Author Archives: drinselman@creativecoachingllc.net

Suicide Things Small Business Owners Are Doing-Don’t You Do Them Too!

Don’t freak out we are in a recession folks. This is normal. Economies go through cycles which are up, down and sideways. When the economy goes down for a long enough period of time and loses 20% it is called a recession; or if it continues to go down further, it is called a depression.

When Michael Jordan had a few bad games in a row did he fire his coaches? No, he looked to them even more to help him get through his “recession” in play.

In May and June, I lost three clients. Their reason for discontinuing was to save money. I told them “That is not the way to save money, but it is their choice, and my door is always open for them to return.”

Last week two of the three returned and wanted my services again. Why? Since they left their businesses dropped another 12 and 18% respectively. They realized that the way back is through the fundamentals that I teach. Yes, grand slams are nice, but it is the fundamentals of singles and doubles coupled with accountability are what consistently wins ball games.

I always use current events to inspire my blogs. There is always something to be learned.

Here are the suicide moves that small business owners make during down-turns in business; you would be wise to refrain from making them too.

  1. Proper cost-cutting not just slashing across the board is the way to cut costs. To keep this short don’t cut advisers (business coach, accountant, lawyer, insurance agents). Cut anything personally and professionally that does not make or save you money or have the potential to do so.
  2. Don’t cut marketing and advertising
  3. Don’t cut staff

It would be too long to explain why in this newsletter. Just trust me on this after 36 years I do know what I am talking about. If you need further explanation, I am happy to hop on a call with you and you can schedule a call by clicking here.

Recessions are wonderful times to grow a business. I know that sounds counter-intuitive but look at when the biggest companies were born. It was during or after a recession or depression. If you execute proper action steps while everyone is hunkering down and pulling back, you can massively gain market share, but you have to do it correctly.

Results are what is measured. If you are happy with your results do nothing. If your results are poor talk to a friend, colleague, another business coach or me. If you want to grow faster than you are, talk to a friend, colleague, another business coach or me. After thirty- six years of being in business and after nineteen years of coaching small business owners just like you, you should be confident that you can be helped too.

If you would like to explore the possibilities, Click here to set up a free and no-obligation strategy session and screen share and I will show you how.

In Gratitude,

 

Paul

 

 

Quickstart Program

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Growth

7 Steps To Every Sale-The Ultimate Method for Developing Master-Level Salespeople

If you’re interested in developing salespeople with master-level skills, here’s the method that will absolutely, positively help you accomplish this.

The following Seven Steps to Every Sale make this method revolutionary. These seven steps are essential to every sale. There is, however, a principle that’s essential for success with the seven steps.

No skill is gained by mere intellectual agreement

There is a missing ingredient to almost every sales training program, and it’s not information. In fact, the “better” (based upon popularity) sales training programs usually have more information, better information, and even more advanced ideas and concepts.

Herein lies the problem with most sales training programs: You do not gain skill by intellectual agreement. For example, you might be very capable of understanding the principle behind a judo flip, but to be able to do it, you have to practice it. To do it perfectly every time, you have to practice it continually.

If you’ve ever been part of a highly trained team, you know the sense of confidence that translates into success. The secret to building an excellent sales force (or team of any kind) is in repeating core training on basic sales skills again and again.

The levels of learning…

The lowest level of learning is memorization. It’s easy to memorize the seven steps to every sale, but that doesn’t mean that you can apply them. However, it’s an excellent starting point.

The highest level of learning is known as synthesis. This means that you have learned the material so well that you can synthesize it into your own style and method of doing things. Synthesis requires a lot of repetition and practice.

To achieve synthesis in your sales team, begin by having them commit the following seven steps to memory, then set about polishing each skill area until your people are masters of each.

