Showing posts with label free marketing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label free marketing. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Signature Line: An Overlooked, Virtually Free Marketing Tool

Author: Veronika Noize, The Marketing Coach

Once my clients truly understand that marketing is about relationships, we start talking about how those relationships are created and maintained to determine appropriate marketing tactics for their businesses and personal styles. But no matter what kind of business my clients are in, they all have the same excellent relationship marketing tool at their fingertips: Their e-mail messages.

E-mail messages are the most frequently overlooked (and virtually free) marketing tools available to entrepreneurs. No, I'm not talking about electronic mail campaigns, or spamming, but using the messages you send out every day to your clients and colleagues as a subtle marketing tool. You can do this by adding more information to your signature line in all your e-mail.

How many times have you received a message from people who aren't using a company domain name in their e-mail address, so you're not sure who Bill or Sally @Hotmail.com is? Or what if you're in that position yourself? Many low cost Web hosts will forward e-mail received to you@yourdomain.com, but don't provide an e-mail address from your domain name. So how do you look professional when you're dealing with a $35 a month Web site and free Internet e-mail? You use an annotated signature line.

Most e-mail programs allow users to create an individual signature line that is appended to all outgoing messages. If you're not using one, you are missing an effective and virtually free way to market your business. And as an added bonus, your marketing message can be seen where paid advertising is forbidden such as on electronic bulletin boards, giving you a competitive edge is such circumstances.

So why bother to annotate your signature line? Here are some good reasons:

1. Annotating your signature line makes it easy for your clients to find your contact information when they want t o buy again. Sure you may have given them a business card, but what if business cards are lost or misfiled? Creating a situation in which your client has to look in the Yellow Pages for your phone number may be risky, especially if a competitor has a more compelling marketing message.

2. Annotating your signature line reminds and makes it easy for your clients to visit your web site. Of course that's assuming you want your customers to visit your Web site. And why wouldn't you? Your Web site is a great visibility tool that builds your relationship with your customers.

3. Annotating your signature line identifies the origin of your messages so that if they get forwarded, people who are interested in what you have to say or offer can find you easily. Evan if you know for sure that your customers have your address, your fax number or understand the full range of your products or services, that information does not forward with your e-mail unless you put it there. So if one of your loyal customers forwards an e-mail from you to a colleague and your contact information is not included, you've just closed the door to a new business opportunity that your customer opened for you by forwarding your message.

4. Annotating your signature line can be a gentle way to remind customers of upcoming events ("Sale end Friday, Dec 27th" or "Don't miss our open house on Jan 17") to buy again ("Call today for a free quote"), to promote a new product or service ("Ask me how our new widget will save you money"), to encourage forwarding and referrals ("Forward this newsletter to anyone you thing will find it valuable") or to call for feedback ("If you like working with us, tell your friends. If you don't, tell us and we'll make it right").

So what should you include in an annotated signature line? At the very least, your e-mail signature should include you full name, title, company name, web site link, plus you phone and fax numbers. Also consider a direct access phone line (if different than the company phone number), cell phone number, company tag line or motto, an offer, a reminder to buy, last call for a special deal, teaser for the future products or services, or even an inspirational quote, if it reinforces your marketing message.

It doesn't have to be fancy to get read. You can make simple borders around your key messages or information by using your title key (~), a dash (-), and underline (_) or even a series of asterisks (*). Bottom line: Every professional needs a standard signature line in all business correspondence. Because that is exactly what e-mail is professional correspondence. Of course, we use it so casually and so frequently that it hardly seems like something professional at all. But bear in mind that all correspondence between you and your customers is an opportunity to enhance you business relationship, even if that communication happens only in cyberspace.

About the Author:

Veronika (Ronnie) Noize, known professionally as the Marketing Coach, is a successful coach and marketing strategist, as well as the author of How to Create a Killer Elevator Speech, and The Real Magic Bullet of Marketing, her first full-length book.

As a senior marketing executive for over 10 years, Ronnie launched more than 200 consumer products, including books, CDs, toys, and games. She created sales and licensing programs that generated more than $650 million dollars internationally for properties such as The X-Files, Magic the Gathering, and Star Wars.

