Waiting for Your Cat to Bark?: Persuading Customers When They Ignore Marketing

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By: Bryan Eisenberg, Jeffrey Eisenberg and Lisa T. Davis
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EDITORIAL REVIEW



Good marketers know that customer-centered marketing is mandatory. However, we are not the customer. What the customer perceives as relevant is the thing successful marketers must anticipate, plan, and deliver on. Waiting for Your Cat to Bark?: Persuading Customers When They Ignore Marketing offers Persuasion Architecture, a proven Persona-based methodology. Persuasion Architecture enables marketers to anticipate different angles from which customers frame their questions and then coordinate messaging across multiple channels so that marketers can create predictive models of customer behavior. Don't miss out on learning about this six-sigma marketing approach that can skyrocket the effectiveness of your interactive marketing.



"There's some big thinking going on here-thinking you will need if you want to take your work to the next level. 'Typical, not average' is just one of the ideas inside that will change the way you think about marketing."-Seth Godin, Author, All Marketers Are Liars



"Are your clients coming to you armed with more product information than you or your sales team know? You need to read Waiting for Your Cat to Bark? to learn how people are buying in the post-Internet age so you can learn how to sell to them."-Tom Hopkins, Master Sales Trainer and Author, How to Master the Art of Selling



"These guys really 'get it.' In a world of know-it-all marketing hypesters, these guys realize that it takes work to persuade people who aren't listening. They've connected a lot of the pieces that we all already know-plus a lot that we don't. It's a rare approach that recognizes that the customer is in charge and must be encouraged and engaged on his/her own terms, not the sellers. Waiting for Your Cat to Bark? takes apart the persuasion process, breaks down the steps and gives practical ways to tailor your approaches to your varying real customers in the real world. This book is at a high level that marketers better hope their competitors will be too lazy to implement."-George Silverman, Author, The Secrets of Word of Mouth Marketing: How to Trigger Exponential Sales Through Runaway Word of Mouth



"We often hear that the current marketing model is broken-meaning the changes in customers, media, distribution, and even the flatness of the world make current practices no longer relevant. Yet few have offered a solution. This book recognizes the new reality in which we operate and provides a path for moving forward. The authors do an outstanding job of using metaphors to help make Persuasion Architecture clear and real-life examples to make it come alive. Finally, someone has offered direction for how to market in this new era where the customer is in control."-David J. Reibstein, William Stewart Woodside Professor, Wharton Business School of the University of Pennsylvania and former Executive Director, Marketing Science Institute



"If you want to learn persistence, get a cat. If you want to learn marketing, get this book. It's purrfect."-Jeffrey Gitomer, Author, The Little Red Book of Selling



"In 1999, the Wachowski brothers revolutionized moviemaking with stunning new angles and special effects revealed in The Matrix. Now the 'Eisenbrothers' have done the same for business in Waiting for Your Cat to Bark? Stunning new angles! Techniques that will be copied for decades. Cat is sure to be remembered as the genesis of an important new direction in marketing."-Roy H. Williams, New York Times Best-Selling Author, The Wizard of Ads Trilogy



"The Web is a democratizing force as the world's largest global brain. It educates everyone

PRODUCT DETAILS

Publisher: Thomas Nelson
Pub. Date: 13th June 2006
Catalog: Book
Media: Hardcover
Format: Bargain Price
Number Of Pages: 240

ABOUT THIS BOOK

USER REVIEWS

Smarter and impatient customers will not hang around!
~ Written on Jan 28, 2010. out of users found this review helpful.

People love to click things and they hate it when when they click does not aid them in getting what THEY want. In waiting for you cat to bark you will gain a deep isight into why traditional marketing just doesn't work anymore and what to do about it. The book is wittily constructed and I have drawn on it for my own book Stone Soup: The Secret Recipe for Making Something from Nothing because the authors articulation of how customers behave in these educated times is so well done.

Customers these days are educated and willful cats who will only play by their rules not yours. gone are the days of pavlov's dog where a message alone might stimulate action. Read Waiting for Your Cat to Bark especially if you have any form of mass market or internet based business.

Not so much shallow as incomplete
~ Written on Jan 13, 2010. out of 1 users found this review helpful.

