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Real World Marketing Tips for a Digital Generation

November 11, 2014 by Rosemary

By Diana Gomez

There are some serious advantages to networking exclusively online. You have full, thoughtful control over your image. You can create content according to your calendar—even posting things on social media through a third party, right on time.

Handshake

These things carry over into your personal approach. You feel more confident, more at ease with your marketing strategy. After all, no one is rejecting you to your face. And this would be all well and good… if your business is already perfect and you don’t need to grow or create any new business relationships.

The truth is, customers are more engaged, feel more understood and valued, and are more likely to return to your business if you show your face in public. After all, even when buying online, customers are abstractly aware that a human is pulling the strings. Lifting the veil creates trust—and what’s more important to a successful, long-lasting relationship than trust?

According to the Economist Intelligence Unit, the six keys to successful communication are:

  1. Engagement and focus on shared content
  2. Tone of voice*
  3. Facial expressions*
  4. The words someone uses
  5. Subconscious body language*
  6. Conscious movements or gestures*

Arguably, all of these may be more effective in face-to-face interaction than through online communication. Indisputably, the four starred items are exclusive to such.

Critical opportunities for face-to-face interaction include:

  • Resolving problems efficiently.
  • Fostering long-term relationships.
  • Creating new relationships quickly.

Don’t worry! Even the shyest networker can step out from behind their computer screen and capitalize on these opportunities.

Networking events

I thought I’d start big and ease you down the anxiety escalator. But don’t skip this just because it’s a lot of work—it’s also the most effective way to get your name out there.

If you are interested in giving back to your community, partner with a local organization or charity. Not only will this increase your local visibility and give you a platform to advertise your business, but you will also be raising some money and doing some good—and that doesn’t go unnoticed by the public.

Trade show booths

You don’t have to throw a benefit with 500 attendees right off the bat. Trade shows and expos happen year round for various events in your area—marathons, festivals, health food expos. Sign up for a booth and gain instant visibility within an existing market with similar interests.

Publicity stunts

I’m not saying you need to paint the entire side of a skyscraper or organize an impromptu dance routine—publicity stunts can be small and tasteful, but should always be in the tone and interest of your brand.

Hire a celebrity look-alike to pass out advertisements on the street. Hold a pie-making contest and garner attention for the entire three months leading up to it. Use your imagination, remain politically correct and tactful, and the rest will be local (or even viral) history.

Local sports teams

Children’s’ sports leagues are always looking for sponsors. Pardon my objectification, but you’ll practically have little billboards running around, even after the season has ended. They had fun, you gained visibility. What could be better? Added bonus for introverts: very little salesmanship is required from you.

Referral incentives

A great way to ensure repeat business is to have your customers do the talking for you. Create referral incentives—in other words, if a customer refers a new person to your store, they get a bonus product or discount. This creates a sense of community and, literally, word of mouth.

Handwritten notes

When it can’t be face-to-face, make it face-to… hand? Nothing adds a personal touch like seeing a real person’s handwriting in all its weird, ink-smudged glory.

Handwritten touches are great as often as you can muster them. If you are pressed for this kind of time commitment, create a protocol for special occasions—if it’s indicated that it’s for a gift, for example, or if you can see from the customer registry that it’s their birthday or anniversary. If you find it really works for your brand, consider hiring a part-time student worker for just a few hours every week.

Hashtags

A great way to tie these personal communications into your social media strategy is with everyone’s favorite thing to hate—hashtags. Include your chosen hashtag on your packaging, on all your products at networking events, even on those kids’ soccer tees.

The key is to choose a hashtag that is going to be relevant to your business for eternity. Don’t include a year or any other limiting qualities. This is a huge part of your branding, and has the potential to be that bridge between your real world relationships and digital interactions.

The fact is, in-person conversation accounts for only 40 percent of business communications. While most business owners are aware of this, convenience and the demand for multitasking leads to overblown amounts of screen time.

