Did you know that mood and mode share the same root word?1
I point this out because you cannot take your customer where you want them to go until you first meet them where they are. And where they are is in one of two different moods, or modes of shopping: transactional mode and relational mode.
Each of us operates in both modes, but we tend to choose our mode according to the category. If the category in question is one which you (1.) have an interest, (2.) have no preferred provider, and (3.) are willing to spend time to save money, you will approach that purchase in transactional mode.
If the category in question is one which you (1.) have no interest, (2.) have a name in mind that you feel good about2, and (3.) are willing to spend money to save time, you will approach that purchase in relational mode.
A customer in relational mode
A customer in transactional mode
Relational customers are High CAP:
High Conversion
High Average Sale
High Profit Margin
Transactional customers are Low CAP:
Low Conversion
Low Average Sale
Low Profit Margin
When you target High CAP customers in Relational Mode, you face these dangers.
When you target Low CAP customers in Transactional Mode, you face these dangers:
The words you use in your ads send signals to your customers. Do your word choices appeal to customers in relational mode, or do they speak to customers in transactional mode?
Give it some thought, because it really is a big deal.
Roy H. Williams
1 Latin modus “measure, extent, quantity; proper measure, rhythm, song; a way, manner, fashion, style,” from a Proto-Indo-European root med “take appropriate measures.”
2 When you “feel good about a name,” it is because you have repeatedly heard good things about that company though advertising or word-of-mouth.
My friend Bill Bergh taught me about Transactional and Relational modes of decision making