Acquire a Promotion Mindset
The home-based business owner is certainly qualified to
put an important credential after his name: OEO. We all know that CEO
is Chief Executive Officer, and CFO is Chief Financial Officer. OEO is
ONLY Executive Officer, and unless you have employees or have involved
your family in running your business, you are wearing all the hats yourself:
executive management, human resources, procurement, shipping, marketing,
accounting, and technology. To maximize your time and energy, you must
learn to do many of these tasks simultaneously. This is especially true
when it comes to marketing and finding prospects or potential customers.
Everywhere you go, you are representing your company. Depending
on your product and service, you should consider every daily contact a
potential prospect. This is perhaps most crucial for network marketers,
but most other businesses will benefit from this mindset as well.
The analogy most critical to your thinking about this is
that of someone planting seeds. You are the Master Gardener of your own
business garden. Since you know that some seeds will not bear fruit, you
must keep planting, keep nurturing, and keep weeding. In this way, you
will see your business garden bear fruit in all seasons.
What do we mean by seeds? Your imagination is the only limit
to what things might bear fruit in the future. Read on for some ideas.
Your Personal Sphere of Influence
Almost every day, as you go to the store, the bank, the
post office, your church, your children’s school, your dry cleaners,
your garage--and even as you travel--you meet and have the potential for
interacting with others. Use these opportunities to subtly increase your
business’s visibility. There’s never a need to be overbearing.
The kinds of seeds you can plant through personal interaction include:
- a handshake and a smile
- sharing a business card
- giving directions
- recommending a good restaurant or book
- leaving a business brochure
- welcoming new people to your community
- keeping your word
- being on time
- dressing neatly and appropriately
- giving generously of your time, talent, and money
- listening attentively when people speak to you
Your Professional Sphere of Influence
When you are officially representing your business—when
you work with your customers, attend Chamber of Commerce functions, civic
organization meetings, or other professional events, you are always planting
seeds (good and bad) through your appearance, your actions, and your words.
When your business becomes known for its quality or value or customer
service, you are more likely to get not only repeat business but also
referrals from both customers and business associates. Whenever you participate
in a business event, always try to get a contact list of other participants.
This will allow you to follow up with a letter that might say something
like, “I enjoyed meeting you when we both attended the Business Expo
last week. Your display was very attractive. I have added your business
card to my files and hope I can send you some business in the future.
I’ve enclosed my company’s brochure that more clearly explains
what my company does. I hope you’ll keep me in mind for your future
needs.” The next time that person needs something that your company
can provide, she will be more likely to think of you.
Always think of ways to capture contact information. If
you have a table or booth at an event and offer a door prize, ask visitors
to fill out a form or leave a business card. Be sure you save this information
for later follow-up. Pass out give-away items with your company’s
name and number.
A surprisingly effective way to get referrals from business
associates is to refer people to other businesses yourself. If you feel
that another business can help someone more than you can, be gracious
and give that person the other company’s name and phone number. Then
call that business to alert them to the possibility that they’ll
be getting a call. You will have planted TWO seeds at the same time—one
with the customer who now sees you as an unselfish problem solver and
one with the business associate who might want to return the favor.
When someone calls your business on the telephone, don’t
do anything except LISTEN. Don’t keep working on your computer. Don’t
keep writing your grocery list. Don’t play solitaire. Don’t
make artwork with your paper clips. Listen. This attentiveness will be
reflected in the warmth and helpfulness of your response. Repeat what
the person says so they’ll know you’re listening and to make
sure you understand what they are needing.
Be courteous to salespeople. As tempting as it is to be
curt when you’re very busy, remember that these people are just doing
their job. If you are friendly and treat them courteously and professionally,
they will remember you when they need something that your business offers.
One of the products of my business is resumés, and I have had many
customers over the years who originally called on me to sell me something
and later called to have me help them with a resumé. An important
thing to remember about salespeople—they probably speak with more
people in a day’s time than you do in a week or two. Make sure that
what they say about you and your business is positive.
Here are a few more “seeds” that can be planted
in the course of your professional work:
- participating in a co-op ad with other merchants in your
area
- buying an ad in a high school yearbook or charity program
- reserving a booth at a local trade show or career fair
- sponsoring a charity event
- solving a customer’s problems
- offering to collaborate with a business whose product or service complements yours (e.g., a
- caterer and a vineyard might collaborate for a Valentine’s
dinner)
- giving a seminar to your chamber of commerce members
- being a mentor to a start-up business owner
An Unlikely Source for Potential Customers
If you are in a sales business—and especially if you
are a network marketer—an extremely valuable source of potential
customers is from those people who DON’T want your product or your
opportunity. You have done your best, but they’re not buying, but
most people don’t like to say no or feel like they’re rejecting
you. Give them a graceful way to exit by asking that critical question:
“Do you know anyone else who might be interested in [your product,
service, business]?” Be ready to write down their answer and then
FOLLOW UP!
A Bird In The Hand: Leverage Your Current Customers
No group is so consistently overlooked for the gold mine
that they represent than your current customers. In marketing surveys,
close to 50% of businesses say that they chose their lawyer, their accountant,
their advertising agency, and their consultants from word-of-mouth recommendations.
Consultant Harold L. Shenson claims that a business person “should
be able to derive 80% of his or her new business from referrals, follow-up,
or add-on business from existing clients. Once you are able to do this,
you have a self-sustaining business.” (Edwards, et. al.).
This is an area where you, as a small or home-based business
owner, can far excel over a larger corporation because you are more flexible
and can respond to referrals more easily, quickly, and personally.
How do you get referrals from your current customers? Here
are a few ideas:
- Make sure customers stay happy by giving them the most
positive experience and the greatest value you can. Exceed your customers’
expectations.
- Solve your customers’ problems quickly and efficiently.
- Let your customers know that you want referrals, and
give them ideas on how to help you.
- Reward referring customers with gift certificates, discounts,
or prizes.
- Make your customers ambassadors for your business by
giving them coupons to give to their friends and families or providing
give-away items they can share with others.
- Offer gift certificates so that customers who like your
product or service can easily buy it for someone else as a gift.
- Send referral request letters to your customers.
- Ask everyone new who comes in or calls how they heard about you. If you can, send a thank-you note to whomever referred them.
Make it easy for your customers to help you, and they usually
will if they feel that what you offer is valuable.
Cultivate An Abundance Mentality
Instead of thinking that prospective customers are scarce,
start cultivating an abundance mentality. When you assume that everyone
you come in contact with could become a potential customer, you will no
longer be wasting time thinking about where you can find your next customer,
but you’ll concentrate on HOW to create a customer out of every contact.
An abundance mentality in this area of your business is contagious and
works like a magnet to attract not only business, but friends and relationships
that will prove valuable far into the future.
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