Debbie Mayo Smith, International Motivational Speaker
Motivational Speakers, Sales, Marketing, Time Management, Productivity, Technology, Tips

Archive for the ‘Debbie’ Category

Don’t blow your enquiries out the window

Wednesday, February 29th, 2012

How do you respond to advertisements for help wanted? Or to enquiries about your services? Like gold I hope.

Let me give you an example. A while ago I advertised online for someone to help me with my website. I don’t know if it was laziness or arrogance and what I found totally amazing, was that most of the responses were basically, “hi, I’m responding – here is the link to the work I’ve done”.

Do you think I took the time to go to their sites and investigate their work when they were applying for my job? Nope. I’m far to busy, which is the understatement of the century for all employers and recruitment agents. The person that got the job in the end was one who followed up and called me.

So this is a major message. I know it’s hard, but I suggest you try to treat your initial communication for each job you apply for, or enquiry you receive as a golden opportunity and make it easy for the recipient to read about you.

Do not have the cover letter or email extolling your virtues. Rather always put yourself in the shoes of whom you’re writing to or will initially read your correspondence. Make it easy and loaded full of benefits for them. You will succeed. Don’t just send your web address and think someone will go through your site joyously with delight and glee saying “oh I’m so glad they sent me their link. I’m just dying to know all about them”.

Finally if you do want to show them material from your website, instead you go to your website and  copy and paste parts of it or the entire page for them to have immediately. This way you’re making it a lot easier.

25 Relationship Building Ideas Using Email and Txt Messaging

Wednesday, February 22nd, 2012

Stay in contact! Not just with clients, but with employees and your distributors also. Think of ways to prompt people. If it’s time for you to see them, send an emailor txt  to let them know you’ll be calling shortly. Think of ways to bring clients back to you for repeat business.

An appointment or meeting
1. Your investment is due for a quarterly/annual review
2. Your polices are due for renewal
3. New product or service that will be of interest, benefit to you
4. Tax laws are changing, how you can protect your business
5  New technology available that client will benefit from

A clients return visit
6. Your car is due for servicing
7.  Your website needs updating
8  Your teeth are due for a clean
9. Your cat needs it’s vaccination
10. Internet special – bring in printout for special offer
11.New menu, new product
12.Business succession planning discussion

Business in general

13.Thanks for dining with us. Come in next Monday for a buy one, get one free dinner (build goodwill and fill empty seats on a slow night)
14.Thanks for becoming a client. Bring in this email on your next visit for $5 off.
15.Latest economic forecast (regurgitated from a financial companies’ report)
16.Your stocked item should be running out, please reorder
17.New service starting
18.Education about your product
19.Tell clients what their competition is doing
20.Build goodwill through valuable information – such as business development tips to sole
practitioners or small business owners
21.Communicate with employees
22.Run a quiz or contest with employees online
23.
Develop your distributors. Help make them better business people in general
24.Educate your distributors about your products
25 Give your distributors information to help their clients learn more about you

STRATEGY: Think of ways to prompt people. If it’s time for you to see them, send an email to let them know you’ll be calling shortly. Think of ways to bring clients back to you for repeat business.

ACTION: It might be unconventional to email thank you’s for business just completed, but
why not? It’s unusual, will make an impact and can be the beginning of an ongoing communication strategy with that client. Can you think of a better way to start off? Try it.

Three Tips To Produce More Business Income

Wednesday, February 15th, 2012

 

1. Focus on Your Most Profitable Income Producing Activity
As you know marketing and business development costs. It takes time, attention and dollars from your business. So in this environment it does not make sense to spin your wheels trying to produce business that does not  provide the best return. Let me tell you a story. An acquaintance called me the other day wanting advice. I listened to him ramble on about what he wanted to do – this and that. And all of it was going to be marketed on a website. My advice? Don’t spin your wheels on every single money making activity you can think of. Your time is limited and valuable. How much energy and effort will it take you to produce this item that will sell for perhaps $10 or $20 dollars each, passively off your website? Wouldn’t it be better to put that same time and energy to get a corporate client where they would pay you in the thousands?