The Seven Steps to Every Sale…

  • Establish rapport. You will find that you close a much higher percentage of sales if you have good, solid rapport with your client. The ultimate definition of rapport is: They like you, they trust you, and they respect you. Respect and trust lead to influence. Influence leads to control over your market or the buying situation at hand. Work with your staff to design standards for establishing rapport.
  • Qualify the buyer (find the need). To reset a customer’s buying criteria in favor of your product or service, you must begin by gaining a complete understanding of his or her current buying criteria. Develop the six to ten questions that you would like to know about every prospect before you begin to present your product or service. Drill these questions into your salespeople until every one of them can recite them by heart.
  • Build value. After you have assessed your customers buying criteria, you must begin to build value around your product or service. Make a presentation at this point in the sales process. The presentation should be targeted to the buyer, not to your product or service.
  • Create desire. Be clear on this important point: Your buyer will be a lot more motivated if his or her current situation becomes unacceptable. To create desire, you must motivate your buyer using a combination of problems and solutions, even if you’re the one pointing out the problems that they haven’t really considered. For example, one company that sold information services to accountants showed the accountants how much new tax information (statutes, regulations, tax law, tax cases, etc.) they have to know each year. This information made the accountants feel overwhelmed and predisposed to purchasing anything that would help them survive the tax-information plight. The company actually helped create the “plight” by introducing the accountants to the very real market statistics that existed but that no one else was showing them. It was very, very powerful.
  • Overcome objections. A talented salesperson does such a good job of finding the need that objections are covered earlier in the sales process. A top salesperson will qualify the buyer’s buying criteria right down to his or her toes before they even begin to sell. However, an “objection” can still surface when it’s time to close the sale (see below). If you remember that “an objection is an opportunity to close,” you will always be happy to hear one. For example,
    1. The client states an objection: “I’d love to buy it, but I just can’t afford it right now.”
    2. Agree that the objection is valid. The client will drop his or her guard: “If you can’t afford it, you can’t afford it (meaningful pause). But let me ask you a question: Is money the only thing standing between you and the purchase of this product?” At this point, if there are more objections, they will surface. If not, the client will say, “No, if I could afford it, I’d buy it.” You have just moved a huge step closer to closing the sale.
    3. Lock down the sale: You say, “So, if I can find a way for you to afford this product, you will buy it?” If the client says yes, you have just closed the sale. You will now need to be more creative in the financing of the product or service or help create more desire, so the prospect will pay the extra money to buy the product or service.

    Getting commitment is key to closing the sale.

  • Close the sale. In truth, the best salespeople I have witnessed do not “close,” they “bring the sale to a logical conclusion.” They have helped set up such a logical buying criteria that the prospect and the salesperson walk to the close together. That being said, it should also be stated that most people need help making decisions.This article cannot cover all the aspects of closing a sale, but it can cover the oldest close of all: assuming the sale. Do this by asking a question like, “Who do we send the bill to?” or “How did you want to pay for this?”
  • Follow up – Last but not least, be prepared for The Cool-Off Factor. Because enthusiasm and rapport are extremely influential in the sales process, a salesperson must know that a prospect is going to “cool off” after the salesperson leaves the room.How do you avoid this? Follow up strongly after the sale! The fax machine was the greatest invention for a salesperson. A good follow-up letter faxed hours after the sale, or the next day at the latest, can go a long way toward avoiding the cool-off factor. (Much more effective than an email).

Summary

These seven steps are core sales skills and procedures. Just as basketball coaches must constantly train their players on lay-up shots and blocking, sales managers must constantly train their players on polishing every angle of the Seven Steps to Every Sale.

Smart companies build tools, policies, and procedures that support these seven steps. The more standards you set, the higher the performance you can expect from every level of talent.

Go forth and master The Seven Steps to Every Sale. Only constant practice and repetition will create master-level salespeople.

Can you use some additional cash in your business? I’ve got a very cool process where I can find any business owner $10,000-$50,000 in lost revenue in 45 minutes or less. I can also show that business owner how to reclaim that lost revenue without spending an additional dime on marketing or advertising. If you want me to find you a minimum of $10,000.00, Click here.

