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The “Me Show” Epidemic (Part II) : Advanced Strategies

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Check out Part I here

Advanced Strategies for Persistent “Me Show” Clients

The Collaboration Framework

When clients resist customer-focused approaches, try collaborative exercises:

Customer Journey Mapping

Work together to map the actual experience their customers go through, from problem awareness to post-purchase satisfaction.

Competitive Analysis Sessions

Review successful competitors to identify messaging patterns and positioning strategies.

Value Proposition Workshops

Use structured frameworks to help clients articulate their unique value without defaulting to personal stories.

Hawaiʻi-Specific Implementation Strategies

Working with Hawaiʻi businesses requires understanding the cultural context while maintaining professional marketing standards:

Honoring Island Values While Building Business

Local Expertise Positioning

Transform personal knowledge into professional credibility:

  • “Born and raised on Maui, I understand the unique challenges of [specific problem] in island communities”
  • “After 15 years serving Hawaiʻi families, I’ve developed systems that work specifically for our island lifestyle”

Cultural Understanding as Business Advantage

Position cultural knowledge as a competitive differentiator:

  • “Having navigated both mainland and island approaches to [service], I help clients find solutions that honor island values while achieving results”
  • “Our team combines traditional Hawaiʻian wisdom with modern [industry] techniques”

Paradise Professional Balance

Acknowledge lifestyle advantages while emphasizing professional outcomes:

  • “Our island location isn’t just beautiful, it provides the peaceful environment necessary for [specific result]”
  • “We’re fortunate to work in paradise, and that natural beauty enhances our clients’ [specific outcome]”

The Hawaiʻian Touch: Making It Work for Island Businesses

Hawaiʻi businesses can absolutely leverage personal connection and island lifestyle, when done strategically:

The “Local Expert” Position

Position personal knowledge as professional expertise:

  • “Born and raised on Maui, I understand the unique challenges of [specific problem] in island communities”
  • “After 15 years serving Hawaiʻi families, I’ve developed systems that work specifically for our island lifestyle”

Cultural Understanding as Business Advantage

Position cultural knowledge as a competitive differentiator:

  • “Having navigated both mainland and island approaches to [service], I help clients find solutions that honor island values while achieving mainland results”
  • “Our team combines traditional Hawaiʻian wisdom with modern [industry] techniques”

The “Paradise Professional” Balance

Acknowledge the lifestyle while emphasizing the work:

  • “Yes, we’re lucky to work in paradise, and that natural beauty enhances our clients’ [specific outcome]”
  • “Our island location isn’t just beautiful; it provides the peaceful environment necessary for [specific result]”

Red Flags: When “Me Show” Clients Might Not Be Worth It

Sometimes, despite best efforts, clients remain ego-focused. Watch for these warning signs:

  • Consistent rejection of customer-focused suggestions without consideration
  • Insistence on personal branding even after reviewing successful competitor examples
  • Unwillingness to discuss customer needs or market positioning
  • Focus on personal validation rather than business outcomes
  • Defensive reactions to strategic recommendations

These clients often consume disproportionate resources while producing poor results that can damage agency reputations

The Client Education Investment

Many successful agencies now build client education into their service model and pricing:

Strategic Foundation Sessions

Dedicate time to educating clients about customer psychology, market positioning, and conversion principles before beginning creative work.

Market Research Presentations

Show clients how successful businesses in their industry position themselves and communicate with customers.

Ongoing Strategic Consultation

Include regular check-ins that help clients make customer-focused decisions throughout the project.

Research from Forrester shows that companies investing in customer education see measurable improvements: 90% report positive ROI, with increases in customer satisfaction (11.6%), revenue (6.2%), and retention (7.4%)⁶.

The Technology Factor

Hawaiʻi’s geographic isolation and slower internet infrastructure create additional considerations:

Mobile-First Reality

Hawaiʻi has higher-than-average mobile internet usage, making mobile optimization crucial. Personal photos and ego-focused content often perform poorly on mobile devices where users want quick information.

Page Speed Concerns

Large image galleries and video content can create loading issues. Customer-focused, text-based value propositions often perform better from a technical standpoint.

Local Search Behavior

Hawaiʻi users frequently search for immediate solutions (“dentist near me,” “emergency plumber Big Island”). Ego-focused content doesn’t align with urgent local search intent.