A tireless small business advocate, Ronnie helps business owners and marketing professionals attract more clients and double their revenues. She supplies plenty of free marketing tools and information on her web site at www.SohoMarketingGuru.com, where you’ll also find her workshops, seminars, and teleclasses.

She says that one of the most difficult problems for new and mature, large and small businesses is figuring out where, when, and how to allocate their often scarce resources of time, energy, and money so that they can meet their business development goals quickly and easily.

Recently honored as the 2007 Coach of the Year by her ICF chapter, Ronnie also leads classes at the International Coach Academy in addition to her coaching practice.

Article Source: ArticlesBase.com - Signature Line: An Overlooked, Virtually Free Marketing Tool

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Top 10 Excuses Why Marketing Is Not For You

Author: Veronika Noize, The Marketing Coach

As a marketing coach, I've probably heard every excuse in the book why people can't market their businesses. You wouldn't believe some of the whoppers people tell when they're trying to justify their failure to attract clients.

Now don't get me wrong; it's not that failing to attract clients makes one a bad person. Not at all. It's just that when I hear the following excuses I feel compelled to call 'em as I see 'em: Baloney!

If you have the mistaken notion that any of these lame excuses are the reason that your business isn't successful, get a clue. These are just EXCUSES for people who fail, not reasons not to succeed (a subtle, yet important, difference).

1. "I'm too honest to market." OK, this little gem is at the top of my list because it is both a lie AND an insult! I am a marketer by trade, and I am honest, so I know for a fact that marketing is not a dishonest process or practice, nor does it have to be dishonest to be effective. What's dishonest is when you overstate your results, or if you truly don't believe that your product or service is worth what you charge, or if you deliberately intend to defraud people. In that case, the problem is with you, not marketing, so stop insulting the rest of us.

2. "I'm too modest to market myself." Listen up, princess, every word out of your mouth doesn't have to be about YOU. Think about what your clients want, need and actually get, and that'll keep the conversation going for as long as you need it to go. Hey, if you're not comfortable saying great things about yourself, start saying great things about what your clients get out of working with you. Or better yet, let them say it for you in the form of testimonials. But don't think that you have to be the subject of every fascinating conversation you have with prospects.

3. "I'm too shy to market myself." As a highly sensitive person myself, you'd think I'd have more sympathy for this excuse, but I don't. If you want to be successful, know right now that it may not always be comfortable, and you have to be willing to do what it takes to succeed, even if that means going outside your comfort zone. Shyness is a habit that can be overcome with practice, so join Toastmasters, or see a therapist if that's what it is going to take, but get over yourself. I promise you will be glad you did.

4. "I'm too creative to market myself." This excuse is really lame! Marketing is a very creative process, and since you have literally thousands of options when structuring your marketing plans, creativity is an asset, not a liability. Unless you're one of those I-am-a-self-indulgent-whiner-who-refuses-to-accept-any-responsibility-for-my-actions-and-masks-that-character-flaw-with-claims-of-misunderstood-or-excessive-creativity kinds of people, in which case I say, grow up, and while you're at it, think up a more creative excuse.

5. "I don't have enough time to market my business." OK, this excuse sounds good at first, but in reality it doesn't wash. Either you are already marketing but not acknowledging your marketing activities as such, or your business is so busy that you don't need to market at all, which makes this excuse unnecessary. So if you haven't got all the business you want but you don't have time to market, you need to reevaluate how you're spending your time, and make some tough decisions about when you are going to do what you need to do to get those clients.

6. "I don't have enough money to market my business." Again, you get points for trying, but this is still just an excuse, because good marketing isn't about money, it's about relationships. You can start very modestly with your marketing plans, and spend nothing but your time. And let me tell you, if you can't get some traction spending 40 hours a week trying to build your business relationships, maybe you should rethink your decision to be an entrepreneur.

7. "I have no personal network to market to." Oh please, you've got to have a better excuse than this! If you truly have no family, no friends, no colleagues, no acquaintances or no former co-workers, then start meeting some. I don't care if you've been on a desert island for the past 20 years, you can always meet people through networking meetings, trade associations, classes, social clubs, or at the gym! Just pick up the phone and call the people you want to know, get out there and mingle, and your personal network will grow quickly.