Marketing Strategy

How To Easily Reactivate Stale Clients

When trying to re-establish relationships with past customers, some customers will be comfortable and feel as if they just conducted business with you yesterday while others will wonder why you went to the trouble of contacting them.

Who is a reactivation candidate? To reactivate customers, you need to be attentive to the process. First, to determine which previous customers to reactivate, define what reactivation specifically means for your organization. Most companies define reactivation candidates based on their lack of response to previous marketing efforts. The typical sequential marketing efforts that an organization may follow begin with acquisition, then proceed to resell / upsell / cross-sell / downsell, retention / competitive defense / selective attrition and then reactivation.

How do you differentiate between customers who require selling and retention efforts from those who require reactivation efforts? First, and most obviously, if you know that you’ve lost your customer’s business, then you’ve probably exhausted your sales and retention efforts and can assign the customer to your reactivation group.

If you don’t know whether you have lost your customer’s business, make inquiries. If you find that it’s too expensive to keep in touch with customers, then analyze their buying history (e.g., length of time since last purchase, number of prior purchases, length of time between purchases and average order size) or apply industry averages to determine who might be a reactivation candidate.

Whom do you select for reactivation? Before designating customers as reactivation candidates, determine whether you have their correct contact information. Exclude past customers who have outdated information that cannot be updated through third-party sources.

Also, review any customer service or third-party data you have on reactivation candidates and categorize the reasons for lost business as “controllable” (e.g., shipped wrong product two weeks after promised delivery date) or “uncontrollable” (e.g., moved from retail area). If you’re to blame for the failed relationship, determine whether there is value in re-establishing it.

Once you select your reactivation candidates, segment this group and test offers before spending money to reach them all at once. If possible, use lifetime value to determine which segments may yield a higher return.

When do you conduct reactivation marketing? Reactivation is not a one-time event for when times are tough. Reactivation should be an on-going activity prioritized among other marketing efforts.

Once you have customers who meet your reactivation requirements, execute a reactivation campaign. (See “Reactivation Letters” in the Sales Letter Library). With response history, you can develop a reactivation response model to determine the optimal timing and frequency of your reactivation efforts. For example, a model developed for a health products cataloger might show that the company maximizes its marketing dollars when it tries to reactivate past customers with a buy-one-get-one-free offer after these customers fail to respond to three months of discount offers following their initial purchase.

When you accumulate significant response history from your reactivation marketing efforts, build a model based on RFM analysis (recency, frequency, monetary) or data attributes that predict purchase propensity. A life insurance company might build a model based on age, number of children, marital status, income and interest rates to determine the likelihood of a previous term insurance customer buying a variable life policy.

What do you say to customers you want to reactivate? People change over time and so does your business, so when you’re thinking about marketing to past customers, consider that your customers’ needs and preferences, as well as your business focus, may have changed.

Profile customer’s to create more personalized communications for each segment. Use past data such as RFM information and, if possible, append reliable third-party information that will enhance your customer understanding. For example, you might use third-party information to determine each customer’s age, family situation and income. Then you could send targeted communications to various segments depending on these data attributes as well as results from an RFM analysis.

In conjunction with customer profiling, make an in-depth determination as to why the relationship ended in the first place. Was it something you did? If so, you might have a manager or high-level executive make a personal call to “high-value” customers.

When communicating with reactivation candidates, use the information you have about them in your marketing communications to show your desire to have them back as a customer. Also, if your communication is asking the reactivation candidate to call a person at your company, create a group of call specialists trained to handle reactivation customers.

Investing in acquisition vs. reactivation. Acquisition and reactivation are both investments designed to yield profitable customer relationships. When deciding how much of your marketing budget should be allocated to each effort, calculate the ROI on reactivating old customers versus acquiring new customers.

Whether reactivation involves less of an investment than acquisition depends on the extent of your data analysis, data enhancement and list rental costs. It’s generally true that with customer data available for analysis as well as past customers’ familiarity with a company’s name and product or service quality, reactivation efforts yield higher response rates and higher profitability than acquisition efforts do.

