The other day a client of ours gifted me a Theragun Mini – a small, portable massage gun. I don’t think my client expected me to be quite as enthusiastic about the present as I was – see, I have a big Theragun, which I love (it works wonders on my sore muscles after a long workout). The Mini is not only a smaller and thus packable version – it also feels really nice in your hand, works just flawlessly, and is a joy to use overall.
In essence, it puts a smile on my face.
How many possessions do you have which put a genuine smile on your face? How many service interactions did you experience which left you grinning from ear to ear and full of gratitude?
I bet you, not many.
Have you ever seen the original Macintosh boot up? Instead of a wall of cryptic text, logging the inner workings of the computer as it boots, scrolling by, to then launch into a blinking cursor with a blank “C:>”, the Macintosh showed you a little icon with a stylized Mac and a big, friendly smile.
Why don’t more people put a smile on our faces? And maybe more importantly, why don’t more people even try to get you to smile with their products and services?
It is a massive missed opportunity. One you, my friend, can take on.
Make me smile. It’s good for business.
To put a new record on my Rega P2 to play always makes me smile and enjoy.
Love this one, Pascal! It's amazing how effective a little good-natured humor can be. I've found it really useful to to make an obviously silly/crazy suggestion in meeting where we've hit an apparent impasse. Without trivializing the issue, a little chuckle seems to unlock our imaginations.