So look at all the activities you do. In 2010 focus on the ones that show you more money for your resource invested.

2. Email – You Must, Must, Must, Must do it Right
I will not harp on you about email. It is one of the most valuable business tools you can employ in 2010. But you can blow it royally by not doing it correctly. You must:

  • Target correctly
  • Think customer first
  • Don’t inundate
  • Graphic simplicity is the name of the game
  • Track, measure and respond
  • Be clever, don’t follow the pack
  • Develop an outstanding database of your own

3. Get Some New Best Business Friends
I’m talking about those with huge email databases. 1 + 1 = much more than 2 when you join marketing forces with someone with a large permission database. Think of clever joint ventures you can do, companies in synergy with you, complementary where you can cross market services to each other.

Be A Better Marketer Than A Doer

Tuesday, February 14th, 2012

Every now and then – you will hear something life changing. Such as “Will you marry me”; “the job is yours”; “It’s a boy” (or in my case, congratulations, it’s two boys and a girl, you’re having triplets).

I heard a presentation by speaker Winston Marsh back in 2000 that changed the way I conducted business.

Winston said “Be a better marketer of what you do than a doer of what you do.”
So simple. So clever. So poorly don by most. There are 1,000′s of people just like you out there. Running similar companies. Filling your occupation. What makes you special? You can be the very best in your industry at what you do. But if people don’t know about you or your company – how can they use your services, buy your products?

Success comes more swiftly to those adept at marketing and promoting their businesses. Be a better marketer of what you do than a doer of what you do. Look for and take each and every opportunity to promote your business.

Let me illustrate two blown golden opportunities.

Blown Opportunity One
I had the opportunity to be at four functions catered by a husband and wife team specialising in vegetarian food. I knew them – but who else at the functions did? They should have had a table plaque with their company name and contact details, or business cards discretely on tables. Here in the middle of their target market, with people marveling at their work (and the chef never in sight) why is there no way to find out more?  How about a discrete sign up sheet for seasonal recipes?

Blown Opportunity Two
Ordering coffee at a café’, there’s an enormous white latte’ bowl chock full of business cards. “What do you do with these cards” I asked. “People go in a monthly draw for a hotel stay” was the reply. “Then what do you do with the business cards” I asked. “Nothing” was the reply.

What a missed golden opportunity!!!! Here was a client database right before their very eyes that they throw out. They should instead start an online communication with people who have already become their clients, and try to woo them back again and again and again.

Search Folders In Outlook

Wednesday, February 8th, 2012

What are search folders in Outlook?

Think of a Search Folder as a virtual folder. You set a criteria – all emails with a word, name or email address in it for example and it will gather and virtually show you all your emails meeting that criteria Search folders even includes deleted and sent items. They are permanent (well at least until you delete them) and they grows in size and content as time passes and more emails meet your search criteria.

You might not think Search Folders are particularly exciting, but when you understand they help you see different groupings of your emails without changing their folder location (your organisation of them) in any way, you’ll be delighted with the concept. For example, if you wanted to see all the emails from the sports committee you’re on or messages from a co-worker in one place, without moving them, you could use a Search Folder to do this.

You’ll find your main Search Folder by looking under your Sent fold. It initially contains three default Search Folders: For Follow Up, Large Mail, and Unread Mail. Large mail is excellent for helping you to quickly find all the large files within Outlook itself in case you go over mailbox limits.

Five Simple Marketing Ideas For The New Year

Wednesday, February 1st, 2012

1. Start doing press releases.

You can make a press release up about almost everything. Extra learning you’ve taken on, certificates and awards, new customers, sponsorship taken in the community. Try to spread the word – be a better marketer!

2. Start writing articles and submit them to industry periodicals and publications your target market reads.

Articles or comments, quotes by you in articles, work so much more effectively than advertising. If you write an article produced in your target market’s periodicals, you’re almost endorsed as an expert – and how many new eyeballs does your name come across to?