Make the first move. Most organizations focus on acquisition, sales to current customers and retention. They see little opportunity in marketing to people who failed to respond to their offers. These organizations, however, are typically not customer-focused.

Instead of trying to understand why a prior customer is no longer responding, they assume that the customer is the problem in the relationship. The dynamics are similar to that of a person who refuses to talk to another person unless the other person reaches out first. Start looking at your past customers and commit to reaching out and re-establishing a relationship that is valuable to both sides.

8 Steps to Designing a Reactivation Campaign

One of our clients just launched a fairly large reactivation campaign. While there are many ways to run a reactivation campaign, the following steps will set you on a straight path should you decide to launch one.

  1. Who is your target? Are these people who stopped buying from you six months ago? Three months? Twelve months? If you run a subscription service, are they people who canceled one month ago? Two weeks ago? Two years ago? Decide first who you want to try and reactivate. If someone bought from you four years ago and you’re just now getting around to sending them an e-mail, it’s probably too late. It’s OK to run a few different variations of the campaign if you want to target several different groups from above.
  2. What’s your goal? I’ll take a wild stab and say your goal is to either have these consumers buy from you again, re-subscribe to your services, or otherwise reengage with your company. But, are there more specific goals than that? Maybe you want to introduce a new product line, introduce a new account manager, or upsell them on something they already own (or a service they already use)?
  3. Why did these consumers leave? Unlike a normal marketing campaign, you need to understand why your consumers left. Did they not like your products? Were you too expensive? Did you not have enough content in their particular field to keep them interested? Knowing the reasons they probably left will enable you to craft a message that addresses those issues specifically.
  4. What segmentation or persona data do you have? If you can segment these consumers either by persona or by purchase habits, you can make your reactivation campaign that much more effective. The rules here are the same as for any direct marketing: don’t just send a mass “We want you back” e-mail. Instead, use whatever knowledge you have of the consumer in order to create a more relevant message.
  5. Split test offers. It’s fine to offer a reactivation discount code to these consumers. They were effectively “dead” anyhow, so you aren’t really losing a full-price purchase by offering them a discount. However, showing consumers that you understand them and have new offerings that meet their needs might just be enough. So, do a split test and create discounts for some percentage of the group, but not all of them. See how they do when compared to the group with no offer.
  6. Focus on your content. Instead of just saying, “We want you back, here’s 15% off,” make a real effort. Show your consumers you understand them. If they used to buy video games, talk about all the new things that have happened in video games since they last checked your site out. If you run a content subscription-based site (like E-Learning), highlight the new content you’ve added to your site since they were last members. Put the relevant content first. Consumers can get a discount anywhere if they try. It’s your content and products (if they’re relevant) that will be more interesting to them.
  7. Make it easy for them to come back. If it has been a while, there’s a good chance your consumers don’t remember their usernames or passwords. Either send them this information (or at least their username) in the e-mail, or make it really easy for them to find it. If their account has “expired,” make it easy for them to renew without reentering all their information again. If you offered a discount code, make it very clear where they enter it.
  8. Reach out via different channels. Are these consumers on Twitter (and do they follow you)? If so, send them a direct message, not an e-mail. E-mail marketing is great, but try other channels if you have access to them.

Finally, realize the difference between a reactivation campaign and a regular campaign. While the above steps could be the recipe for any old marketing campaign, there is one important difference. Reactivation marketing needs to understand how long people have been gone, why they possibly left, what is different in your offerings now that would make them come back, and what (if any) incentive they might need to come back.

If you can’t answer, “What is different in our offerings that would make them come back,” then skip the reactivation campaign and focus on answering that question!

I’ve got a very cool process where I can find any business owner $10,000-$100,000 in lost revenue in 45 minutes or less. I can also show that business owner how to reclaim that lost revenue without spending an additional dime on marketing or advertising. If you want me to find you a minimum of $10,000.00, Click here.

