SEO experts are in great demand. So, how do you hire an expert and not a sleaze? Tom Pick’s recent post on WebCentral blog has a list of points to consider: He has the irrelevant experience He guarantees results – impossible…. He promises instant results – SEO is long term, Adwords is short term Read the full SEO article here [...]
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The first question people normally ask me is what can I do next to market my business?
Before we start with something new, you need to unearth the goldmine’s that are in your business right now that will generate you money and build loyalty with your customer base. Read the rest of this entry »
Today you are the Brand. Check out the damage to Tiger Woods bottom line.
Most businesses I talk to tell me that when it comes to marketing, they feel overwhelmed. So many decisions, options and tools to use. Which one will work, which one will not cost much, which one will take up the least of my time??
With so many options and decisions to make, fear creeps in and this then stops a business in its tracks when it comes to their marketing.
To be truthfully, working on your marketing is one of the most important tasks you need to do in order to be successful. I want to share with you 10 tips that have been tried and test over the years with my clients that you can use today, to build your marketing plan and reach more potential clients.
You don’t have to do all the steps above. Start off with one and take it from there. The key is to focus on the steps. They will help you develop a winning marketing plan.
If you have any questions, drop me a comment and I will get back to you
Did you know that internet marketing covers:
So how do you get started….
Let me know how you get on. If you have any questions, drop me a note and we will get back to you a.s.a.p.
The number one reason that I receive from a potential new clients is because they have spent a lot of money on marketing and received absolutely nothing in return.
When I first start wi
th a business, the first thing we look at is what they actually sell. Nearly 99% of the time, business owners (or the people doing the marketing) are marketing what you deliver, not what your product or service can actually do for a potential client. These two things aren’t the same.
The second thing I hear from a business owner is that it is obvious what I need to market.
Or is it? For example
If you’re a financial advisor, you probably think you’re marketing financial advice. If you’re a HR advisor, you may think you are marketing HR advice. If you own a clothes shop, you may assume you market clothes. If you market a restaurant you may think you are selling a meal.
In each case, you’d be right in terms of your deliverables, but you are wrong about what they are buying.
What you’re marketing and what you actually deliver are two different things. The key to increasing your sales is to realise that what you are really marketing is hope – your clients’ hope of achieving their goals.
I have worked with a variety of business owners from design agencies to bridal shops. They have all faced the same problems when increasing sales. They have confused their marketing with what they deliver.
For example, if you are financial advisor, yes you deliver financial advice, but what the client really wants is hope. Hope that you can help them with their money and deal with things that they don’t really understand. Ultimately, they want to make money, which you can’t promise, but you can offer hope. If you sell carpets, you deliver the carpets and lay them in the house, but what you are selling is hope. Hope that at the end, the room/house is going to look better then the owner has visualised it in their heads and also practical for their needs – you are helping to create a home. If you own a restaurant, you are not selling a meal, you are selling hope. Hope that the evening will be something to remember, that the meal will be better then what they can do at home. That for once, they don’t have to do the dishes! The meal may be for a special occasion i.e. birthday, reward, celebration.
You’re marketing to your prospects’ hopes that they’ll be happier, more successful, more attractive, smarter, richer, more comfortable, and more secure, etc. Target you’re marketing to the real reasons people buy and you’ll be much more successful in motivating them to make a purchase from you.
Do you see the difference? Let me know your thoughts.
If you are anything like me, then you are eager to help businesses. I am always giving away free advice.
A lesson I have learnt over the last couple of years is that you can give too much free advice or information away. This then leds to less time to spend with customers who really need your product/service. Plus a lot of time running round trying to find my next customer!
What was I doing wrong? I was failing to prescreen my leads. I was giving away valuable advice and service to the wrong people. More importantly, I was giving away advice to companies who couldn’t afford my services.
Don’t get me wrong, it is great to be able to offer something and get leads, but are people REALLY interested in what you have to offer and can they affort it, now? If not, you are just wasting your time and money.
Prescreening is easier to do then you first think. Late last year I worked with a client who was offering a “free 1 hour consultation” to every person/company who would commit to a meeting. Great, he had a full diary and was running around making new contacts. When he reviewed his sales a month later, he had only converted 2% of the people he had seen. Spent a lot of money travelling and invested considerable time.
He called me and asked for help. We put togehter a prescreening questionnaire, which covered 5 questions in total. Based on the replies received, the then worked out who to see and who his PA could follow up with.
Currently his conversation rate has gone up to 8000%
Think about the service/product you provide and list out a set ot 3-5 questions which will pre-qualify leads. For example:
This simple exercise will also lower your costs and provide valuable information for you to provide a better service in the future. (More about that in a later article).
Don’t worry about refusing to provide a “free” service to all. You are not in busines to offer valuable information and services for free.
Let me know how you get on.
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Thursday, November 5, 2009
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