Thai Food and eMail Marketing In The Offline World

I really like Thai food and Mexican food.  This is a story about both.

I look to some people to learn about internet marketing, and I look to others to learn about internet business.  It's not that internet marketing gurus are not good at teaching internet business and vice versa, it's just that everyone is great at something, and it makes sense to learn from the best people in every area.

Jason van Orden is one of my favorite internet business guys.  One thing I will never forget is a tale that Jason tells about a friend of his that ended up on the wrong end of an investment joint venture.  The guy had a successful business, but after the deal went bad, he no longer owned the business.  In fact, he was forced out.  He lost everything over night.

Well, not everything.  As it happens, the guy had his email list.  He was able to contact his loyal customers, explain the situation, offer value to them (as he always had in the past), and rebuild his business quickly.  When people say "the money is in the list," I think they have it wrong.  The value is in the list.

What About Thai Food

Well, I was eating Thai food the other day and was talking to Ann, the owner (I cannot even say her Thai name - it is beautiful, but I am a native Texan with limited language skills).  Anyway, she had recently tried to sell the restaurant.  When this happened (months earlier) I was sad because I had been eating there for years and the new owners were just terrible.

In fact, the new owners were so bad that they ran off all of the old customers (10 years worth of loyal customers) in a matter of weeks.  On top of that, they apparently did not pay Ann for the restaurant and walked away from the deal after selling a lot of the tables, chairs and kitchen supplies.  Ann was left with a gutted restaurant and few customers.  When I was in there, the place was a ghost town.

What Ann needed was an email list.  If she had been asking for emails for the last ten years, she would have thousands of loyal customers on her list.  Just a simple monthly coupon is all a restaurant needs to maintain a list and drive foot traffic.  Using Aweber, this costs about $20/month.  You don't even need a web site (although I recommend one). 

Ann could have simply sent an email to her list explaining about the Grand Re-Opening and how happy she was to have the resturaunt back. She would have been flooded with customers (me among them). But she did not do any of that list building, so now she has to start all over again building a new customer base.  Ten years of work gone!  It's a very sad story.  Are you like Ann?  Do you have a site without an opt-in?

Then, There Is Mexican Food

I also like Mexican food, and I eat at my favorite neighborhood place as often as I can.  I know the owner there too (Kevin).  Every time I eat there, Kevin catches me up on the progress they are making on their new location.  The new place will be much nicer and will bring more traffic to the business because of a better location.  They are moving in August, and I am a little bummed because it will be further from my house.  Not too far, but definately farther.

I love this particular place, and I like the owners.  So, I asked Kevin when the Grand Opening would be.  I want to eat there on the first day -- to be part of his success.  He said -- we are not sure yet, but we will notify the mailing list as soon as we know!

I am already on the list.  I love it.  I get coupons and drink specials from him about twice a month.  It's just enough to remind me that he is there -- or to offer me free queso with my fajitas or what ever.  See the difference -- Ann just about lost her business and Kevin is able to move his.  All because of email marketing.

Two Lessons For You

Lesson 1:  You better have opt-ins on all of your sites.

Lesson 2: You can probably sell Aweber to people like Ann.  They need you, and you can help them.

I don't really do this because I have a day job -- but you could.  How?  Simple.  Create a page on your site describing how email marketing can help offline business.  Offer consulting, setup, and whatever else you are comfortable with.  Create a 1 page flier with the same information.  A business card would be nice too.

Then, go eat (I am reall good at the eating part).

You to waiter: This place is great!  Is the manager around?  I'd like to compliment him on your service today.

Waiter: I'll be right back!

You to Manager: I just want to tell you that I love this restaurant, and we had great service from Jimmy.

Manager: Thanks, we appreciate your business.

You: Do you guys have a mailing list that I can sign up on so I can remember to come back here.  This was great.

Manager: No, I am sorry.  We don't do email.

You: You're kidding.  You could really get your numbers up with some email marketing.  If you ever want to consider it, give me a call.  I do that sort of thing for a living.  Customers love it.  Here is my card.

Manager: Thanks.  I'll think about it.

You get the idea.

One last thing.  If you want to know what to do with your list after you start it, I recommend Josh Spaulding's email marketing guide called New Age Email Marketing.  It is excellent.

Have a great day,

Mark

So tell me what you think? Got an opinion about this topic that you would like to share? Be sure to leave a comment below -- I do my best to respond to each and every comment.

