Registration of a UK private limited company creates a flurry of thoughts about PR, an experience of the CountingUP challenger bank, and an unexpected opportunity with HSBC.
HSBC, like all banks I imagine, has a backlog due to the Bounceback loan, 110,000 applications in a matter of weeks. My experience of getting a bounceback loan from HSBC was brilliant - quick & efficient. I was impressed.
As I went to register a new company bank account I received a letter from challenger Bank + App Counting Up. This prompted me to think about what makes customers switch providers and what role PR can play.
Listen to what Hermann Simon, considered by many to be the father of modern pricing theory and author of ‘Confessions of a pricing man’ says about value and secondary value.
In his words lie the PR challenges that companies of all sizes face, and also the answers to how you can market goods with higher prices and have your customers loving you for it.
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Read the article version of this episode - https://theunnoticed.cc/episode/why-the-worlds-global-local-bank-called-me-for-pr-and-how-confessions-of-a-pricing-man-can-make-news
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EASTWEST Public Relations Group was founded in Singapore in 1995 and has a company in China and the UK. Jim James is an award-winning British entrepreneur who has spent the past 25 years building businesses using PR, whilst running a multi-office Agency serving over 500 clients.
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Hello, and welcome to today's episode of The speak PR podcast. My name is Jim James, and I am your host today. So I'd like to talk to you today about second value pricing. doesn't sound very exciting, does it? But it's something that came to mind to me today because I registered East West public relations as a limited company on Monday and on Tuesday I got confirmation from from Companies House, and I'm pretty excited about it. To be honest, I'm 25 years after I registered my first company in Asia. I've registered my my company here in the UK moving from sole proprietor to Private Limited. So I rang up HSBC, because I bank with them all over the world and have an account already. When I said I want to convert this to a private limited data He said to me that that was going to require opening a new bank account. Now I have to confess I'm a bit disappointed about that I was hoping that I would be able to commute one to the other. So I had a very nice chat with Dr. Men on the phone because I was trying to navigate to the forms and and I asked how long it would take. And he said, I'm actually Sir, I don't know because we've had a backlog of people working that used to be on the new account openings now working on the bounce back loans. Now, Rishi sunette has obviously done a great job. Many companies, including my own have applied for this bounce back loan. And it's a saving grace. HSBC alone had 110,000 applications. And as the young man said, this is over six years worth of requests in the space of about Six weeks. So the team are massively behind. And I said oh well, actually we've we've applied and the bounce back loan was approved within five days and the money was in my account. I think you guys did a great job. He said, Oh, you know, that is so nice. Thank you so much for letting me know. And do you mind if I tell my my team and I set up happy for you to tell your team because it's good news and they've done a good job and I appreciate it. So I thought you know, nothing of it. Then today. I received a letter from what I thought was company's house, but I opened it it was from a company called counting up. Now I opened the letter and it says, congratulations, Adrian on starting a company on your own which can be a challenge. counting up makes it simple. Open your free business account in just five minutes scan the QR see on your phone and the data Download the app and follow the setup signs. And I will have a an account number and sort code and a MasterCard. Now this letter says it's entrepreneurs like me that power our economy. And I agree with that. I says we like you we got fed up with the month long wait open High Street bank account with their lengthy application forms. Now. I have to say, I'm both impressed and slightly bemused how within 48 hours of actually opening a company and going to Companies House. This letter is in my, in my, in my house. So one question is, from a PR point of view, is it good to get such a personal email so quickly? Is it is it efficiency or slightly eerie? Well, I decided, of course that I would have looked at the website. And because I haven't heard of counting up and I haven't seen it in any other press about banks. On the website, there is a narrative about the founders who went to school together and started this bank not that long ago in 2018, but there's no no press coverage. There's a blog, and apparently an astounding 20,000 customers qualifying for the free account or up to a nine pound 99 a month. So, it calls itself the accounting bank because it counts and combines banking and accounting for business. And the the inevitable because it's a great idea I never to be went online and checked things like trustpilot and I found one one piece of coverage, saying that counting up isn't officially a bank, so your deposits won't enjoy the standard 