Social media, Facebook, Twitter — what’s the most effective, least expensive way to market your business or service? One of the easiest and the most effective email marketing tools you can use is your Autoresponder. Read More »
Social media, Facebook, Twitter — what’s the most effective, least expensive way to market your business or service? One of the easiest and the most effective email marketing tools you can use is your Autoresponder. Read More »
Want to know which two-three paragraphs are guaranteed to increase your sales by up to 50% or more? It’s not a secret — but all too many businesses let prospects slip away when they forget to use this incredibly powerful tool.
What am I talking about? It’s the proven way to eliminate your prospects worries about taking any risk when they buy from you. Read More »
When PR people complain to me about the Customers from Hell, I always try to help.
At some point in the conversation, I’m not surprised to hear them say, “I should have trusted my gut.”
Indeed.
Debbie Bermont, president of Source Communications, a marketing consulting firm, says trusting your gut is one of seven reasons to say no to new business. Read More »
Here’s a strange story for you.
A while ago I wrote an e-mail for a firm selling investment advice.
They took forever to get the damn thing out and never told us how it did, but one day sent us an e-mail asking us to adapt it for another firm’s list with whom they had a deal.
But by accident we saw two revealing insights into why so much marketing is bad. Read More »
Is it taking you too long to close the sale? Are you getting the brush off? If so, you’re using the wrong approach.
There is no set amount of time it takes to close a sale, but unless you’re selling something that costs tens of thousands of dollars, you’re not going to make money if you spend hours with each prospect. In most cases, 30 minutes is all you should need to close the sale. Read More »
I’ve just started redesigning my business website – it’s been about a year and a half since I last did it. One of the main reasons is that most of my work over the last year has involved WordPress projects. I think it’s high time my own website was built in the content management system I recommend to clients!
As I’m working through the new site, I’m culling content from the old one. Some of the revised verbiage includes text about creating maintainable websites. What does that mean, exactly? Aren’t all websites maintainable? Read More »
I just got back from Fabienne Fredrickson’s Mindset Retreat in Miami. I actually never planned on going but after interviewing her for my Wise Women of The Web teleseminar series, her ideas intrigued me so I hopped on the plane.
What a week! Fabienne devoted 3 days to ‘transforming’ the participants lives. She covered a whole array of mindset issues-from the importance of thinking big and understanding your Big Why to how to get rid of the ‘gunk’ that is preventing you from being the full success you want to be. Read More »
If you do business with people from cultural groups different than your own, you would be wise to invest some time understanding their cultures as well as their needs in terms of your products and services.
You may not necessarily be doing business with people in another country, but with those from other countries who have relocated near your place of business. If you want their business, you have to understand their needs on many levels. Read More »
Now that you know what to do in order to solicit a positive response—here’s what to avoid:
1. Not Taking “No” for an Answer
Persistence is an admirable trait, but there comes a point when you must accept defeat. Most people won’t build relationships with insistent callers who phone 500 times after they’re told “No.” When someone says “No,” accept it. Walk away before you destroy a potentially valuable connection.
Read More »