Kick-Ass Ways to Grow Your Business

I have said this many times before. Growing a business is easy when you do the following:

  1. Have clarity-Clarity=success; lack of clarity=failure
  2. Have written goals complete with actions steps
  3. Live by this equation   Intention + Action = Result    if you do not like the result change the action steps UNTIL YOU GET THE DESIRED RESULT
  4. Never Ever Give Up-the day you give up is the day that you fail
  5. Have a pleasing personality
  6. Give more service than you get paid for
  7. Keep innovating your business. Your business should look different every 5 years
  8. Make sure your office presents a clean and professional atmosphere
  9. Train your staff so they are profit centers
  10. Smile more
  11. Work on your headspace
  12. Read motivational books
  13. Shut off the TV-especially the news
  14. Create systems-a business that is not run on systems is a hobby
  15. Know your numbers-keep statistics and a good set of books
  16. Do a bank reconcilliation as soon as the bank sends your bank statement
  17. Pay your taxes on time
  18. Do quarterly estimates so you are not caught short on estimated payments
  19. Create a lead generation system
  20. Hire a team of professionals that can help you navigate the pitfalls of business without having an emotional tie
  21. Schedule vacations at least once per year, but preferably every three months
  22. Learn the language of Disc
  23. Learn how to upsell, downsell and cross sell
  24. Create a market dominating position
  25. Learn where you are losing revenue

I’ve got a very cool process where I can find any business owner $10,000-$100,000 in lost revenue in 45 minutes or less. I can also show that business owner how to reclaim that lost revenue without spending an additional dime on marketing or advertising. If you want me to find you a minimum of $10,000.00, Click here.

Financial Mistakes

How to Avoid Making Poor Financial Decisions

Unfortunately, I spend way too much time with clients helping them clean up their financial messes that were made from poor decisions. This article should help you develop better money management skills, while teaching you how to make better financial decisions for the future. In my fiteen years of helping clients just like you, these mistakes, I have found to be the most common:

  1. Allowing someone to pressure you-Some of the best deals that I have made are those that I never made. Now don’t confuse pressure with procrastination or taking too long to make a decision. Pressure is when you hear lines like: “if you don’t buy or invest now, the car or deal will be gone;” or, my manager will only allow me to do this price today.
  2. Making a financial decision based on money that you expect to receive-This is called deficit spending and will lead to a sure financial problem very quickly. Make and keep this rule. If you don’t have the money in your bank account then you don’t have the money to spend, even if you expect it to come in the next day.
  3. It sounds to good to be true-Typically when things sound too good to be true they are. HOWEVER, that is not a hard and fast rule. Do a proper due-dilligence. Sometimes these investments are terrific. However as stated above, don’t let someone pressure you into a deal that sounds too good to be true, if it is real then it will still be there after you have done a proper due dilligence. Don’t ever allow someone to pressure you!
  4. Everything has to work out or there will be trouble-Before you ever spend or invest money calculate your downside risk. Never make a financial decision that the decision only makes sense if abc happens; because if abc does not happen you will endure a whole lot of financial pain.
  5. Do Your Homework-Mistakes are easily made when you don’t know what you are doing. There is nothing wrong with not knowing. It only becomes a problem if you fail to ask. Surround yourself with great advisors. Do not spend your hard-earned money; or invest your hard-earned money without doing your homework.

You must protect your money at all times. Nobody should care more about your money than you. Doing a proper due-diligence on each and every expenditure/investment is crucial to creating financial independence.

 

Word of Mouth 2

Word of Mouth Tactics – Part 2

In the last post we started our series on word of mouth and talked about how to make your customers purchasing experience a short, easy one. We are going to continue with that theme a bit today. We’re going to talk about the power of word of mouth and how to mold it to your advantage.

The reality is everyone needs an advisor to guide them to make a decision. We rely on the expertise of others to make the right decisions as they are explained to us. When you take the time to understand exactly what and how word of mouth works, you’ll see all the great advantages it has to offer you. Remember this path when working to understand word of mouth:

  • Accelerate the decision making process for increased profits.
  • You can accelerate product making decisions by making the process easier.
  • Instead of low-ball advertising and the used car salesman approach, try delivering on your word of mouth promises.

