Kamis, 27 September 2012

7 Ways to Make Customers Love You

7 Ways to Make Customers Love You:
Follow these simple rules and you'll have customers buying from you again and again and again.
The greatest compliment anyone can receive in the business world is "I just love working with you." That's especially true when that compliment comes from customers, because it means that you'll be getting their business time and time again.
Here are the seven rules for getting customers to love working with you, based upon conversations with Jeffrey Gitomer, author of the The Sales Bible and Dr. Earl Taylor, master trainer at Dale Carnegie:
1. Make building the relationship more important than making the sale.
2. Create opportunities for the customer to buy, rather than opportunities for you to sell.
3. Have meaningful conversations and never give a sales pitch.
4. Be curious about the customer as a person and let the friendship evolve from that.
5. Don't try to be a hero who swoops in to solve the customer's problem.
6. Believe in your heart that you and your firm are the best at what you do.
7. Deliver exactly what you promised to deliver, no matter what.
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3 Keys for Stellar Mobile Marketing

3 Keys for Stellar Mobile Marketing:
Whether you have a mobile app or a mobile website, these channels can help your target audience find your mobile presence.

Estimates from eMarketer indicate that the population of mobile social network users will reach 79 million by 2015, which would result in mobile adoption rates that crush other technological adoption rates of the past. As with any new tech platform, organizations need to understand how to participate in and be found via mobile channels. Whether you have a mobile application or a mobile webpage, here are the top three channels that can help your target audience find your mobile presence:
Mobile Organic Search

A recent study by Google found that a smartphone was the most common starting point for online activities. It's crucial to show up at the top of organic search on mobile devices, because 65 percent of the study participants started with a mobile device when searching for information, as well as shopping, online.

The best way to optimize your website for a mobile device is to create what is known as a responsive website. A responsive website will auto-detect the visitor's device prior to serving up the website content. Upon detection, CSS will then tailor the website content to the specific device. Responsive websites will reduce clutter and avoid duplicate content issues that may arise from duplicating website content on a mobile subdomain such as m.yourdomain.com.

Marketers can also monitor performance using the mobile search data segment in Google Webmaster Tools. Use this tool to monitor the results of your mobile search optimization.
Mobile Content Marketing

The goal of content marketing is to create target-market-oriented content that informs, entertains, provides value, and inspires sharing. It's important to consider context when creating content for different devices. The same Google study mentioned earlier found that smartphone use is primarily motivated by communication and entertainment activities. By contrast, PCs are the most common starting point for more complex activities like planning a trip or managing finances.

It's important to serve the needs of your target market within this large mobile user group with content crafted with a mobile context in mind. For example, launching complex content such as a research paper or interactive survey wouldn't be valuable in a mobile context. Focus on content ideas that support communication, fact references, or entertainment. Be sure to always post mobile-friendly content using HTML and CSS rather than Flash or JavaScript.

The Google Keyword Tool also allows for mobile device segmentation, which can provide keyword research insights for targeting mobile users. Combine the most popular mobile search trends with top-performing activities in mobile such as social networking, informational search, and shopping online. This kind of focus will start you down the path to content built for success on mobile devices.
Mobile App Stores

According to Nielsen, mobile users are spending 10% more time on mobile applications than the mobile Web. There are tremendous opportunities in mobile application development for organizations that want to extend marketing reach through this highly interactive channel. However, deep reach in this channel requires great app content and a solid strategy to make sure your app is found on platforms such as the Apple App Store.

A new start-up promises to add some Ooomf to your mobile app marketing strategy by using a platform that mixes mobile app developers with users to enhance and promote their mobile applications. Founder Mikael Cho recognizes that building a great app is a challenge, but getting people to care about it is even more difficult. Ooomf will employ a promotional strategy that offers a curated list of mobile apps. The company also hopes to develop relationships with mobile journalists and mobile influencers to help them discover apps on the Ooomf website.

You can also monitor the top trending mobile applications by category on Chomp or 148Apps. Emulating the best trending apps on the mobile app store is the best strategy for success, according to the book App Empire.