85,000 pound protection that comes with the FS Cs the financial services compensation scheme. Now. So I was interested in the free, I was interested in the quick, I'm interested in integrating my banking with my online accounting. So that would save me doing a direct feed from my zero account to my HSBC and back again. And so I could save a whole step. So from a PR point of view, I have thought that's a great proposition. But there isn't a lot of supporting evidence online, to make me feel comfortable and particularly happy about taking that step. So I'm influenced here by the cascade theory of what which I've mentioned before in our blog on how Captain Tom became a global sensation and the cascade theory of what and other people including An artist shows that the the importance of influencing people to get viral PR is to reach out to people who are easily influenced because it's through these people that you can get great PR now counting up I've got a lovely narrative on their website and the the issue though for me is that I don't see the the conversations online creating for me a cascade that's reassuring me about what I should do with my money. Of course one of the things that I look at when I'm looking at the anything is priced and so I have decided to record a video on my website. And I have included on there an explanation of why we're now publishing our prices online. Now most professional services firms issue putting their pricing online because they you know, let's have a conversation because you know, you Don't buy on price you buy us a service providers. But we recently lost a piece of business in Singapore. And I asked the company always why we win and also why we lose. And this official business organisation in Singapore, they kindly wrote back to me saying that actually, all the proposals met the requirements are which makes sense because all agencies meet the brief otherwise they wouldn't be there. But the other agencies had been more competitive on price and added in more things that were going to be part of the package deal. Now, agencies like mine, we all spend time and money building these proposals for clients and trying to differentiate but we also have to compete on price. Now. I decided that what I'm going to do and have done is I've published my fees online because actually People need to decide fairly early on, if they can afford the services I'm offering or like counting up, do you want to pay nine pounds 95 for your banking integrated with your with your finance app? Because as Herman Simon says, Here is the considered to be the father of modern pricing, the ultimately the consumer or the customer is only willing to pay for the value that he or she gets. So if I look at counting up and I say for nine pounds 95, am I getting value? Quite probably. If people look at my website, and they say, am I getting value from this agency, then I have to hope that they say pipe quite possibly. Now what we know is that this customer in Singapore that used to be a customer then moved away from us and purchased based on price last year, and we're unhappy in fact with the lower cost provider. The went for, because what they found was, as is often the case, you get what you pay for. Now, what Herman Simon goes on to say and I can recommend his book, it's called author of it's the book is called Confessions of a pricing man, price affects everything. Not only does he say that ultimately customers will need to pay for the value he or she gets, but he goes on to say that the only fundamental driver of willingness to pay is the perceived value in the eyes of the customer. The important word there is the perceived and often in public relations, we talk about perception management, that used to be a phrase that I believe Edelman or someone like that coined. So the perceived value of your business and your offering is really what people are going to pay for. Now. Herman goes on to create or to give an illustration and he talks about what he calls the second The effect and this is something that in public relations, we almost never talk about an order in advertising we go for the primary order effect, which is the if you buy this, what do you get out of it? The secondary order effect is much more powerful. And he brings the case of the air conditioner that was being sold for trucks. And there was a company making premium quality air conditioners. And they were losing market share to the companies that were making low cost air conditioning units. So they commissioned a survey. And what they found when they did the survey from the buyers of these air conditioners, the expensive trucks were buying the expensive air conditioners and what they found was the real value was the reduced number of sick days of the drivers due to fatigue in the heated cabins. So the point Air Conditioning was basically reducing the quality of the environment for the drivers. They were then able to drive less distance and they were taking more sick days. So the proposition for that air conditioning company became not by us because we're low price and we can compete but by us because actually, the performance of our components are higher, it costs more to buy, because it's better quality. And that will keep your your drivers healthier, because there will be less downtime on the air conditioning. So it's the secondary order effect. That became the