Traditional advertising draws about one response for every thousand ads and most of those are to ask for more information before the customer even considers purchasing. When you get information from a friend, you are more likely to take their word for it and act. On average customers purchase two out of every five recommendations their friends make. That’s a HUGE difference.

So, what exactly is word of mouth? Well, we know how powerful it can be, but to define it: Word of mouth is a communication that happens between a customer and a potential customer. There is usually a relationship of some kind between these two people with an established level of trust.

Now, compare this to advertising where you are providing a message to a potential customer where they have not established relationship with you or level of trust. Who are they more likely to take advice from? The answer is clear!
We talked above about the benefits of word of mouth now let’s take a look at some reasons why it works. Some of these are:

  • The information is custom tailored to the potential customer because of the friendly relationship of the referrer.
  • It’s more personal, relevant and believable.
  • It’s customer driven.
  • It’s self generating and can take on a life of its own, especially with the information age of the Internet.
  • It becomes part of the product’s description.
  • The source of word of mouth can be important and more effective when coming from an expert.
  • Word of mouth saves you time and money.

To fully utilize word of mouth you need to understand:

  1. Where is your word of mouth coming from?
  2. What products are being affected by word of mouth?
  3. How is your word of mouth traveling?

Once you know these things you can work out a plan on how to trigger more word of mouth. This wraps up this lesson on word of mouth. If you need help understanding word of mouth and how it can impact your business, try our FREE test drive to access our wealth of resources and tools.

Next time we’re going to dive into the nine levels of word of mouth. These levels help you understand which word of mouth is positive and which is not.

Word of Mouth

Why Using Word of Mouth Tactics is Important

Today we’ll start a new series talking all about Word of Mouth and how it can make or break your business in an extremely short amount of time. In this first lesson we’ll get a feel for what exactly word of mouth is.

Word of Mouth is easily the most powerful form of marketing and is absolutely free. People talk about ads they see, experiences they have and the products they purchase. If you treat people right and spread the word about your new products/services in a positive way, you’ll attract the right customers and client who will sustain your business for a long time.

Now, as positive as word of mouth can be for your business, the other side of the coin is how negative it can be as well. Bad news seems invariably to travel faster than good news and if you have a less than high-quality product or weak customer service system, then your customers will tell everyone they know to not buy your products and services.

The age of technology has proved to be an amazing benefit in the world of word on mouth. With blogs, podcasts, online marketing, forums, social networking and all the other online mediums available and making it easier and easier for consumers to share their experiences. And, remember this is all free advertising for you.

Let’s take a minute to talk about the importance of shortening the customer decision cycle to help customers/client choose more quickly and easily. There are three great ways to increase sales by shortening the decision cycle. They are:

Increase the overall dollar amount customers spend on each purchase

Increase your number of customers

Increase frequency of purchases

Let’s take a deeper look at decision speed. Offer simplicity, ease and a fun purchasing atmosphere and you’ll help your customers make their decisions quicker and more confidently. When this happens your customers will buy more frequently, spend more money than usual, refer friends and make the decision to purchase more quickly. This can raise your market share by over 100 times.

The time it takes your customer to decide and purchase far outweighs any other component of marketing. When you focus on customer decision speed it forces you to take a hard look at your company and brand image, positioning, value, customer service, guarantees and product quality.

The next area I want to talk about quickly is how to minimize the friction, or stress, involved with decision making. No matter how easily people find decision making there is a certain amount of anxiety we all experience when making a purchase, especially from a new source or for a large amount of money. When you help to minimize this emotional response, you will soothe your customers’ anxiety and they will make their decision quicker and more confidently.

There are a few secrets to accelerate the customers decision making progress:

Your benefits, features, claims and promises must be obvious, clear and concise.

The information you offer must be complete, easy to understand, credible and balanced.

Use comparisons that show a marked difference.