Long-Term Client Relationship Management

Successfully redirecting ego-driven clients requires ongoing relationship management:

Setting Expectations Early

Be clear about your approach during initial consultations:

  • “We focus on creating websites that generate inquiries and sales”
  • “Our process prioritizes your customers’ needs and decision-making process”
  • “We’ll find strategic ways to incorporate your story that serve your business goals”

Measuring Success Appropriately

Use metrics that demonstrate business value rather than personal validation:

  • Inquiry form submissions over social media likes
  • Sales conversions over website compliments
  • Customer retention over personal recognition

Continuous Education

Share industry insights, case studies, and market research that reinforce customer-focused principles throughout the relationship.

The Broader Implications

The “me show” phenomenon reflects broader cultural shifts affecting business marketing:

Social Media Culture

The democratization of publishing has created false confidence that personal content equals effective marketing content.

Influencer Economy Confusion

The democratization of publishing has created false confidence that personal content equals effective marketing content.

Instant Gratification Expectations

Social media’s immediate feedback loops create expectations for quick validation that may not align with effective business marketing strategies.

As digital marketing professionals, part of our value lies in educating clients about proven marketing principles, even when those principles conflict with their social media-influenced instincts.

Real-World Application: A Framework for Change

Here’s a practical framework for working with ego-driven clients in Hawaiʻi (and beyond):

Phase 1: Discovery and Redirection

  • Ask strategic questions that naturally shift focus to customer needs
  • Listen for underlying business goals beyond personal validation
  • Identify genuine competitive advantages that aren’t personality-based

Phase 2: Strategic Education

  • Present market research showing customer-focused messaging effectiveness
  • Review successful competitors who prioritize customer benefits
  • Discuss the psychology of customer decision-making

Phase 3: Collaborative Development

  • Work together to identify customer pain points and desired outcomes
  • Transform personal elements into credibility-building components
  • Develop messaging hierarchy with customer benefits leading

Phase 4: Implementation and Testing

  • Create customer-focused content with strategic personal elements
  • Monitor performance metrics that matter for business growth
  • Adjust approach based on actual customer response

The Professional Standard

The most effective digital marketing campaigns consistently focus on customer needs rather than client egos. While personal branding has its place, business marketing requires strategic thinking about customer psychology, market positioning, and conversion optimization.

Our role as professionals is to guide clients toward strategies that generate results, even when those strategies conflict with their personal preferences. The best client relationships combine empathy for the client’s perspective with firm commitment to proven marketing principles.

In Hawaiʻi, we have additional opportunities to leverage unique cultural context and natural beauty, but always in service of customer value, not personal promotion.

Moving Forward: Professional Growth and Client Success

The challenge of redirecting ego-driven clients ultimately makes us better marketers. It forces us to:

  • Develop stronger strategic thinking skills
  • Improve client communication and education abilities
  • Deepen understanding of customer psychology
  • Build more effective frameworks for collaboration

For Hawaiʻi businesses, overcoming the “me show” tendency opens doors to:

  • Broader market reach beyond personal networks
  • Scalable marketing systems that don’t depend on personal charisma
  • Clearer competitive positioning in crowded markets
  • Sustainable growth based on value delivery rather than personality

The Bottom Line

Effective marketing makes the customer the hero of the story, not the business owner. While personal elements can provide credibility and connection, they should always serve the larger goal of demonstrating value to potential customers.

The real question isn’t whether your client’s story matters, it’s whether that story serves their customers’ needs or just their own ego.

Mahalo for reading, and remember: the best marketing makes the customer the hero of the story, not the business owner.

Ready to help your Hawaiʻi business move beyond the “me show” and start connecting with customers? Contact Tako Mojo for strategic marketing that puts your customers first and your business growth second to none.

Book a Discovery Call Today! Submit Your Requirements

¹ Twenge, J. M., Konrath, S., Foster, J. D., Campbell, W. K., & Bushman, B. J. (2008). Egos inflating over time: a cross-temporal meta-analysis of the Narcissistic Personality Inventory. Journal of Personality, 76(4), 875-902. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18507710/

² Boursier, V., & Manna, V. (2020). Selfie-engagement on social media: Pathological narcissism, positive expectation, and body objectification. Addictive Behaviors Reports, 11, 100263. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7244909/

³ Roth, C. (2012, June 26). Return on Ego (ROE) vs. Return on Investment (ROI). Carol Roth Blog. https://www.carolroth.com/community/return-on-ego/

⁴ Anderson, J. C., Narus, J. A., & van Rossum, W. (2006). Customer value propositions in business markets. Harvard Business Review, 84(3), 90-99. https://hbr.org/2006/03/customer-value-propositions-in-business-markets

⁵ Intellum. (2023, July 25). Guide to Customer Education Marketing (With Examples). https://www.intellum.com/resources/blog/customer-education-marketing

⁶ Referenced in customer education ROI studies. Forrester Research (2019). The Business Impact of Customer Education Programs.

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