this year, I traveled to
Keystone Resort in Colorado to participate in a 2-day
women’s snowboarding (and skiing) clinic known as "Betty
Fest." I
attended mainly for the purpose of challenging myself and
facing my fear
of turns that involve steering my body directly down a
slope on a well-waxed fiberglass plank.
While I did return home feeling like a true
“shred betty” in the sport’s vernacular, I also had
a bonus business inspiration: How might the high learning curve truths of the
snowsport industry translate into some useful nuggets for
marketers in general?
Now, I know that women and snowboarding, overall, may
not be a classic marketer’s case study.
But, bear with me.
There are a few lessons we can learn here.
The Confidence Factor
My first day of snowboarding reminded
me of my first day in kindergarten.
You know – that place where we all turned from
tentative tykes into confident children.
In order to educate us about so many new
concepts, our teachers had to create an environment that
was conducive to learning, allayed the fears of our young
brains and inspired us to try big-kid things (like
sharing).
Along those same lines, whatever the
new-to-your-industry female consumers might fear or see as
a difficult thing to learn or use, there must also be a
way to present the topic within a comfortable and
collaborative learning environment.
For example, some of the college-age women in the
snowboarding clinic I attended mentioned that they had
previously tried to learn the sport with the help of their
boyfriends. But, with the first big fall (or series of falls, as it
were), they had wanted to cry and felt so vulnerable that
they just bagged it and left the slopes for good.
Yet, they became much more confident
through the support and
encouragement of our group of all-ages, like-minded women.
Nothing like a few "you go girl" cheers to get
you off your bum and back at it.
The Snowsport “Marketing to
Women” Truths
I interviewed Yvonne Kidd, editor and publisher of the very
inspiring site, skilikeawoman.com, and Sue Greene, ski instructor and women’s program head at Keystone Resort, to learn
from their years of experience in the snowsport industry. Their
thoughts, along
with my interpretation of how they might be applied to
other industries, are as follows:
- When
women become moms, their fear factor increases because
they can’t afford to get hurt, and, in general, they
fall off the snowsport radar when they hit their
“family formation” years.
(How do the “mom” emotions change and
affect women’s perception of your product or
service? How
do you attract them again, once their kids get a
little older?)
- Females
clearly need different teaching techniques than men.
Keystone’s research found that “gaining
confidence and reducing fear” and “improving
style” were important reasons for women to take
lessons. (How women want to learn about your products
or services may differ greatly from the way men would
go about it, too).
- There
are a lot more single-parent households these days and
snowsports are too expensive for them. (How can your
product or service keep from being dropped off the
"to-buy" list when a household financial
situation changes?)
- Women
trust role models and instructors with whom they can
identify and relate.
Women
will be more likely to trust a female ski instructor
who has learned to master the mogul fields than a
young male coach, for example.
(Women
need to be able to identify themselves within your
marketing efforts and customer experience, or they'll
think less of your brand for it's lack of
understanding.)
- Encourage
women in your industry to serve as teachers, role
models, presenters, key customer service
representatives, and the like. (Just as female
snowsport
customers appreciate female instructors, so will your
women's market notice whether your management,
advisory board, sales and customer service staff
reflect female involvement, and, it may well affect
their purchasing behavior.)
High Learning Curve Issues
There
is often much more pre-purchase information to consider
for products or services offered from within “high
learning curve” industries like snowboarding, financial
services, or home improvement (or perhaps your industry).
It's just not as simple as buying toothpaste. The
following tips will help you focus your marketing messages
and product information to both tentative and confident
buyers, with an easy entry point for all:
§
Provide
a range of education. Offer a range of educational
materials that help progress customers through the basic
information stage and into more advanced topics.
§
Teach
related skills. Offer resources (online worksheets,
seminars, brochures, and one-on-one instruction) that
teach the “skills” to make a person more savvy in your
industry. Be the source for the “insider” secrets and
information that make a person a more sophisticated
consumer. For example, a nursery could offer topical
classes for both “New Gardeners” and “Master
Gardeners.”
§
Map
key information points. Consider what key information
customers tend to need prior to making a purchase
decision. Explore how your educational materials, sales
presentations and other resources could support this
natural learning progression.
§
Expand
online options. Web sites, email campaigns and other
online tools should be developed to accommodate and equip
both industry-tentative and industry-confident women. For
example, a website can provide low-tech (phone) and
hi-tech (real time chat) options for their online customer
service to serve women at both ends of the technology
spectrum. For email, that might mean something as simple
as making sure you deliver text email messages as well as
HTML.
Slope "Shredder’s"
Word of Mouth
While ski resorts with great
women’s programs exist (Keystone has had one for 10
years now), the word just isn’t getting out as quickly
as the industry had hoped.
Perhaps management hasn’t fully committed to the
women’s market potential or allocated the marketing
budget, which can often be the case.
But, the bottomline may come from
somewhere outside the typical corporate
marketing budget anyway, in a more grassroots form.
Why not consider engendering and equipping
word-of-mouth from the passionate female fans you’ve
already developed. (What
a concept!)
Of course, Keystone isn’t paying me
to tell all my friends how much fun I had.
But, who knows how far my word-of-mouth will
reverberate, or which of you readers is on the phone right
now
planning next winter’s trip there?
Women who have just experienced the
bounties of your service or program are intensely passionate, so get their testimonials and secure
permission to use them.
Do the same with photos of smiling participants (riding
in perfect form or covered in snow, but smiling, after a
mountain headplant), and more women will be able to
identify with the situation.
Utilize some homepage space to promote the program
or display those great images.
Or, hand out t-shirts (like my hot
pink Betty Fest treasure) or other promotional items, when
appropriate, to make the women who’ve overcome the high
learning curve feel like they’ve joined an exclusive
club of empowered women.
The word of mouth will roll on
without you. By effectively converting tentative women prospects into
confident consumers, you’ll raise the bar for your
industry, women will hear about it, and your company will
be the first place they go to learn something new.
Yvonne Kidd/Ski Like A
Woman:
http://www.skilikeawoman.com
Keystone Resort Women's Programs:
http://keystone.snow.com/info/sr.adult.womens.asp
While
doing my research for this month's article, I came across
a new series of action-sports clinics for girls and women
called Girls
Learn To Ride. A portion of the proceeds from
each event is donated to the Boarding
for Breast Cancer Fund, a non-profit with a great
tagline: "active lifestyles + early detection = best
prevention." Any of you looking for a good
cause tied to healthy lifestyles for young women?
I
also recently heard about a new magazine geared toward
women who aspire to "Thrive in the Wild" called Dandelion.
Haven't seen the first issue yet, but they were pretty
savvy to partner with the Title 9 Sports athletic apparel
catalog (www.title9sports.com) to distribute one free
issue - if I do say so myself.
Take care until next time,
Andrea
P.S. Yes! Write me with your ideas, comments, or questions
at: andrea@reachwomen.com
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