Right now, companies have the opportunity to be first to market in the world of mobile applications and websites. Use these three platforms to jump-start success for your organization in the mobile space.


The Benefits of Hiring Untrained Sales Staff

The Benefits of Hiring Untrained Sales Staff:
Frustrated by sales professionals that are unwilling to change, one entrepreneur is hiring young graduates and turning them into top salespeople.

What will the next generation of sales specialists be like as employees? What will they need for training and technology? How will we find them, compensate them, and manage them? This topic has become a driving concern for many entrepreneurs. Recently I was introduced to someone with fresh ideas who is taking the longer view. Rolf Meyer, president of HARTING North America, is hiring recent graduates who have little to no experience and turning them into top salespeople.

HARTING North America, based in Elgin, Illinois, manufactures connectors. Not terribly exciting, but, as it turns out, pretty important. With all of the recent talk about "big data," it is these connectors that send that data at warp speed to its destination.

So why go through the trouble of training new graduates when it would be a lot easier to pick up a few sales veterans from his competitors and work them into his system? Meyer explains.

1. The world has changed and veterans may not adapt—Meyer recruits young people—and demonstrably flexible people of any age—because the world is changing and they are more willing to adapt along with that change. Inflexible people are at a disadvantage in this fluid world. Here is what that means ...

2. Build new habits rather than undo bad habits—"We are looking for people who can be molded into the way we do business," says Meyer. "Experienced people who sell commodities think they can sell anything. Maybe they can. But we are not selling anything. Our people learn that what they are actually doing is giving solutions." He hires paid interns for positions in sales, finance, manufacturing, information technology, and other departments. But the key focus is on sales. Interns then become employees.

3. Qualities over experience—"We want people who are curious, nosy, open-minded," he said. "We need to know as much about the customer as the customer. Our interns learn our product line inside-out. They learn the customer inside-out, too. That is, they learn what problems are plaguing the engineers they meet? And perhaps the single most important question our interns learn to ask is, 'What do you want to do five years from now?'"

Admittedly, this is a long-term strategy. The goal is to build competitiveness in your sales force five years from now and beyond. However, with thousands of the most experienced people retiring every week, there will be a lot of scrambling by the bigger players in every market to secure the remaining tenured candidates. Building your own force from the ground up is a compelling strategy for the coming market challenges.


Minggu, 16 September 2012

How To Turn Your Customers Into Regulars

How To Turn Your Customers Into Regulars: My passion for the restaurant business started with my family’s regular practice of eating out.  My blue-collar parents both worked full time (and sometimes more), and often felt unenthusiastic about cooking at home.  In truth, neither was very good at it.  As a result, we ate out almost every evening.  My father disliked chains and respected locally owned businesses, so we ate at a number of independent restaurants -- from diners to steak houses to Chinese.  We tried a variety of different establishments in the Hudson Valley.

Is Your 2013 Planning a Budget Battle? Try Something New - Preference Marketing

Is Your 2013 Planning a Budget Battle? Try Something New - Preference Marketing: It’s budget season for most companies and a key part of the process is balancing revenue targets with investment levels. The CEO’s goal is to get to the right tradeoff between ‘almost-guaranteed’ sales revenue and marketing investment for a smorgasbord of hard and soft benefits.
The CEO has a revenue number they’d like Sales to commit to. Sales, in turn, looks to Marketing for a pipeline commitment and throttles the revenue target up/down according to its’ confidence in Marketing’s pipeline. We all know how the story plays out. In tight times, sales gets budget at marketing’s expense. In the face of clear growth opportunities, marketing may get more budget at sales’ expense. But it’s always a fight leaving all involved bruised and sore with a good amount of lost trust. This ‘zero sum game’ mentality damages culture and morale. Oddly, people wonder why Sales and Marketing don’t get along?
The irony is that both Sales and Marketing are wrong.
At the core, the fight is over leads – which team can generate more bookable leads, cost efficiently. That deeply engrained, age-old premise assumes Marketing and Sales is actually in control of the purchase process. They aren't – the buyer is.
Buyers took control when information became ubiquitous on the Web. No longer dependent upon marketing for information on trends or new ways to solve problems, and equally no longer dependent on Sales to navigate the pros and cons of solutions they were considering – buyers threw off the shackles and rewrote the rules.
Today, buyers engage in a self-directed, trust-based, social purchase process for everything from commodities to software and trains. They no longer buy products or solutions; they purchase outcomes. With their new-found freedom, they have redefined vendor relationships and interaction expectations. They are fully in control and know it.