3. Use Email Signatures cleverly.

Signatures on emails are a great way to market yourself to different clients and your different products and services. Your email software package should have a Wizard that walks you through creating it. In Outlook it is the tools menu > options > mail format > signatures.

4. Start doing Thank-you notes, cards and emails.

You know the recommendation that you should always send out thank-you notes and cards. But what if you see a lot of prospective new clients in a week? Or you’re just too busy? Why not do a mix of thank-you notes and emails?

5. Direct Your Audience in what action you want them to take?

Plan ahead. Sure, you might want people to click through to your website and order something then and there. But is there anything else? Do you want them perhaps to give you more information? Do you want them to pass the email on to a friend? Do you want them to sign up for regular emails? So if this book is prompting you towards your first email campaign, stop. Go for a walk. Think. Really think. What actions do you really want your readers to take?

Five permission email tips for marketing

Wednesday, January 18th, 2012

1. Only email those who have asked. It’s the law

If someone hands you their business card, don’t assume you can just add them to your email list. Ask first – the best time to mention it is when you get the card in your hand. Say something like: ‘I’ve got a great online newsletter, would you like to get a free subscription? You can leave it if it doesn’t appeal.’ Nine out of ten times you’ll get an affirmative answer.

2. Always honour their requests to opt-out.

Make it a simple process. Since people often have multiple email addresses, include on your email the address you have sent it to. This can eliminate a lot of angst on their side and frustration on yours.

3. Allow your customers and prospects to give you their preferences.

Information: how much and how often do they want it? For example, if you’re doing a daily email – cater to those who might prefer to have only some of the information. This makes it more relevant for them instead of having to scan through the entire email.

4. Do not sell or rent your lists.

Your email list can be your goldmine, one of the most valuable assets of your business. Don’t ruin it by selling or renting your email list.

5. Give and take.

You don’t think people give you their email addresses out of the goodness of their hearts do you? They do it in exchange for something of value to them. A gift, Information. Education. White paper.Chance to win. Be creative, but truly add value.

6. Respond to customer email inquiries promptly.

Why is it that once someone hits that send key on their computer, they expect an immediate reply? They expect that someone is sitting at a computer ready to read and respond to their email. Have an email policy and enforce it. Ensure that you have a 24-hour turnaround if at all possible.

If you liked this tip please sahre it with your friends and colleagues.

Persistence pays heaps

Wednesday, January 11th, 2012

Let me tell you about Wayne McCarthy, a top real estate agent with Barfoot and Thompson in Auckland. Wayne worked with a couple from England for two years house hunting in Auckland during the summers. Several months into year three they bought a home online from England from another agent & company. For most, the contact would have ended then and there. However Wayne continued to stay in touch with them with a regular, five monthly “good day, how are you, need a tradesman or anything let me know” email. Yes, Even though they weren’t clients. He never mentioned in any of the emails “Do I have a house for you, told of an open house or suggested they might want an investment property. He simply sent them a can I help you email.

Five years pass
Wayne gets a call from the English couple. “Wayne, we are not coming to New Zealand as often as we would have liked. Please sell the house for us.” “Of course,” Wayne replies “but what about the agent you bought your home from?” “We never heard from him again. You’ve been loyal so we’ve called you”.

What’s the point?

  • Persistence – 5 years
  • Continued though business was lost
  • System
  • Relationship building – NOT BUGGING

Your System
To build a similar reminder system for yourself – why not create a recurring Task in Outlook (To Do in Lotus Notes) to remind yourself to call, visit, follow up on important clients and prospects?

Focus your pleasure and profit

Wednesday, January 4th, 2012

It was a business changing moment when I overhead one of my young triplets Matthew say to a friend “oh that’s my mom. She’s always on the computer”   That innocent comment was like a hot knife slicing butter, slashing my heart. How right that little boy was. It kick started a -examination of my business. Being self employed I was able to analyse each type of work I took in, rate it by how personally pleasurable and profitable an activity it was. By 10am the next morning I had a whole new focus of only accepting and developing business that was the most profitable and pleasurable to do.

