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Just Ask a Woman: Cracking the Code of What Women Want and How They Buy
 
 

Just Ask a Woman: Cracking the Code of What Women Want and How They Buy [Kindle Edition]

Mary Lou Quinlan
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Product Description

An enlightening blueprint of the secrets of reaching female consumers from the expert

Just Ask a Woman is a powerful book about how to tap into female consumers' needs. Mary Quinlan, the founder of the premiere consultancy dedicated to marketing to women, has personally interviewed 3,000 women in the course of her research for Just Ask a Woman. Women are the decision-makers in an estimated eighty-five percent of household buying decisions, and yet far too often, products marketed specifically to them fail to connect with their needs. Here, Quinlan explores topics such as how women judge brands and advertising, how they make decisions, the effects of stress on their consumer behavior, and their increasing demands for service and communication. Quinlan rejects the traditional focus group approach in favor of highly energized and intimate talk sessions where women reveal their deeper feelings about products and services. In Just Ask a Woman marketers, brand managers, and advertisers will find a revelatory resource filled with ideas and action steps for building your brand with women-from a woman who has walked in a marketer's shoes.

Mary Lou Quinlan (New York, NY) is the founder and CEO of Just Ask a Woman, a marketing consultancy dedicated to building business with women. Just Ask a Woman is a division of bcom3, a $15 billion global communications firm whose clients include Citigroup/Women & Co., Lifetime, Saks, Hearst Magazines, Toys "R" Us, and Time Inc. Known as a brand-turnaround expert, she has helped to remake brands like Avon and Continental Airlines. Quinlan has been quoted in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Fortune, Fast Company and Advertising Age and appeared on ABC, CNN, CNBC, Lifetime LIVE, Fox and nationally syndicated news shows. Her articles have been published in Marie Claire, Good Housekeeping, Redbook, and More, among others.

From the Inside Flap

"Mary Lou Quinlan’s Just Ask a Woman is a fascinating and important study not only for marketers, advertisers, and brand managers, but for the general public. The big message of this book is: Understand the woman you want to reach or she will align herself with someone who does. Here is a terrific guide to achieving that understanding that should be required reading for any business manager."
–Sharon P. Smith, Dean, School of Business Fordham University

In Just Ask a Woman, top marketing consultant Mary Lou Quinlan shows marketers and business leaders how to tap into America’s most powerful consumers: women. Although they comprise just over half of the U.S. population, women buy or influence the purchase of eighty–five percent of all products and services sold nationwide. Yet, far too often, products marketed specifically to women fail to address their needs or connect with them on an emotional and motivational level. Just Ask a Woman will tell you why.

The founder and CEO of the premier consultancy dedicated to women’s marketing, Quinlan has personally interviewed 3,000 women–uncovering profound and enlightening truths that can’t be learned from traditional research. She’ll tell you why focus groups don’t work, and help you learn new ways to listen to women, understand their needs, and meet their expectations for customer service. She explores topics such as how women judge brands and advertising, how they make decisions, and how stress affects their consumer behavior.

In Just Ask a Woman, marketers, brand managers, and advertisers–and anyone selling to women–will find actionable answers to difficult questions and real–world strategies that work–from a woman who has walked in a marketer’s shoes.

Throughout this book, you’ll read the stories of women consumers in their own words. Then Quinlan translates those opinions and concerns into ideas marketers can use. You’ll also read the stories of nineteen CEOs and marketing executives, many of them arguably among the most successful marketers to women today. They share their struggles and the lessons they learned that led to marketplace success with women.

Just Ask a Woman is your chance to get to know your most important customer–personally. The days of marketing products TO women are over. These are the days of marketing WITH women–treating them as business partners and listening to them throughout every step of the marketing process. So, if you really want to succeed with the most powerful consumer group in the world, all you have to do is ask.


Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 2349 KB
  • Print Length: 275 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 0471369209
  • Publisher: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.; 1 edition (31 Mar 2003)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B000Q7ZFSO
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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More About the Author

