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Top Ten Marketing Tips for Spring
You can't sell your service,
but you can create the conditions where clients want to buy. (Brad
Burton). Here are some tips!
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Keep your ears open!
See CJ's article. Your clients will let you
know what they need. Just listen
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Give something first.
Before you try and
sell your product, give prospects something of value first, so that they
can experience how you can help. A sample an article, hints and tips...
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Make friends.
Not clients when people get to know, like and trust you they will want to
do business with you.
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Give
referrals.
Refer the people and businesses you know and trust to your own
contacts. Ask them to say who referred you. Its the least you can do for
people you want to recommend you.
- Get Feedback.
make sure that you find out that your
customers are completely happy with your products and services. Don't just
ask your clients they may give you the answer you want to hear. Ask others
what people are saying about you.
-
Educate them. Be happy to
share your knowledge with your clients and colleagues. they are not going
to steal your business, but it will increase your credibility.
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Socialise.
Build the relationship with your clients so they get
to know you as a person, rather than just as a supplier.
-
Offer a special deal.
To your existing clients. They
will be pleased to know that their loyalty is appreciated and are bound to
tell their friends what a good deal they got.
-
Be interested in
their business.
It's not just you that loves to talk about yourself and your business and
you will pick up useful information about their requirements.
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Make it personal.
People buy people so make sure you open-up to your clients as a real
person and not just as a front fro your business.
To get the most out of
your marketing enrol on a Get
Clients Now! programme now. Visit
www.getclientsnow.co.uk
or email for programme
details:
mike@getclientsnow.co.uk
__________
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Clients Now! On-line
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use this new medium to keep in touch with our clients. @getclientsnowuk
Become a fan on our facebook page.
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Visit
www.getclientsnow.co.uk
for more details. |
A MESSAGE FROM CJ HAYDEN
In Marketing and Sales, It Pays to Listen
by C.J. Hayden
We talk quite a bit in sales and marketing about, well, talking. We examine
how to get our message across, what to say to potential clients, how to
present our businesses, etc. But sometimes, listening can be considerably
more productive than talking. Here are five ways you just might be able to
get more clients by listening.
1. Listen for what prospects want. This is the most obvious kind of useful
listening, but it's often the most overlooked.
Consider the life coach who tries to sell fulfilment to a prospect who is
seeking security, the graphic designer who insists on selling an identity
package to a prospect whose budget only extends to business cards, or the
real estate agent who keeps showing single-family homes to a prospect who
wants a condo.
Of course you should ask prospects about their needs, then propose the best
solution for their problems. But this must be the best solution for THEM,
not just the best for YOU. Once you land a new client, there can be many
opportunities to sell them additional products and services. By then they
will trust you and be more open to your suggestions. But when you are first
trying to close the sale, you'll have much more success if you sell them
what they are already looking for.
2. Listen to how prospects respond to your marketing messages.
Learning how your communications are perceived by the recipient is crucial
to making them more effective. Your prospects are often quite different
people than you are yourself. So a message that appeals to you may not have
the same impact on your desired clients.
Think about the writer who introduces herself as a "communications
consultant" because that's the label she and her colleagues prefer. If
listeners respond by asking for help with their public speaking, she needs a
new label that prospects will better understand. Or the chiropractor who
says he delivers "optimal health," but discovers that prospects with back
pain don't grasp that this includes pain relief. He needs to use language
his prospects can connect with.
3. Listen for buying signals. When you're focused on presenting your
business, it's easy to miss cues that prospects have already heard you and
are considering your offer. Questions like "how much will that add up to,"
"have you done this for other clients like me," or "how long will this take"
are all signals that your prospect is seriously considering working with
you.
Don't make the mistake of thinking these expressions of interest are
objections to moving forward. If you treat them as objections and keep
trying to convince your prospect why you're the best, you could lose the
sale. Instead, answer the question factually, then check in with your
prospect on his reaction.
For example, "The total would be £2,500. Is that in your budget?" Or, "I
could have this completed by 15th June . Would that date work for you?"
4. Listen for leads to new business. Stop tuning out comments by prospects,
clients, and networking contacts that don't seem to apply to you, and listen
carefully instead. There could be gold in those offhand remarks.
When a prospect says she doesn't have time to meet with you, find out what
else she's working on that you might offer help with. If a client complains
that an upcoming conference is delaying the project you're working on, ask
if you could be one of the speakers. A networking contact's gossipy story
about office politics could transform from boring to fascinating when you
recognize the changes he is describing at his company might mean business
for you.
5. Listen to sales and marketing success stories. When you're finding
marketing to be somewhat of a struggle, it's often easier to engage with
others' complaints than with their successes. But success stories can often
do more to help you than commiserating about failures.
The next time friends or colleagues tell you that business is going well,
listen carefully to what they've been doing. Get curious about what led to
their success. What marketing approaches have they been using? How do they
talk about their business? Where have they been networking? What helps them
close their sales? You'll hear many valuable clues for how you might build
your own business.
So don't think sales and marketing is all about talking. If you start
lending an ear to what your prospects, clients, and colleagues have to say,
you may discover all sorts of ways that it pays better to listen.
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