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Top 10 Marketing Tips
By Rick Crandall
Despite confusion about what marketing is,
without it no business can succeed. The
best definition of marketing is anything
you do to get OR keep a customer. This means
the most important forms of marketing are
customer service and referrals, according
to Dr. Rick Crandall, author of 1001 Ways to
Market Your Services: Even If You Hate to Sell.
That’s why in his six books on marketing he
focuses on how to build relationships with
customers and potential customers. He says,
"You can build relationships in person or online.
Even your advertising and brochures can help
build relationships."
Having recently collected almost 2000 ways
that real companies and individuals have
marketed successfully, we asked him to name
the ten best methods. He replied, "Of course,
the best methods will differ depending on
your personal style, your industry, and your
budget. Despite the increasing impact of
technology on marketing, most of the key
things you can do are still aimed at standing
out in your market and building relationships.
If I had to pick the top ten approaches they
would be these."
- Make your advantages easy to understand.
For instance, Computer Resources International AS
originally sold consulting, for which they used
proprietary software. Only when they started
selling the software first, and then customization
and consulting as extras did their business take off.
Buying software was easier to understand than the
more intangible consulting. LifeUSA insurance,
and many other businesses, focus on speed in every
aspect of their business. They make fun of the slower
industry standards and provide a simple advantage
clients understand. Other ways to set yourself apart
are through great service or association with worthy
causes.
- Don’t try to be everything to everyone.
Just as customers screen you, you should decide who
you want to serve. Printing Resources originally
took any printing business that walked in the door.
When they realized which kinds of customers they worked
with best, they were able to cut down their marketing
costs and make more money. Some computer consulting
firms only work with one customer per industry so
they will have no conflicts of interest. You can bet
they select customers carefully, and that customers
are flattered by the partnership approach. Consider
creating a checklist of who shouldn’t hire you!
It will help you focus, and may impress the right
customers if you share it with them.
- Work for referrals. Word of mouth is the least
expensive, most effective way to get new business.
Barry Farber has new customers write on the back of
their business cards why they bought. These become
mini-testimonials. Bob Brassard calls at least one
client a day just to keep in touch. This builds the
relationship by showing he doesn’t just care about
them when he wants something, allows him to update
files, and generates referrals. One upscale dentist
put up a Web page. He got about six extra referrals
a month because his clients thought it was "cool"
that their dentist had a Web page.
- Use online marketing. You don’t have to have a Web
site like Eastern Mortgage Services to do business online.
You can send personalized e-mail like Michael Swartz of
DNA Software. You can pay only for the leads generated
for you by advertising on many sites. You can research
potential clients for better presentations. You can
gather customer input inexpensively as Ritchey Design
does. Or you can post free ads in discussion groups.
- Don’t sell, help people buy. When you truly put the
client’s interests above your own, you will become a
consultant, a team member, and a partner for your client.
When you’ve earned trusted advisor status, doing
business is no problem. For instance, computer
consultant, Amadaeus Consulting Group, helps its
customers make more money by using computers to help
their clients sell more. Of course, the extra business
comes around as the client grows. A small accountant’s
client felt they needed a "Big 5" firm to handle their
audit because they wanted to go public. Instead of resisting,
the accountant helped the client select a Big 5 firm,
thus maintaining and extending the relationship with the
client. Conrad International added warehousing services
near overseas clients so they could afford to buy in bulk
for a lower price.
When you put the customer first, you earn long-term
loyalty that is more profitable than a larger quick sale.
- Partner with other companies reaching your market.
This might be neighborhood merchants cooperating on a
sidewalk sale, or Digital Equipment partnering with
Infinite Technologies to better serve the Bank of
New York. Or it could be you partnering with a charity
to create a fund raising event that brings attention to
both of you, like Service Merchandise and Goodwill did.
- Shift the risk to yourself and you will profit.
A believable guarantee
makes it safe for prospects to give you a try.
Very few people will exploit a generous guarantee
compared to the extra business it generates.
YoyoDine is one of many companies that guarantee
you results from their online advertising. Even
Kaiser, the big HMO, found a money-back guarantee
to be successful.
- Be personal. To build relationships you have
to build a personal connection. A handwritten
invitation pulled great for Frank Candy,
president of the American Speakers Bureau
and for restaurateur Murray Raphael. Internet
consultant Dan Janal gives clients links from
his page. One nursing home created a waiting
list through great referrals by greeting visiting
relatives by name and filling them in on their
loved ones at the start of each visit.
- Create free publicity. Our old Construction
Computer Applications Newsletter had a hard time
finding reviewers for computer programs of interest
to readers. Our reviewers not only got publicity
from their reviews, but we gave them referrals.
A large CPA firm specializes in citrus growers.
Every year they do a survey of their clients’
costs of operations. The survey data helps their
clients benchmark their operations, positions the
CPAs as the experts, and gets the CPA firm publicized
in trade articles. Inquiry Handling Services gets
regular publicity from newsletters and articles,
as well as a book they wrote for their industry.
And Luxury Limo received major coverage about a
special rate created to allow three "regular" women
to share the commute in a limo at about the cost of
carpooling.
- Integrate your marketing. This means that
everything you do should convey the same message
and represent what you stand for. Putnam Investments
manages $150 billion in assets. All their literature,
and even their office, conveys the same message.
Viva Knight, a script consultant, rents mailing
lists from the same magazine he advertises in.
If he also wrote articles for the same magazine,
it would add to the integrated approach.
Whether you use high tech or shoeleather
approaches to marketing, the best methods
will be comfortable for you and prospects,
build relationships, and support the setting
up of a system that can be done regularly.
And perhaps that’s the main secret of successful
marketing-to get started and keep doing something
on a regular basis.
These tips are from the book:
1001 Ways to Market Your Services: Even If You
Hate to Sell, by Rick Crandall (RPCrandall@aol.com),
published by Contemporary/NTC Books. Copyrighted.
for an occasional free newsletter, contact the author.
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Last updated: July 10, 2000