Mary Lou Quinlan
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
By Rolf Dobelli TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
Mary Lou Quinlan interviewed 3,000 women consumers about their desires and buying habits. When you finish her book, you will actually be able to answer the question, “What do women want?” Quinlan’s style is direct and personable. She backs up her arguments with quotes from successful CEOs and marketers and with a smattering of do’s and don’ts from the world of advertising. The book has heart — after all, Quinlan maintains that for women, business is personal — as well as practical advice, although you may have to dig for it. She provides a lot of information on broad thematic lines, sometimes making it tricky to sort out strategies from stories. This is less of a textbook than Marketing to Women (by Martha Barletta from Dearborn Trade Publishing); it is more research-based and extends beyond communications into comparable hands-on, practical counsel. suggest this wakeup call about the buying power of women to professionals in marketing, advertising, sales and customer service. Use this primer to decode those mixed signals you’ve been getting from women in your marketplace — and in your life.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful
By Rolf Dobelli TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
Mary Lou Quinlan interviewed 3,000 women consumers about their desires and buying habits. When you finish her book, you will actually be able to answer the question, "What do women want?" Quinlan's style is direct and personable. She backs up her arguments with quotes from successful CEOs and marketers and with a smattering of do's and don'ts from the world of advertising. The book has heart - after all, Quinlan maintains that for women, business is personal - as well as practical advice, although you may have to dig for it. She provides a lot of information on broad thematic lines, sometimes making it tricky to sort out strategies from stories. This is less of a textbook than Marketing to Women (by Martha Barletta from Dearborn Trade Publishing); it is more research-based and extends beyond communications into comparable hands-on, practical counsel. We suggest this wakeup call about the buying power of women to professionals in marketing, advertising, sales and customer service. Use this primer to decode those mixed signals you've been getting from women in your marketplace - and in your life.
Was this review helpful to you?
Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  18 reviews
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful
Packed with Knowledge! 15 Oct 2003
By Rolf Dobelli - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Mary Lou Quinlan interviewed 3,000 women consumers about their desires and buying habits. When you finish her book, you will actually be able to answer the question, "What do women want?" Quinlan's style is direct and personable. She backs up her arguments with quotes from successful CEOs and marketers and with a smattering of do's and don'ts from the world of advertising. The book has heart - after all, Quinlan maintains that for women, business is personal - as well as practical advice, although you may have to dig for it. She provides a lot of information on broad thematic lines, sometimes making it tricky to sort out strategies from stories. This is less of a textbook than Marketing to Women (by Martha Barletta from Dearborn Trade Publishing); it is more research-based and extends beyond communications into comparable hands-on, practical counsel. We suggest this wakeup call about the buying power of women to professionals in marketing, advertising, sales and customer service. Use this primer to decode those mixed signals you've been getting from women in your marketplace - and in your life.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful
The Right Words To Say It 6 May 2003
By Serge J. Van Steenkiste - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Mary Lou Quinlan is clearly at the top of her subject. Quinlan first reminds her audience of the importance of listening in marketing, especially when one keeps in mind that women influence the purchase of or buy 85% of all products and services. Some marketers have preconceived ideas about marketing to women at their own peril as Quinlan successfully shows through her punchy listening checkup. Quinlan then goes on to stress the otherness or focus on the others that many women display. Women are often their worst enemy because they feel that they need to be superwomen: i.e., a perfect woman, hybrid being, unique crossbreed of "executive woman", "supercharged mother" and "femme fatale": perfect in all respects to quote Michèle Fitoussi in her entertaining "Le ras-le-bol des super-women (superwomen's dissatisfaction)." Marketing stress-reducing, life-simplifying products and services that internalize women's wants and needs then makes perfect sense. Marketers can also take a leaf out of "Simplicity Marketing" by Steven M. Cristol and Peter Sealey for these purposes. Furthermore, Quinlan demonstrates that women, who rely on multiple sources of information, are both procedural and disciplined in their decision-making process. Women more regularly take a more holistic view of the researching/shopping experience than men who tend to compartmentalize their attention. Quinlan also draws the attention of her readers about the importance of how women are portrayed in advertising and communications programs. The perceived image of women that a brand carries, consciously or unconsciously, influences women's inner and outer beauty dialogue. In addition, Quinlan addresses the interaction between women and technology and its pitfalls. Quinlan then proceeds to look at the disrespect that some marketers show towards women due to their lack of listening skills. Women often put themselves last in line. However, they also crave for being taken care of. Quinlan explains to her audience how smart marketers are responsive to women's wants and needs in terms of self-comfort and restoration. Finally, Quinlan assists marketers in developing a listening action plan to better meet women's desires. As a side-note, readers can find some very useful information about marketing to women in the references that Quinlan mentions in her notes.
9 of 11 people found the following review helpful
Waste of Money 21 July 2003
By angie bloud - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
This book is a waste of money - I bought it thinking I was going to learn something new - the BIG revelation -Woman want to be treated as people - there I told you - so don't waste your time or your money....Mary Lou Quilan states the obvious again and again, it is not worth the [$$$].
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