marketing message. So let's think about let's think about your PR. And when you're talking about the primary order effect for your business, often in PR people look for an agency and they say, I want to get noticed and how much does that cost? Now that's normally the primary order. The secondary order is that they want to get a new contract or they want to look good or they want to get something else. And this is what Paul's done. of the B one g one talks about, which I mentioned in earlier podcast is the so that question as you're looking at your marketing and your PR, if you have issues with your product in terms of marketing, can you extend the value by saying we provide this quality this value so that you can do this? Now, today I spent three hours making a video of the speak PR programme. And the speak PR programme is a five stage methodology that I've developed for entrepreneurs and business owners to be able to manage their own PR because they may or may not be to afford it. agency when I went to make the video today, I wanted what's the perception of value that I am giving when I do my promotion and when I make my video so I've invested in a high definition camera, I've invested in rode the brand new rode wireless microphones said that the sound quality is perfect. I have a road desktop for here I have the best map pro that I can afford. Because the lighting the sound, all add value to the to my presentation. And I would like my my audience and my potential customers to see that. If I pay this much attention to what I am delivering and how I delivered, I would deliver that much value to them. The secondary realise that their business would then improve their career would then improve. So the importance of lighting sound. And I also took a tip from Brian Hill, who I mentioned on the podcast earlier, was about the importance of hands. So I took the camera back, and I made sure that I'm filming my hands as well. So that it's not just a talking head. It's also about my whole body. Because if it's true that our hands send the most messages, then if I'm, if I'm giving a presentation, then not only are my slides important in my voice important, and the lighting, but also that people can see me gesturing now Meanwhile, and the Walter was busy working at the progress shared, and he said the biggest challenge that they have with with Clients is the lack of ambition. Now, as we've seen, ambition is, is a good thing. And if we look at the counting up website, there's a narrative about the ambition. And it's very compelling that Tim for acre and his high school friend, that computer science classmate, Mike moat, they have the ambition to build something bigger and greater than what currently exists. The problem is that it's not just the 995 and integrating my banking with my accounting software. It's the secondary order value that matters. Because looking after my money, looking after my accounting is only part of a much bigger picture. It's part of running my business too. So the absence of other people telling me that they're doing Already, with counting up, makes me a bit nervous. Now on my way home driving back from the three hours of filming of the speak PR programme, HSBC rang me and they said, Mr. James, thank you so much for your compliments today to the call centre. We we were wondering if you'd be willing to give a testimonial if you'd be willing to talk to our PR agency grayling as a as a bounce back loan recipient that was applied for and deliver through HSBC? Well, of course, I'm in PR, I can see the value of PR both for myself and for HSBC. I'm not embarrassed about taking the bounce back loan because I think it's a very prudent thing to do from a business perspective. And if I can have, you know, an opportunity and audience with HSBC and East West public relations being seen Together, then obviously, that's potentially good PR for me and plainly, you know, they must be desperate, but they're obviously thinking it might well be good PR for them too. And I have an interesting story because I've been overseas for 25 years, and I've come back and the timing of this was all, it was a bit of a challenge. So the the HSBC speed of solution has been really very beneficial. So there's a narrative that I'm weaving in, and I mentioned to the lady from HSBC, that I'd be happy to share. So the secondary order value of working with a bank like HSBC, is the reassurance that my funds are going to be safe, the continuity of where my business currently resides, but also the halo effect that can come with a large brand as you plan your PR and you manage your community. occasions, maybe look at what's right about a bank like counting up terms of the offer, but maybe look at what is the challenge for a company like counting up when it comes to overcoming how they're communicating the secondary order value. I recommend him in Simon's book, he says price affects everything. And it's not just the price. It's how willing are we to pay for the value that we get? But most importantly, as an entrepreneur or a business owner? How are you communicating the value that you're bringing to the company and the company's bringing to your customer, or to your consumer? Thank you for listening to this episode of speak PR. I pray that you're safe, that your business is profitable, and that you keep on communicating. Thank you. My name is Jim James.