How do you apply this principal to your business (and personal life)?

What are your activities now?
Write down all the things you do.  Then score each by how passionate you are and how pleasurable an activity it is. Next rate the income production activities by how profitable they are.  Pleasurable/ passionate has to be part of the equation as life isn’t about money alone. For example a self employed mother would find a better use of her time marketing for new business as opposed to cooking dinner. But if cooking gives her pleasure, it’s an activity that stays.

Focus Your Marketing
It’s easy for small businesses or the self employed to make changes swiftly. What about retailers for example?

Rob Bruce, owner of Blenheim Furniture2go has a marvelous attitude. “In the current market we’re not selling so many $2000 lounge suites, but $4,000 ones are moving.  We look at sales, and tweak our focus. Beds vs. lounge suites. Targeting the catalogue mail drop to certain neighbourhoods.

Alliances for work you turn away
You always want to be helpful so try to build alliances with other companies in your industries that are happy to take on that work. You might even be clever and negotiate a little clip of the ticket.

If you like this tip please share it with your friends and colleagues.

Focus your pleasure and profit

Wednesday, January 4th, 2012

It was a business changing moment when I overhead one of my young triplets Matthew say to a friend “oh that’s my mom. She’s always on the computer”   That innocent comment was like a hot knife slicing butter, slashing my heart. How right that little boy was. It kick started a -examination of my business. Being self employed I was able to analyse each type of work I took in, rate it by how personally pleasurable and profitable an activity it was. By 10am the next morning I had a whole new focus of only accepting and developing business that was the most profitable and pleasurable to do.

How do you apply this principal to your business (and personal life)?

What are your activities now?
Write down all the things you do.  Then score each by how passionate you are and how pleasurable an activity it is. Next rate the income production activities by how profitable they are.  Pleasurable/ passionate has to be part of the equation as life isn’t about money alone. For example a self employed mother would find a better use of her time marketing for new business as opposed to cooking dinner. But if cooking gives her pleasure, it’s an activity that stays.

Focus Your Marketing
It’s easy for small businesses or the self employed to make changes swiftly. What about retailers for example?

Rob Bruce, owner of Blenheim Furniture2go has a marvelous attitude. “In the current market we’re not selling so many $2000 lounge suites, but $4,000 ones are moving.  We look at sales, and tweak our focus. Beds vs. lounge suites. Targeting the catalogue mail drop to certain neighbourhoods.

Alliances for work you turn away
You always want to be helpful so try to build alliances with other companies in your industries that are happy to take on that work. You might even be clever and negotiate a little clip of the ticket.

If you like this tip please share it with your friends and colleagues.

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Call Debbie Now!
64 (9) 575-5359 NZ
61 (3) 9005 7563 Melbourne
61 (2) 8005 7551 Sydney

Debbie@successis.co.nz


Books

Marketing in Today's Wired World

Marketing in Today's Wired World alerts you to the many profitable and clever ways you can use email, txt, video and audio messages to boost revenues, recruit new business, cut costs, improve customer service and leapfrog in front of your competition.
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101 Quick Tips for Google and Email
101 Outlook and Google Tips Debbie's years of experience working with email and Google are packed into this easy to read #1 bestselling book.
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101 Quick Tips: Create a Great Customer Experience
101 Customer Experience Tips do you want more sales, referrals and repeat business? Then you need this book! You won't want to miss these 101 tips to place your head and shoulders above the crowd to build customer loyalty, word of mouth, and profits.
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101 Quick Tips: Surviving the Kids
101 Balancing Tips with nine children between them and busy careers, let Debbie and Mary Lambie use their experience to make this practical little book a goldmine of solutions for you.
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Conquer Your Email Overload Superb Tips and Tricks For Busy People
Save hours a week using clever, timesaving 'how-to' solutions to the top problems you have using email, your calendar, address books/contacts.
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