![]() |
Marketing Information |
|
|
Sum of Its Parts
I just spent a week at the beach with my family and, as much as I vowed not to think about work, stumbled onto a highly relevant lesson for marketing professional services. It was actually my mother who inspired this lesson, thanks to the following beachy quote she had on the refrigerator: "Saltwater taffy, for example, does not taste good. Seagulls are not pleasant birds. Most people look better in clothes - a lot of clothes. But it works. The beach is the ultimate triumph in setting." -from the article, Sea and Be Seen What does this have to do with marketing professional services? A lot. Just like saltwater taffy, seagulls, and under clothed people, any one thing done in isolation to market your professional services won't work. When you take the sum of its parts, marketing works. Let's take an easy example: networking. Done in a vacuum, networking is just a "part." Without ways to sustain a new contact's attention, build their trust, or keep in touch - the other "parts" of your whole - you spend far more time and energy drumming up business than if you had other aspects of your marketing "machine" doing a lot of the work for you. Let's get specific. The biggest mistake I see is when people go out, network (or make cold calls, or send direct mail pieces), is that they simultaneously scare prospects off with an anemic poorly-messaged website, no value- adding resources to build your prospect's confidence, and new contacts that vanish into thin air because there's no systematic way to stay in front of them that's affordable and effective. The same "in isolation" principle applies to other marketing "parts." * If you invest in telemarketing, but send new leads to a lousy website (even if you don't send them there, they'll look you up), you're shooting yourself in the foot. * If you're a master at churning out brilliant weekly e-newsletters, but haven't "packaged" your services into a range of ways potential clients can buy from you, you're missing the point of using an e-zine as a smart promotional tool. * If you go to all of the time and effort to get booked as a speaker, then run around preparing for and delivering your talks, you'll get nothing but a nice ego boost and applause unless you target the right audiences and hit them with "What in it for Me?" messages. All of that time, money and energy wasted?but not if you pay attention to the sum of your parts! To avoid wasting your resources and to make the most of your individual marketing efforts, make sure you have all of these parts working together: * Positioning that sets you apart from others offering a similar service. From your target audiences' perspective, what makes you different? Why should they choose you? * Packaging in the form of a value-packed website that you can send new contacts to, demonstrating your value (again, through their eyes) and building their confidence in you as a good solution to their problem. * Promotion: An easy way to keep-in-touch with contacts and prospects, even if you're using other high-touch tactics, such as follow- up calls and meetings. The point is that not every new contact is a ready-buyer when you first meet. You need to stay on their radar, at least monthly, so that when they're ready to buy, you're there. A monthly e-newsletter or e- zine is the perfect vehicle. * Persuasion: You've got to turn contacts into prospects, prospects into clients, clients into referrers, and so on. Simply setting up sales calls and writing proposals won't do it, though. As any successful sales person knows, there are many moving "parts" to master. You've got to know who the decision makers are, what they're willing to spend, how buying decisions get made, how to stay in control of the selling conversation, and how to ask for referrals, to name a few. * Performance is the one "part" most of us in professional services rely on most - it's how we get referrals and maintain (or tarnish) our reputation in the marketplace. It's the marketing part that keeps me on my toes the most, above any other marketing challenge I take on, including writing this e-newsletter, upgrading my website, closing a sale, or giving a public talk. Why? Because it's all about managing and exceeding client expectations, two very tricky "parts" to master. If this doesn't ring a bell with you, then take this quick quiz to find out what it really takes to master Performance: http://www.turningpointemarketing.com/Is_This_For_You.html In isolation, I'm definitely not a fan of saltwater taffy, seagulls or bathing suits. But in the right setting and working all together, they're part of the most effective vacation I can think of. The sum of its parts works. So too can your marketing. (c) 2004 TurningPointe Marketing, Inc. All rights reserved.