Best regards, Mark Mason P.S. -- If you like this article and would like to be notified about future posts, please take a moment to sign up for my internet marketing newsletter using the form in the right sidebar. This will also give you instant access to my free membership download area.
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15 Responses to “Thai Food and eMail Marketing In The Offline World”

  1. Brenda Nicholson says:

    Great article Mark! Good thing I just ate, or I’d be hungry right now.

    Seriously, I have a friend who owns a bar and needs to hear this. I think I’m going to take your idea and run with it. Thanks!

    • Mark Mason
      Twitter: masonworld
      (566 comments.)
      says:

      Thanks, Brenda — if it’s a friend, then you can just sign him up to Aweber under your affiliate ID and call it a day. Bars are great for this because of drink specials and live entertainment announcements.

  2. stewkelly says:

    Hi Mark,
    I had another take away from your article too. That is be really careful who you do business with. Check them out top to bottom, do a credit check, get references, etc., and do your best to avoid the people that might burn you.
    Stew

    • Mark Mason
      Twitter: masonworld
      (566 comments.)
      says:

      I think you are spot-on Stew. Hard for me to imagine how you do a deal like this without getting the money up front. I feel bad for her — I hope she can turn it around. She is a really nice lady with a great product. She needs customers.

  3. Online Coupon Codes (1 comments.) says:

    Great article! While I was reading this I thought of several local businesses that should be taking advantage of this idea. Places like hair and nail salons, quick lube shops ect. would be good candidates too.

    • Mark Mason
      Twitter: masonworld
      (566 comments.)
      says:

      Thanks — I agree. You can think like this every time you buy something. And it’s an easy “cold call” too — “can I sign up on your mailing list?” You don’t have one? You are kidding. Here — take my card. Boom.

  4. Walt (1 comments.) says:

    Superb idea and post. Five kudos for you.

    So, thoughts about how the business owners should get people to submit their email addresses? Flyers in the menus? I know Home Depot, and I think Lowes, has a website listed on their receipts where you can take a survey for prizes, and they trap email addresses that way. (Hmmm, that’s a thought. You could probably offer that kind of functionality to business owners as well – handle everything for them). Any other ideas?

    • Mark Mason
      Twitter: masonworld
      (566 comments.)
      says:

      The three things that occur to me (and are easy to implement):

      1. Sign up to get coupons
      2. Take survey to get coupons
      3. We give away a free dinner for two once a month

      You can also just ask. I like being on the mexican food’s email list. They send me free stuff. I forward them to my wife with an invitation to get a sitter or whatever.

  5. Preben (6 comments.) says:

    Lovely post Mark!
    I’m starting in the offline niche on June 1.st, and I’m really looking forward to it.

    I REALLY like the opener. “Great food! – Can I sign up for your mailing list?”.

    This opens up for making back the entire meal after you’ve eaten it, and actually MAKE MONEY by doing so.

    One thing though… I’m from Norway, with Norwegian clients. Do you know any autoresponder with better support for other languages? Or spesifically Norwegian?

    Thanks,
    – Preben

  6. Don Davis says:

    Mark- I love your story about the restaurant owners. It clearly illustrates the need for a mailing list. I see that you, like myself also have trouble spelling restaurant. I almost never get it right!
    Thanks for the blog post.

    -Don :)

  7. B Simple says:

    Mark, Great stories. Your totally correct. That is one thing I have not done and I believe have missed out on several opportunities. I will try to have one up and running soon.

  8. Mark Mason
    Twitter: masonworld
    (566 comments.)
    says:

    @Preben — Sorry, I really don’t. It’s a great question, but I have never had a need to investigate that.

  9. Normal Joe (8 comments.) says:

    Yeah son! great story, great lesson, thanks for the kick in the butt!

    sometimes we forget how much we know that can help local biz folks.

  10. Mikael @ RetireRichRoadmap (15 comments.) says:

    @Preben, I’m from Denmark and I know that we have several Danish options for autoresponders (I prefer Aweber though) so I’m sure you have as well if you do a little searching.

    /Mikael

  11. [...] King and others – Check out Mason’s blogpost here if you want an actionable, easy business plan: Thai Food and eMail Marketing In The Offline World | MasonWorld Internet Marketing Strategy | Mark M… It’s really one of the easiest business models out there, and I bet it works like a charm, as [...]

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