Sales and Marketing Together at Last

Sales and Marketing Together at Last: A middle-market, B2B company is launching a new brand. Sales and Marketing will each play a critical role in whether the new brand will be a success.

Minggu, 09 September 2012

10 Dumb Sales Tactics to Avoid

10 Dumb Sales Tactics to Avoid:
These big mistakes seem to be shockingly common. Make sure you're not guilty of any of them.
In the year or so since I've been writing for Inc.com, I've received several hundred emails from readers asking for assistance and advice. From this experience, I've observed that the following 10 basic selling errors are surprisingly common.
1. Answering Objections the Customer Hasn't Surfaced
Though it's a good idea to anticipate objections that the customer might have and prepare reasonable answers to them, it's a horrible idea to surface those objections yourself--because you've just created an issue that probably didn't exist. Explaining away something preemptively can also make you seem defensive and unsure of the real value of your offering.
Fix: Never start any sentence with "You may be wondering..." or "Perhaps you're asking yourself..."
2. Leaving the 'Next Step' to the Customer
I've read dozens of so-called sales letters and sales emails that end with a suggestion that the customer should call or contact the seller "if you're interested" or "in order to learn more." The people who send these letters always complain that they don't get any responses.
No kidding--you're asking the customer to do your work for you.
Fix: Keep the ball in your court. Try substituting a closer like this: "I will call you next week to discuss whether it makes sense to discuss this matter further."
3. Selling Features Rather Than Results
Incredibly, some people (usually marketing folks) believe that customers buy a product because it has desirable features. They therefore rattle off a list of those features, hoping that at least one will pique the customer's interest.
In fact, customers care only about the results of purchasing a product and the ways it will affect their lives and their businesses.
Fix: Figure out why a customer buys your product rather than somebody else's. Then sell that result, using the features to buttress your ability to deliver that result.
4. Faking Intimacy
Like it or not, the minute you're positioned in somebody's mind as "a person who is trying to sell me something," you're fighting an uphill battle to win trust. Under those circumstances, the absolute worst thing you can do is to try to "suck up" by acting smarmy.
The most common manifestation: brightly asking, "How are you doing today?" at the beginning of a cold call. It makes people want to puke.
Fix: Remain personable and professional--but no more--until such time as you actually forge a friendship, which typically takes weeks.
5. Writing a Sales Proposal Too Soon
Although proposals can occasionally help develop an opportunity, in most cases, the proposal requesting (and writing) process happens after the prospect has already defined the problem and (probably) defined the solution as well. Because writing a proposal takes time and effort, it's usually a bad investment unless you've got the inside track on the sale.
Fix: Write a sales proposal only after you've got a verbal agreement.
6. Talking More Than Listening
I've written about this problem repeatedly in this blog, but the error is so common that it bears repeating. When you're selling, it's all too easy to get excited and nervous and then try to "drive the sale" forward by talking or giving a sales pitch. Customers find this extraordinarily irritating.
Fix: In your mind, redefine selling as a passive activity that consists mostly of listening, considering, and reacting to what the customer does and says.
7. Wasting Time on Dead-End 'Opportunities'