This is an opportunity for you to step up. When everyone else is hiding behind e-mails, you can be the one to go above and beyond—and make your customers feel like they’ve been seen and heard as the whole person that they are.

Author’s Bio: Diana Gomez is the Marketing Coordinator at Lyoness America, where she is instrumental in the implementation of content marketing strategies for USA and Canada. Lyoness is an international shopping community and loyalty rewards program, where businesses and consumers benefit with free membership and money back with every purchase.

Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media Tagged With: bc, marketing, networking

Get More Sales and Better Revenue Numbers

November 5, 2014 by Thomas

asaleeDoes your sales team enjoy your sales meetings? Or have you caught the telltale glazed eyes that let you know the stacks of work back at their desks are looking a lot more attractive than your meeting right now?

Done right, your sales meetings can boost your profits, help your team bond, and bring you the insights you need to drive your business forward. So what makes for a great sales team meeting?

Follow these five tips to turn your sales team meetings from boring to brilliant:

1. Keep Your Focus Narrow

As the article “Ideas For Sales Meetings – Sales Skills Development” points out, cramming too into too little time leads to dull meetings that drag on and bore your sales team.

By picking a focus for each meeting – such as a specific skill or product – you’ll make your meetings more effective.

Your team will have time to digest the new information and learn from it. You can’t cover multiple topics effectively, so narrow your focus.

2. Offer Something to Take Away

If you want your team to get something from your meetings – offer them something!

The goal of your sales team meetings isn’t to give your team an info dump and then send them back into the field. The goal is to make your meetings count, improving your sales and getting the most from your team.

To do that, add fun and interesting skill building exercises, team bonding activities, or even bring in an expert to teach something new.

Use your meeting time to strengthen your sales team and you’ll see the benefit in your business turnover.

3. Give Everyone the Floor

Being talked at for the duration of a meeting really makes it feel like a drag for your team.

Instead, get them engaged by making sure at least some of the meeting time is dedicated to giving everyone a chance to have their say.

Keep the conversation productive with direct questions and great time management to make sure everyone gets a chance to contribute without the discussion getting too far away from the key point.

If you make the conversation about everyone, your team will be more engaged.

4. Presentations? Make Them Pop

Presentations can be an engaging way to get your point across during sales meetings. Or they can be the point when your sales team starts surreptitiously checking their smartphones.

To make presentations work for you, keep them sharp and relevant. Try adding multimedia such as sound bites, video or images, and inject something new, unexpected, humorous or interesting to keep your team’s attention.

Make time in your presentation for interaction, such as questions or even a simple show of hands.

5. Make Time for Motivation

Adding motivation to your team meetings adds an element of fun and competition that encourages your team to do better.

You can offer rewards, for both a job well done, and for excelling at in-meeting activities. The rewards can be as simple or as impressive as you like. Don’t forget the simple act of thanking your team, praising the team as a whole and any particularly outstanding performers.

Make sure your team knows you appreciate them, and give them a reason to give you their best.

Your sales team meetings don’t have to be a chore.

Following these tips will help you build meetings that your team will benefit from, leaving them feeling valued, motivated, and with new skills ready to bring to the table.

Photo credit: Image courtesy of Stuart Miles at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

About the Author: Tristan Anwyn writes on a wide variety of topics, including social media, SEO, sales skills and team meetings.

Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media Tagged With: bc, communication, customers, sales, team

3 Natural Behaviors You Exhibit When You Believe What You Sell

October 28, 2014 by Rosemary

By Scott Dailey

Dale Carnegie said, “If you believe in what you are doing, then let nothing hold you up in your work.” If we truly believe in how we are meant to matter to people, we can begin to be useful to them. We can begin to persuade them. Simply knowing something, or worse, knowing what you want, will never be important enough to others to act as an instrument of persuasiveness.
Keep Calm and Believe
Because our value to others is decided by others, our ability to persuade can never be led by self-important and well-rehearsed scripts. It may seem simple enough a notion to grasp, but in my travels, it’s among the most overlooked precepts of sales: if you’re serving only yourself, then you’re mathematically incapable of serving others. We become valuable to others only when we actually believe what we are doing adds value. Belief, itself, in what we do, is therefore the only conduit through which persuasiveness actually journeys.

