Over ten thousand visitors gathered for the wildly popular “Make Music
Pasadena.”
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On Wednesday
August 17, at our OPMD first Marketing Committee meeting after measuring the success of “Make Music Pasadena,” we held an informal roundtable on the most effective ways
to attract and retain customers. As the head of Marketing, I was specifically interested in how OPMD’s
efforts were making the merchant's efforts easier. But we didn’t exactly ask that question.
Thank goodness.
We asked, “What has
worked best to attract and retain customers for your business?” The
overwhelming answer was “Customer Service.” All the merchants around the table
agreed. Everyone was eager to share what had worked, and, even more
emphatically, what had not worked for them in their own businesses. This
promised to be much more interesting that what we had originally intended, so we listened and learned.
“Paying attention
to the little things,” was a common theme shared by business owners and
managers from the diverse group at the table from The Melting Pot restaurant,
Lula Mae boutique gift shop, Vertical Wine Bistro, Le Grand Orange Café and the
One Colorado development. Another common theme was rewarding locals, residents
and employees alike who spend time in Old Pasadena. The more personal the
approach, the better.
On the other hand,
impersonal discount aggregators such as Groupon were roundly dismissed.
Customers who came in to use their Groupon discounts were almost never seen
again. To make matters worse, the merchants only received 25% of the value of
the service or merchandise and the 8 ½ x 11 computer print-out coupons were
perceived as tacky and awkward to use. According to Online
Media Daily, we weren’t the only people to notice.
Personal coupons,
and targeted neighborhood discounts such as Lula Mae’s “Lula Bucks,” Le Grand
Orange’s Monday and Tuesday Neighborhood Nights, Vertical Wine Bistro’s Burger
Night Thursday and Melting Pot’s Rewards Program paid off consistently with a
wealth of return customers. And unlike Groupon customers, local customers taking part in local restaurants' promotions tipped their waiters.
When we finally
asked our merchants if the OPMD events helped them, they were effusive with their praise.
“Make Music Pasadena,” “Pasadena Restaurant Week,” “Summer Film Festival”
“Happy Hour Week” and our “Art Night” entertainment had all positively affected
business. Everyone was excited about the “Locals Only Thursday”
promotion running in September and October. In fact over 50 Old Pasadena businesses
have signed on to be a part of it.
Personal touch.
Customer Service. Catering to friends and neighbors. As much as we at OPMD
would like to believe that we are the driving force in Old Pasadena business,
apparently doing good business is still what does businesses the most good.
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