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Five And Seven Are Incredibly Powerful Numbers For Marketers

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five, hands, star

In previous posts, I talked about the power of being first to a position as well as the power of three in marketing.

In this one, I’d like to extend the number sequence to 5 and 7. Why 5 and 7? They represent the number of elements that the average human brain can remember.

Five represents the low end and 7 the upper end of the range. This is probably why most people have a tough time remembering Santa's nine reindeer.

Five fingers and toes

Starting with five, it is the number of fingers and toes most humans have on each hand and foot. When we learn to count we realize this. When athletes celebrate, they sometimes share a high-five. Postal codes in the US have five numbers before a 4-digit extension that many do not use. After five primary grades that follow kindergarten, students graduate to middle school.

BCG model

The Boston Consulting Group developed a model that relates market share and profitability in a domestic market. The model says that companies that have a ≥20% share in a domestic market are almost always profitable, whereas companies that have ≤15% market share may or may not be profitable (it is hard to know).

If one were to divide 20% into 100%, that leaves room for five major players in a domestic market that are likely to be profitable. If you divide 15% into 100%, the number is between 6 and 7. Once again, there is room for 5 to 7 players in a domestic market, and those that have a ≥ 20% share of the market are likely to be profitable, and those with a 15% or smaller share of the market may or may not be profitable.

If you look at most pie charts that represent markets and you count the wedges, you will typically find 5 to 7 wedges, which is consistent with this model and with the number of things the average human can remember.

The Power of 7

Seven keeps coming up again and again in just about everything. It is a lucky number in many cultures, and in the USA, phone numbers have seven digits plus an area code. There are the seven wonders of the world, the seven dwarfs, seven continents, Shakespeare talked about seven ages of man, seven deadly sins, seven virtues, and seven is the optimum hours of sleep for humans. There is more, but I want to limit this “additional” list to seven.

7 fundamental building blocks of marketing

While many in marketing learn the 4P’s, that is not enough since it does not include three essential marketing ingredients – the marketing information system, corporate image, and positioning. Hence, I created the 7 Building Blocks model which includes the following.

  1. Marketing Information System strategies to research the market and to continuously collect, analyze, report, and act upon information from the marketplace.
  2. Corporate Image strategies to create, protect, and enhance the image of the organization.
  3. Positioning strategies that identify the target audience with an unfilled need and fill that need better than competitors with a unique and compelling image of the product.
  4. Product strategies that provide the goods and services that the target audience wants.
  5. Price strategies that offer the product at prices buyers are willing to pay and for which sellers are willing to sell.
  6. Distribution strategies that make it convenient for the target audience to find, buy and use the product.
  7. Promotion strategies that communicate the benefits of the product in such a compelling way to prompt a buying action.

Universal Marketing Structure

A model to help clients and students communicate more effectively is the Universal Marketing Structure, which also has seven main elements.

  1. Headline. Data shows that 83.3%, on average, only read and remember the headline of a communication. Therefore, it should contain (1) unique and important benefits, (2) a hook to interest the reader to take further action, (3) the name  of the company and product (unless the positioning strategy requires separation).
  2. Body text. The Body Text should provide more information and details for those that are interested to find out more about the product and company. Since only 16.7% get to this point, marketers should not rely on people reading the body text.
  3. Close. The Close should (1) Solicit a Buying Action, (2) Tie-in with the Headline, (3) End the communication, and (4) Contain a Marketing Information System code so the success of the communication can be measured.
  4. Photo and Graphic elements. The photo and graphic elements should help to communicate the main unique benefits, be visually compelling, show the product looking as good as possible, function as a size reference if necessary, help to break up the body text into “bite-sized” pieces, show before and after examples if appropriate.
  5. Format. The Format should make it easy for the busy or lazy members of the target audience to find and remember the main unique benefits of the communication without forcing them to read, listen to, or watch the entire communication.
  6. Signature. The Signature (which is comprised of the name, logo and slogan) should give identity to the communication and further the relationship between the target audience, the product, and the company so the prospect is comfortable buying.
  7. Everything else. Since people typically can remember up to 7 elements, all other important issues such as design, color, fonts, size, shapes, selling psychology, and putting “the WOW” into the communication should be considered here.

How you can apply the power of five and seven in your marketing

To help your target audience remember the things you want them to remember, you should follow a simple guideline – the fewer the better. In a previous post, I explained that three (or less) is optimal. If you need them to remember more, you can go up to between 5 and 7, but you should limit your communications to no more than seven. Too many communications don't. Hopefully, you will remember. Best of luck.

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