Throughout my career, I have found only one immutable principle that binds all successful acts of persuasion and it is in believing what I say and do. So if it’s Dale Carnegie’s persuasive brawn you wish most to emulate, then you need to exhibit a fundamental belief in what you want me to believe with equal veracity.

Below I have outlined three completely organic behavioral changes you are guaranteed to undergo when you believe what you sell. Apply them to your sales practices and like I experienced, you’ll win more frequently and in the process, earn more coveted referrals than ever before.

You Calm Down.

When you believe in something you naturally relax. Mark Twain said, “If you tell the truth, you don’t have to remember anything.” Think about something – anything — you believe. The fundamental process of believing it contains organic calming properties. When you simply know a thing, you don’t kick, scream and wail seeing to it that your belief has its day in court. But in sales, the stress of the pitch often originates from a singular eagerness to advance the wrong agenda. “Sell, sell, sell! I need to sell this stuff,” we declare! When you’re preoccupied with getting your points across, you’re actually losing sight of how few opportunities you’ve left yourself to say something you actually believe. What’s left, because of your urgency to sell, are nothing but uninspiring talking points, programmed into you through print collateral, demanding superiors and perhaps even nagging bill collectors.

When you believe however, you relax and permit your buyer the opportunity to reveal him or herself. The new, cooler you has a chance to be valuable by letting those revealing details act as opportunities to discuss what’s important to the buyer. Now you’re calm. Now you’re useful. Now you’re selling! 

You Quiet Down.

When you believe in something, you stop loudly lobbying, petitioning and proselytizing too. Armed with a new-found tranquility, you actually want to speak less, purely as a means to listen more. Piping down gives your buyer a chance to feel listened to, to feel important to you. And as another benefit of being a more collected version of yourself, you’ll slow down and exhibit the sureness afforded only to those composed enough to let the buyer dictate the pace and tenor of your meetings.

No longer are those periods of silence, excruciating exercises in impatiently waiting to resume your dazzling presentation. Rather, when you believe in your value, you make the conversation meaningful to your buyers, on their terms, in their language and their cadence. And yep, your softer temperament is a natural response to believing in your message. You quite simply need to believe and the demonstration of your beliefs manifest in ways most satisfying to the person you wanted to persuade. Remember, when you believe, you don’t fight for the microphone. You quietly wait until it is passed to you by someone eager to have your words solve their problems. 

You Identify.

We’ve all been told that hearing is not the same as listening. You can hear someone and never really ever listen to a word they’ve uttered.

In the same way, listening is not identifying. If you comprehended what I have said, you have listened to me. Well done! But while listening is critical and certainly better than hearing, it’s not the same as identifying. When you believe what you are telling me, you can relate your products and services to my specific situation. When you do this, you make me feel important because you’ve identified with my circumstances, not merely my business problems. When you identify with me, you go even further than that though. Because you have aligned your products and services soundly with my unique challenges, you have expressed concern for me, not your boilerplate idea of a business such as mine. This selfless brand of sales lucidity only comes from believing that what you are selling to me fits my circumstances, not solely your Goldilocks Client criteria.

Identifying with your buyer leaves them with a memorable sense of self-importance that is — and this is the best part — authored entirely by you. I wish your buyer luck forgetting all about you now. When you identify with your buyer, you cogently declare your concerns for the buyer, not the buyer’s fit.

At first, your calm, quiet character permitted you the desire to listen. Bruce Lee said, “Knowledge will give you power, but character, respect.” When you exhibit the character required to identify, you calmly, quietly tell buyers that their sensibilities are important to you. That’s persuasive — make no mistake. But again, believing is the only way to identify with buyers.