8. "My product or service is too hard to explain to people." Fine. Quit explaining what you do, and start talking about what your customers GET from working with you. Do you help your customers get thinner, smarter, married, fitter, their first home, or what? Seriously, nobody cares about what you do, really; people care about what they get. Get it?

9. "My product or service is so good that it should sell itself." Sure, that's probably true if your product is a talking monkey, or your clients are all telepaths, but other than that, it's going to take a little effort on your part, bucko, so start creating some momentum in the marketplace and you'll find that your product needs less and less of your efforts to sell, until one day it almost seems like it DOES sell itself!

10. "My niche is too narrow and I can't find my customers." Hogwash. What this usually means is that you haven't yet defined your customer, because you can't find what you haven't identified (and don't give me that you'll-know-them-when-you-see-them line). Start with a matrix of situation and need to identify that client. For example, let's say you're a financial planner, and you think your clients are "people who want to get their financial affairs in order." Think instead about who needs to get their financial affairs in order, and you'll probably come up with something like "married couples with children who have $X in assets and need to protect those assets with planning." And you can certainly find those people, can't you?

So we've blasted all these lousy excuses, but we haven't yet addressed the biggest excuse of all: fear. Most of the time I've found that the more excuses my clients offer for not moving forward with their businesses, the more fearful they are.

Hey, I understand, and I've been there myself. But what it comes down to is this: Are you more afraid of succeeding (or failing) than you are of going back to work for that idiot boss you always end up working for? If the answer is that you're more afraid of facing the personal responsibility of entrepreneurship than of any garbage your boss could throw at you, then good-bye entrepreneur, and hello wage-slave.

But if you think that the worst possible scenario is working for some moron again, and that you'll happily work like a dog if that's what it takes just so you don't have to slink back into that stinking office with your tail between your legs, good for you. It's time to forget about excuses, and start figuring out how to make this whole self-employed thing work for you.

The first thing to understand is that fear is OK. Yes, we've all been fearful (and yes, I include myself in that "we" statement). It can be scary picking up the phone. It can be scary going to a sales meeting.

But at the end of the day, isn't your product or service of value to someone? Aren't people glad (or going to be glad) that you've solved a problem for them? So stop worrying and fearing the marketing process, and remember this: Marketing is really nothing more than the process of developing relationships, and you, my friend, can do that in your sleep.

Veronika (Ronnie) Noize, the Marketing Coach, is a successful Vancouver, WA-based entrepreneur, author, speaker, and Certified Professional Coach. Through coaching, classes and workshops, Ronnie helps small businesses attract more clients. For free marketing resources including articles and valuable marketing tools, visit her web site at http://www.sohomarketingguru.com/

About the Author:
Veronika (Ronnie) Noize, known professionally as the Marketing Coach, is a successful coach and marketing strategist, as well as the author of How to Create a Killer Elevator Speech, and The Real Magic Bullet of Marketing, her first full-length book.

As a senior marketing executive for over 10 years, Ronnie launched more than 200 consumer products, including books, CDs, toys, and games. She created sales and licensing programs that generated more than $650 million dollars internationally for properties such as The X-Files, Magic the Gathering, and Star Wars.

In 2001 Ronnie appeared as Your Marketing Coach on a regional business television program in the Pacific NW. The show aired on the local Fox affiliate, and is now in syndication in Israel and Taiwan. A regular columnist for the NW Women’s Journal and the Vancouver Business Journal, she has also written more than 100 articles that were published in The Home Business Journal, The CEO Refresher, and The Home Business Report, among other business and trade publications.

In 2004, she founded the Northwest Women’s Virtual Business Network, a virtual space where local businesswomen can network and connect with others.

A tireless small business advocate, Ronnie helps business owners and marketing professionals attract more clients and double their revenues. She supplies plenty of free marketing tools and information on her web site at www.VeronikaNoize.com, where you’ll also find her workshops, seminars, and teleclasses.

She says that one of the most difficult problems for new and mature, large and small businesses is figuring out where, when, and how to allocate their often scarce resources of time, energy, and money so that they can meet their business development goals quickly and easily.

Recently honored as the 2007 Coach of the Year by her ICF chapter, Ronnie also leads classes at the International Coach Academy in addition to her coaching practice.

Article Source: ArticlesBase.com - Top 10 Excuses Why Marketing Is Not For You