MORE RESOURCES:
Google News |
RELATED ARTICLES
Educating Your Customers One of the biggest marketing mistakes businesses make today is failing to educate their prospects and customers about the unique advantages that are being offered to them. The cornerstone of any marketing plan should be to educate your customers. Marketing Brain Trust Rest assured that no matter how smart you are, you do not know everything about marketing. You don't even know anything about marketing your product! You can't figure everything out yourself, or see all the angles, or provide every bit of critical thinking. Who are Those People Youre Selling To? If you're in the IT business, that's an important question.Most marketers are keen to profile their prospects. Creating Your Unique Selling Proposition or USP Creating Your Unique Selling Proposition"Don't tell them what you do. Tell them what you do for them. Integrity and Marketing - Finding the Right Balance When marketing themselves to leads and prospects there are five common mistakes people make, all which can be easily avoided by finding the right balance to maintain your personal and professional integrity in all pursuits.Five common mistakes many people make are;1. Brainstorming Techniques as New Product Development Strategies When developing new products and strategies, coming up with unique ideas is often a struggle. It is one of the reasons why, in any industry, there is so much repetition. Top 10 Dos and Donts for an Effective Business Referral Network! Every business - particularly small, entrepreneurial or professional businesses - must have a powerful referral network. It is very unlikely (and terribly expensive) to "advertise your way to success". What You Must Know When Marketing Your Business Marketing is both an art and a science. Anyone who says differently probably isn't doing very well marketing his or her business. The Top 10 Wild and Wacky Ways to Market Yourself for Big Visibility In today's competitive world of business, it takes moxie and pizazz to sell a great product, idea, or service. This list will provide you with ten unusual and creative marketing strategies which will help you to stand apart from the competition and to increase your visibility. Why Referral Business Is So Valuable With so much money invested on innefective advertising, it's time to look at some good old fashioned ways of generating new business. One tried and tested way is by referral. Features vs. Benefits vs. End Results If you've been in the copywriting realm for very long at all, you've heard the phrase "features vs. benefits. Viral Marketing Viral marketing involves the use of surf-exchanges, and if you don't know what a surf-exchange is, its a site that you can join, often for free, and exchange web page views with other members.You submit the website you wish to promote, and then you usually get a 'start page' that you load into your web browser and you start to view other web pages. Know Thy Competition BREAK FROM HO-HUM MARKETING ? IT'S TOO BORING! Once you break from ho-hum marketing, and learn to put your deeper beliefs and values into your promotion, a remarkable thing will happen: You will beat your competitors at every turn, attract precisely those clients who really need and appreciate the products or services your company provides, and have a really good time in your business. In other words ? once you know what your clients really value, and how you are different from your competitors then it's an incredibly simple process to promote your company's products or services. Have You Tried Cause Marketing? To help promote your small business or professional practice, consider tearing a page out of the corporate marketing playbook. For years big companies have partnered with nonprofits to co-promote their brands. Voice Mail Can Be Your Buddy Voice Mail is a classy name for "answer Machine". Problem is, people at home had answer machines long before most businesses. Writing A Marketing Strategy It is my belief that if anyone is to suceed in any type of business then the business needs to be marketed to it's target consumers in an effective manner. In order to do this effectively rather than in an ad hoc, probably expensive, manner I propose the construction of a marketing plan. Why Most Marketing Videos Dont Work Every now and then I will meet someone who has commissioned a marketing video that did not work for their company. It is a sad state of affairs and it is avoidable. These Four Things Will Make Your Direct Marketing Successful Direct marketing is built on four things. The other way to look at it is that when you think direct marketing is not working only one of four things can be wrong. How Architecture Rendering is Part of the Impact Cartoons have gone from celluloid to digital. Movies have gone from cinematography to computer graphics imaging. How to Convey Trustworthiness in Direct Mail Marketing Sales Letter A person or business that might buy from you is called a prospect. But they might just as accurately be called a skeptic. |
| home | site map |
| © 2006 |