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Keys to Success What
Does It Take To Succeed With Your Small Business Marketing?
by
Charlie Cook
©2007
In Mind Communications, LLC - All rights reserved.
Why is it that some small business owners seem unstoppable,
steadily growing their businesses and assets, while others
struggle to
stay profitable?
Last week I got a call from Phillip in Oregon,
whose two online niche lawn care businesses had hit a wall. In
just over three years, he had grown his revenue from the two sites
to about $200,000 a year. He was happy with the results, but he
wasn’t satisfied.
His sites were getting over 1,500 visitors a day but his sales had
stagnated. Phillip wasn’t sure where to focus his time — and
endless energy —to convert those visitors to customers.
Phillip wanted to increase his total sales from the two sites by
a factor of ten. His friends had told him he was crazy, but he was
convinced he could do it if he could improve his conversion rates.
When I asked Phillip where he thought he
needed my help, he was ready with answers. He knew that he needed
help; he was aware that his lead generation system was leaky;
he knew that he didn’t
have any follow-up strategy in place and needed help implementing
one. He also mentioned that his product development process
often got bogged down.
Ready
to take your business to the next level? Click here
to find out how >>
Listening to Phillip describe his business, I heard a business
owner who had all the potential to be extremely successful. He had
the five characteristics that highly successful small business owners
have.
Do the following characteristics describe you as well?
1. Never 100% Satisfied
Very successful business people are aware of their successes but
are always looking for a way to improve their products, services
and profits. Another of my clients, Julie, who owns a home health
care business, is a good example. She built her business to bring
in over six million dollars in revenue and turned down an offer
to buy it so she could grow revenue to nine million.
The same thing applies regardless of the
size of your company. Toyota, for example, is arguably the most
successful car company in the world. Rather than taking success
for granted, every employee is expected to look for ways to continually
improve the corporation’s
products and processes whether its making their cars more
reliable or more fuel efficient.
You could be applying the same continuous improvement
approach to your small business marketing.
2. Create Opportunity Instead of Waiting For It
Some people are looking and waiting for the right opportunity to
open up for them. And they keep on looking and waiting. These people
are perpetual dreamers.
Truly successful people may dream about
success, but they don’t
wait for doors to open. They build the doors and then open
them themselves. My client Laurie Nadel is great example of this.
At one time a destitute, divorced Brooklyn housewife, Laurie built
a thriving coaching practice, helping executives and actors
alike people overcome performance anxiety. She created her own
business opportunity and now is enjoying its benefits.
3. Not Afraid to Make Mistakes
Few entrepreneurs have found a straight
road to success. Many have lost significant amounts of money and
time before they learn what works. When I launched my first web
site almost ten years ago, I couldn’t find my own site in
the search engines. This prompted me to become an expert in search
engine marketing. The offshoot of this was a site I created that
reviewed and ranked search engines, which I sold at the height
of the Internet bubble for a small fortune.
Truly successful people aren’t afraid
to stumble or even fail and use their failures as the foundation
of their best successes.
Ready
to build on your successes and failures and reach your
goals? Use this link >>
4. Aware of Their Limitations
Phillip could point to at least a handful of areas where he knew
he needed help to improve, including his follow-up and product development
processes. Julie knew her market penetration was limited in one
of her target markets.
Successful business people know that one
of their competitive advantages comes from identifying what isn’t
working and fixing it.
5. Seek Out Expert Help
Is it even possible to become an expert
in every aspect of your business? It’s more likely that you’d be a jack-of-all-trades
and a master of none. This strategy won’t help you rise to
the top.
If you own a small business, it’s just not possible to become
an expert in product development, operations, personnel management,
accounting, fufillment, small business marketing, sales and customer
service. You’re going to need the help of a handful of experts.
Test Yourself – Do you
have what it takes to succeed?
1. Do you push yourself and your employees to improve every aspect
of your business?
2. Are you actively creating new opportunities for success?
3. Do you use your mistakes to create new ways of working?
4. Are you aware of your biggest business marketing
weaknesses?
5. Are you currently working with experts who can help you take
your business to the next level? If not, are you seeking the help
you need to grow your business?
How many questions did you answer 'yes' to? What's the
next step to achieving your goals?
Highly successful entrepreneurs are dreamers
and doers, self-confident and self-critical, with expertise in
at least one significant area of their business but aware of what
they don’t know. They’re
people who take action and try new ideas.
Sound like you? If it does,
you’ve got the
key characteristics of someone bound for continued success.
Tomorrow I’ll be opening my small business marketing mentoring
program to applicants. If you want an expert to show you what works,
and hold you accountable for getting it done and getting it right,
then use the following link to put yourself on the list. After this
week I’ll be closing the doors to the mentoring program for
the next eight or nine months.
Use
this link to be considered for this unique mentoring program >>
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