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

Posts Tagged ‘increase turnover’

Diamond Marketing On A Pauper Spend

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

 

Back in the late 90’s as a marketing consultant, I would always hear the Managing Director of a of risk insurance brokerage I was assisting tell his team “activity equals success”. Without a doubt he was right. The sales you make today are generated from the marketing activities you have done in the past. What differs industry by industry is the lead time required for that activity to create a sale. Stop the activity and in a corresponding time in the future – sales will fall.

 This is not yet another article espousing the imperative of continuing your marketing efforts in difficult economic times. Rather six strategies on how to enhance and refocus your marketing to generate greater success from less cost in time, dollars and effort.

I can vouch for all six because I personally do them every day.

 1. Quantify. Money talks. Fluff walks.

Put a dollar value on how they’ll benefit. Measure their rate of return. 

This exercise is easier than you might think. Will your event management service save them time? Put a value on it by estimating how much time it will save per annum multiplied by the value of that person’s time (their wage per hour, salary). You can reduce stress? Does that lead to happier employees which helps reduce turnover? You can quantify the recruitment costs saved along with the productivity continuum. By helping them put on the conference and not cancelling it this year – it will help them make more sales or increase turnover?  Take the average value of one sale (you can even factor in the life time value of that one new client) multiplied by the number of new ones expected.

You can get the base information any number of ways. Research on the Internet. Their Competitors. Annual reports. Talk to HR professionals about salary levels. Colleagues in that industry. Allies within that company.

2. Do Your Homework

How much time do you take researching a prospect before your initial contact? After several presentations this September at the Bi-annual Asia Pacific Ronald McDonald House Charities conference, An Australian house manager made this comment. “Debbie the most important point I’m taking home from you isn’t one you mentioned, it’s what you vividly demonstrated throughout this conference. It suddenly hit me that I wasn’t doing any research before going to talk to prospective business partners or donors. I just front up the meeting, talk about us and ask for donations or support. It is now clear to me that we can be much more successful by understanding them more. Putting their shoes on. Empathising how we can be of help to them also.”

3. Them. Not You

Almost every piece of marketing material, proposal, sales presentation that I see has the wrong I/You ratio of.  Your prospects care solely about themselves. Yet most marketing material focuses on how wonderful we are. How great we do. Send this chest thumping guerrilla marketing philosophy packing. Replace it with a customer focused what’s in it for them strategy. How will it make them more successful? How will it make them happier? How will it make them more money?

4. Communicate

Build relationships. People do business with people, not companies. How many communications do you receive from businesses after you’ve paid the invoice or bought the good? By maintaining a regular communication strategy you will stay top of mind and gain more referrals. But remember point 3 – the communication is primarily for their benefit – not just yours. The mode of communication should be varied too. Not just email. When was the last time you picked up the phone and called existing customers? You’d be surprised how much business you can generate that way.

5. Tenacity

Figuratively speaking most businesses knock on a door and ask “will you do business with me”? When the answer is “no, not now”, they move on to the next prospect. Then the next. And the next. That time spent is forever wasted.

When you knock, change the question to “can we start up a conversation”? In other words, by using the communication strategy you set up in point 4, you create tenacity. Persistency. You nurture prospects along until they are ready to do business with you or equally important, they refer people to you.

By combining these six strategies, you can improve your success while using less money, time and effort.

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

Debbie@successis.co.nz


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