Do you know your customer and can you address their needs and desires?
Oh, and did you know people don't swim on the Oregon coast?
All this and more on today's BJP Live!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v-hiIjTYMb4
Transcription
Are you speaking your customers language?
Hi I'm Brian Pombo, welcome back to Brian J. Pombo Live.
Today I'm coming to you from the beaches of Bandon, Oregon. I'm here on the, on the little patio here, of the motel that we've got here just on the beach, the beach is right back there. I think because of the exposure, you can't quite see it, we're getting towards sundown right now.
Out here, you'll might be able to hear cars driving by or waves or a little bit of wind here and there. But it's a nice, relatively peaceful night.
But it reminds me my experience here reminds me a whole lot of my experiences in building campaigns and working with speaking to customers, or potential customers or clients through advertising, and through ongoing communication, via any form of marketing whatsoever.
We talked a lot about content marketing, well, sometimes content marketing isn't just for potential customers, sometimes it's for you know, your current customers and really be able to send them a direct message.
So this is a very interesting example.
So when I grew up, I grew up in Northern California. And the closest the closest beaches that everyone tended to go to, were right around Santa Cruz area.
There's Capitola, and Aptose, and all these areas around there. And that tended to be a pretty good beach location that everyone would go to, especially during, you know, in the middle of the summer.
When you think of a beach in terms of Northern California beach, that was I mean pretty cold water, but great sand, and still very much worth swimming in and surfing and, and just having an all out good time, you can spend all day at the beach.
As I got older started going to more Southern California, where the where the, the waters a little warmer, you can spend a little bit more time.
Then you start going to places like Hawaii, and some of these places where the water is actually warm, where there, there's literally warm water. And that just blows your mind if you're not used to it.
That's a completely different thing when you use the word beach. And Hawaiian beach is nothing like a beach in Northern California, you know, and then got a little bit older, and went to the Pacific Northwest up here in Oregon.
And you go to the beaches here and people don't go swimming in the water up here. It's still fabulous, it's a great vacation, it's a great place to go.
But it's a completely different vacation. beach here does not mean swimming and surfing unless you can serve if you've got a you know, a wetsuit, and, and you're very adventurous.
But you're not gonna see a whole lot of surfing going on out here in general, there's going to be a lot more people just walk in the beach, and sometimes you're walking the beach in a sweatshirt like this, or like today, you walk around and flip flops, shorts and, and a sweatshirt on top with a beanie or something to keep it keep you warm. And so that's that's how we hang out and beaches in Oregon. But it's not the same thing.
The exact same word for nearly the exact same location means at least 10 different things. Depending on where you're at in the world. I don't know,