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3 Ways to Improve Your Marketing and
Increase Your Small Business Sales
by Charlie Cook
Copyright 2005©. All rights reserved.
Last week I got a call from Jose, who was looking
for help improving his ads. He’d been running the same ad in
four local papers for two months and only gotten one response. He was
understandably frustrated. With more than a dozen very satisfied clients,
he knows that the residential property management services he and his
brother provide should interest more people, but he wasn't having any
success getting attention or generating leads for his small business
.
Jose knew that to grow his business he'd need to do
some marketing. He had a web site and was doing all the networking he
could in addition to running his ads. Isn't this what he should be doing
to attract more clients? Aren't advertising, web sites, mailings
and networking what small business marketing is all about?
Webster's dictionary thinks so; it defines marketing
as, "an aggregate
of functions involved in moving goods from producer to consumer".
In other words, small business marketing is a collection of activities.
Is this how you think of it? Has approaching marketing with this mindset
helped you increase your sales and profits?
Think about it. You started your business to
provide products or services that help people. You work long and hard
for your clients to ensure they get what they want. You know that the
more helpful you are to your clients, the more likely they'll be to
hire you again and the more often they’ll
recommend you.
Your products and services are aimed at meeting
your prospects’ wants
and needs. Focus your marketing on these wants and needs and use them
to guide your marketing activities.
Small Business Marketing is Helping Your Prospects
Get What They Want.
Learn how to generate More
Sales With Less Selling. Use this marketing system to get more
clients.
In More
Sales With Less Selling you'll learn the key concepts and strategies
you can use to give your clients what they want so you can increase
your pr0fits.
Use this link to get your copy of More
Sales With Less Selling.
Learn how to explain what you do and get a better response to your marketing.
In the 15 Second Marketing
guide. You'll discover how to write and use your marketing message
and elevator speech to get more attention and more business.
Use this link to get the 15
Second Marketing guide.
Marketing is not about you. It is not building
your brand name, (unless you’re a Fortune 500 company and have
the advertising budget to match). It is not convincing people to buy
your products and services. It is not a group of activities that move
goods and services. It is about your customers and what they want.
Working with Jose, I had shown him how to refocus
his marketing on what his prospects were looking for. A few days ago
Jose called me back to tell me about his experience with trying out
this helping model of marketing. During a recent visit to Home Depot,
he struck up a conversation with a prospect, Bob, who asked what Jose
did. Instead of going through the litany of services his company provides,
Jose said, "We help landlords
manage their properties more efficiently and make more money."
That got Bob's attention; he wanted to know how
Jose helped landlords. Jose briefly explained his company’s services from the landlord’s
point of view. Bob asked for Jose's business card, so they could have
a conversation about Jose managing Bob’s 56 rental properties.
Whether you are crafting your advertising copy, elevator speech, or
the copy for your web or print brochure, your business marketing
should focus on what your prospects want. When your prospects see you as helping
them instead of just trying to sell them, they'll be more likely to respond.
Use your
marketing and advertising copy to get more clients. Learn how to
write copy that pulls in prospects so you can sell them your products
and services.
Click
here to learn more.
Want to help your prospects get what they want
so you can increase your sales and profits? Focus your marketing
on helping by doing the following
three things.
• Regularly ask your prospects what they
want, what their goals are and how you can help them.
• Use this information to shape your marketing
copy.
• Describe in brief and in detail your clients'
concerns and how you help them on everything from your business card
to your sales letters to your ads and to your web site.
When you focus your small business marketing
on helping your prospects get what they want, you’ll get what
you want; more leads, more prospects and more clients.
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Learn how working with Charlie
Cook can help you grow your business with less effort by calling
1-800-795-1858 or sending
him an email.
"I love your marketing books so much that
I've bought three of these marketing tools, my favorite being 'Creating
Web Sites that Sell'. I used to see marketing as a puzzle; now all
the pieces are falling into place.
Your marketing manuals contain
a wealth of information that simplifies what I do. They ! have helped
me be more productive and get many more clients. Highly recommended."
Susan Robichaud, Visual Communications Inc.
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