What with voice mail, gatekeepers, and a challenging economy (not to mention the craziness of global competition), it sometimes seems like a miracle when you actually get into a sales conversation with a live human being. When that happens, the possibility of making a sale can become so seductive that you don't want to spoil the dream by asking questions that might reveal this as a false opportunity.
Fix: Within the first five minutes of your first conversation, ask questions that will reveal whether the customer has a real need--as well as the money to satisfy it.
8. Failing to Follow Through
The sad truth is that, to customers, people who sell are guilty until proven innocent. Building a customer relationship is about gradually building up enough trust to overcome the natural antipathy that most people feel toward sellers.
Because of this, you're not going to get any slack if you fail to deliver when promised. Drop the ball, even once, and you're probably out of the game.
Fix: Get religious about your to-do list and scheduling specific events. Make only commitments that you're 100% certain you can keep.
9. Treating a "Close" as the End of the Process
Maybe it's the result of unfortunate terminology, but a lot of companies and individuals take "closing the deal" to mean that the sales activity has ended. Nothing could be further from the truth.
The real work happens after you've closed the deal--because that's when you can start building the kind of relationship that will eventually generate follow-on business and referral sales, both of which are far easier and profitable than winning new business.
Fix: Always aim for long-term relationships rather than short-term revenue. That way a "close" is the beginning, not the end, of the process.
10. Asking for a Referral Too Soon
Some sales training programs recommend asking, "Do you know somebody else who might need my product?" even when prospects say they're not interested. Other programs suggest asking a similar question when you've closed your first sale to a customer.
Both approaches are naive, because customers in their right mind do not put their own reputations at risk by recommending somebody whose ability to perform is unknown to them.
Fix: Ask for referrals only after the customer is delighted with the products or services that you've sold.
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Senin, 03 September 2012

5 Most Common Marketing Mistakes

Over the past decade or so, I've reviewed dozens of marketing plans and hundreds of sales messages, and watched thousands of companies try to establish themselves in some of the most competitive markets in the world.

My main take-away from this experience is: there's an incredible amount of really lousy marketing out there. I'm not just talking the "inept" kind of lousy, I'm talking the "would stink in a deep space vacuum" kind of lousy.

1. No Concept of the Ideal Customer

Many marketers have a completely product-centric view of the world. They know their product up, down and sideways, but have only a vague idea of who might actually want or need it, or how they'd actually use it. Worst case, the marketers don't think that's important because their product is so "state-of-the-art" that it's obvious why it's a good thing to buy.

2. No Time Spent Listening to That Type of Customer

Even when marketers DO have a concept of the ideal customer, they often spend little time actually listening to those customers. They do "market research" and run demographic numbers, but when it comes to just sitting down and listening (really listening)... that's simply not on the agenda. Not surprisingly, the result is marketing messages that don't mean anything to the people who are supposed to buy.

3. No Idea of What That Customer's Customer Wants

Even when marketers DO listen to an ideal customer, they listen for the wrong things.  They try to find ways that the product their marketing can fulfill the customer's needs.  While that sound's smart, it's actually stupid. In business-to-business sales (which is the bulk of most sales activity) what's important is not satisfying the customer's needs, but the needs of the customer's customer. That's what's driving your customer's business. Your product only counts if it counts to the end customers.

4. Inability to Formulate a Meaningful "Value Proposition"

Even when marketers DO understand their customer's customer, they often have an extraordinarily difficult time formulating a value proposition that makes sense to both the customer and the end customer. Doing so requires an understanding of the business dynamics that permeates the entire supply chain, a concept that's unfortunately beyond the ken of all but the most experienced marketers.

5. Inability to Articulate a Value Proposition in 25 Words or Less

Even when marketers DO have a great value proposition, they have a tendency to do "group writing" that always results in long-winded sentences, full of abstractions, biz-blab and jargon. Writing a crisp message is a specialized task that only a talented individual can accomplish. It's a rare skill, as evidenced by the truly awful marketing messages floating around, even inside otherwise great companies.

What's the solution?
Well, don't get mad at your marketers, who are trying to do their best at a very difficult job. The real solution is to step back from your marketing milieu, research potential customer bases, spend lots of time listening until you thoroughly understand how their businesses work.

Then, after you REALLY understand what's going on, give the writing assignment to a professional writer and resist the urge to let the process devolve into group editing, which is the messaging kiss of death.
There's really no shortcut.