Your guarantees must be rock solid and more than the customer expects.

Make trial periods easy.

You must have simple evaluations of your products or services.

Testimonials need to be relevant and positive.

Your support, delivery and other operational systems must be perfect.

Your website can be as good as you make it. You can offer more than information, you can offer an experience that guides your customers gently through the decision making process to make it easy for them to buy. Take it a step beyond by offering toll-free support numbers, software downloads to help with the process or other classy and informative ways to reassure your customers that you are there with them every step of the way and have nothing to hide.

This wraps up the first post in our series on word of mouth. If you need help identifying your target market and the issues they are experience in their purchasing experience that is making their decision time long, try our FREE test drive and work with one of our coaches to come up with the best way to smooth out your purchasing experience.

Next time we’ll move forward with word of mouth and talk about the power of word of mouth and what exactly this powerful tool is and can be used for.

Maximum Potential

Three Ways to Maximize and Multiply Your Resources

It is vital to keep up the momentum in the areas that are serving you well.

Finding Your Pot of Gold

You must always have a goal you’re working toward in order to stay on course. Your goal needs to be something you can attain and utilize your full potential. Don’t be afraid to aim high, just make sure you are clear on what your goal is and exactly what you need to do to get there. You need to continue to hold yourself accountable to your goal and raise the bar as you accomplish the steps to your goal.

Stay at the Top of Your Game

Once you’ve mastered these areas, you need to make sure you are staying competitive and constantly coming up with new ways to use your new tools. Don’t rest on one success when there are more on the horizon. To continue to be successful your business must continue to learn and revolve.

Wealth from the Inside Out

Wealth and riches are defined within yourself, not by your profits or the world beyond. You can use all these strategies in both your business and life to find a greater level of success. When you naturally reflect who you are and what you mean, you will automatically attract the right people to you. This will happen in life and in business.

You are capable of reaching your goals as long as they are well-defined and a solid road is built to them.

Throughout the last seven lessons we’ve talked about how to take a hard look at the resources you currently have right in front of you and maximize them to get the most out of what you already have. Then turning around and multiplying those maximized resources to take them to the next level.

If you need help with any of these areas, steps or processes, click here for a free consultation.

Market medium and market domination position

Are You Confusing Message with Medium?

When I am teaching a client about their message and I hear them say “I’ve done Facebook before” I have to stop and educate them that message and medium are like comparing apples and oranges; they are not the same thing and are very easily confused.

Mediums are what are used to convey your message. Facebook, radio, TV, AdWords, brochures, and lectures are examples of mediums. These are the places where your message is conveyed.

If you want to generate a consistent system of new leads then you must do the following regarding your message:

  1. You must create a market dominating position-This is what is going to set you apart and allow you to crush your competition. It is not to be confused with a UVP, or USP. A Market dominating position allows you to enter the conversation that is taking place in the heads of your prospect. To learn more you may click here and register for a free webinar on lead generation; that will teach you how to generate more business leads than you can handle.
  2. You must use the conversion equation (interrupt>engage>educate>offer), which will allow you to convert those leads into paying patients, clients or customers. The webinar will also teach you how to properly deploy the conversion equation
  3. You must understand the buyer’s journey. All buyers are not created equal. You must market to each type of buyer differently to be effective.
  4. Do you understand the difference between strategic-based marketing and tactical-based marketing? If you don’t, your results will suffer and you will waste time and money.
  5. Do you understand how to make your website a profit center? In today’s market-place you must have a website to have credibility. However, having a website and making money from a website, are two entirely different things. Unfortunately most people are not making money from their site. The webinar will teach you how to tweak your present site to make money effortlessly.

Once you create the proper message using a market dominating position coupled with the conversion equation you can now choose the proper medium to use to deploy your message. All mediums work and have their place. You will find that even if you have done a Facebook, or AdWords campaign, or any other medium in the past; once you have a properly crafted message your results will soar and be much different than your previous experience. You may also click here to learn more about the Academy of Creative Marketing.