There are a lot of good ideas in this book, but not many that you can really get a good hold on to actually use. Most of the ideas are taken from elsewhere: the main contribution of the authors is to tie them all together in their "Persuasion Architecture."
The main postive aspect of this book is to take these concepts, such as personas, wireframing and scenarios, and give an overview of them. On the flip side, they do a terrible job of explaining these concepts, exploring them in depth or in giving solid examples. For example, they do not manage to define "wireframing" in any useful way. Nor do they do better with their own concepts: "uncover," is poorly and confusingly described. In Chapter Nineteen, they introduce a "Complexogram," complete with drawing, but they do not explain what the quadrants are, what it measures, or how it is used.
Part of the problem is that the book meanders rather than reveals, and includes information that is marginally relevant to their process. The section on Myers-Briggs, for example, seems to be put in there just to use up space, since they use a different theory in their actual analysis.

Pros: Overview of some useful contemporary marketing concepts
Cons: Poor explanations, lack of depth, lack of actionable processes, light-weight analysis.

better off not making this purrrrrrchase
~ Written on Jun 16, 2009. 1 out of 2 users found this review helpful.

This book was recommended to me by a few different people, and also came with a lot of hype by some business writers. Unfortunately, I found nothing new in this book. I'm not sure why it was written other than to promote the marketing consulting work of the authors, but that in itself is not reason to write a book.

This book is a dog....you're much better off not making this purrrrrrchase. (Get it, I used both a reference to a dog and a cat in my review, because the authors think a clever title is really important to sell their book, which they are correct since their content wasn't clever in itself. I can be clever, too.)

Persona-Based Marketing Segments Your Customers
~ Written on Jan 1, 2009. 1 out of 1 users found this review helpful.

I've been a fan of the Eisenbergs for about eight or ten years, ever since Jeffrey started posting to the ISales Discussion List (now gone, unfortunately). All of their books are worthwhile. My spouse, Dina Friedman, uses "Persuasive Online Copywriting" to teach her business students at UMass. I've recommended "Call to Action" to quite a few folks. Their latest, with long-time collaborator Lisa T. Davis, has the intriguing title, "Waiting for Your Cat to Bark?"

While their previous work has focused especially on online persuasion, this book includes food for thought in both the virtual and physical marketing processes. Among my favorite points:
* Demographics are not nearly enough. They describe two women who live in the same New York apartment building, are within a few months in age, work in similar jobs--but have completely different motivations, and therefore need to approached very differently to engage in a buying pattern.
* When presenting a marketing message to people that you don't know and who don't know you, you need to reach them where they are in the buying process: the triggers that will draw a positive response from someone just beginning to gather information will be very different from the triggers for someone who has done extensive research, selected a brand and model, and wants to move forward. You want to "be there" for both of these folks, as well as everyone on the continuum between them.
* But it's not only demographics--it's also personality type: Approach a Methodical the same way you'd approach a Spontaneous, and you're almost guaranteed to fall flat on your face. But what's exciting for us marketing junkies is that it's not all that hard to craft selling copy that has trigger points for all four major personality types (the other two are Humanistic and Competitive).
* Companies as well as individuals have a psychographic profile, and even a relevant finding using the Myers-Briggs assessment tool (you probably took it in college).

Shel Horowitz's award-winning sixth book, Principled Profit: Marketing That Puts People First, demonstrates how to build a business around ethics, environmental sustainability, and cooperative practices--and how to develop marketing that highlights those advantages.

Waiting For The Content Of This Book
~ Written on Dec 24, 2008. 7 out of 8 users found this review helpful.

I'm going to be brief...this book is not worth your time UNTIL you've read everything else on the market.

There is so much 'blah blah' filler in this book it is aggravating. Not only is that wasting my time but it detracts from the main point. Towards the end (ie last 20 pages) they start to get into the meat which is decent, but by no means worth the praise these other 'reviews' have here.

I added quotes to the reviews term because by now you should surely know over half of these reviews are fake...friends of the author, publisher, etc. Do yourself a favor and look at a reviewers other reviews to verify they aren't some "in the pocket" reviewer.

That being said the most annoying thing about this book IS IT IS JUST A FANCY BROCHURE for their FutureNow inc company. Every other page they seem to talk about how great they are what they've created. Let's just say these guys have no problem blowing their horn and if you want to pay to listen to it...be my guest.

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