If you want to persuade me, you need to include me in the persuasive process by identifying and citing my significance aloud. You need to let me know that, not only did you hear what I said, but that likewise, you believed that my ideas, values and requirements contained merit and substance. When you identify with me, you allow me to influence our transaction and that makes me feel valued.

When you believe what you are selling, you are operating at your full potential as a sales professional. Said another way, if you lack an authentic belief that your solutions can be useful, how will you persuade anyone to think that they are? Equipped with these three easy ways to practice belief-based selling, you’ll be well on your way to persuading, and yes winning, more often than you ever have before.

Remember that when you don’t believe, you are too busy forcing your rehearsed thinking on me to notice that you’ve lost me. Believing in your ideas makes you a reserved, patient and passionate advocate for those you mean to persuade. And best of all, when you believe, even a “No” is received with a calm, measured response that can now give way to a vast new body of techniques that turn a “No” into a “Yes.”

So start believing and you’ll start persuading – and winning.

Author’s Bio: Scott Dailey is the Director of Strategic Development for the digital marketing company Single Throw, in Wall, New Jersey. Scott leads the marketing and sales department for Single Throw and is an ardent lover of all things digital marketing and lead generation. You can follow Scott on Twitter at @scottpdailey.

Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media Tagged With: authenticity, bc, sales

3 painless ways to get prospects to commit more often

October 10, 2014 by Rosemary

By Scott Dailey

Every year your sales manager adds up your “Yes’s” and your “No’s.” And in both of these buckets resides a few of each. I mean after all, that’s sales. There’s always a few when compared against the hundreds or even thousands you tried all year to persuade.

But there’s another bucket, another category of leads that needs to be measured with far greater emphasis then were your wins and losses.

Three railroad tracks diverging

It’s that category of lead that, year after year, actually by contrast to the other two, is filled to the point that it’s spilling over and out of its container.

It’s the “Unknowns.”

What came of those perpetually silent buyers you doggedly pursued?

You know the ones. You’d try tirelessly to apply the techniques outlined in your latest Dale Carnegie read, only to see each of your efforts met with a roaring silence that seemed to grow antagonistically louder with each try? Not even a “No” out of them. Just silence. A screaming, nagging and endless quiet.

So there you are, each year adding up the wins and losses, and examining in some decidedly perfunctory and obligatory manner, those very leads we learned little from because they unceremoniously escaped our grasp like air casually fizzles out of a balloon.

And off we go to do it all again another year.

“Why not, ‘No’?”, you ask yourself over and over again. And I agree. Why didn’t you get at least a “No?” Here’s why: you didn’t insist on one. You were so concerned with being polite, ginger and careful, that you’ve forgotten that you have a right to clarity. You’ve forgotten that you’ve earned the right to demand clarity.

If this describes you, you have fallen for one of the biggest traps I see sales reps fall into most: the “I’m only a sales rep” trap.

Let me explain.

I have a 10-year-old. If you were to ask him three or more years ago what Daddy does, he would have told you, “My dad fixes computers.” As a matter of fact, his mother would have also added that Daddy also fixes hair driers, TVs or blenders – or for that matter, anything with wires attached to it. Three or more years ago, this explanation sufficed nicely. If I told my son then what I really do, he would have never understood. It’s too complicated for a child that young. So I waited.

Fast-forward to today. Only recently my now 10-year-old son asked me again, “Dad, what do you do at work.” This time I told him the truth. I said, “Fin, Dad makes sure people have jobs, so they can pay their mortgage, their rent and feed their kids.”

Let’s get something straight: you are not a sales person.

Don’t let your silent prospects lull you into thinking that’s what you are either. You are a facilitator of commerce. Your job is to make sure your buyers have revenue, which creates paychecks, which keeps the rain off of their heads. That’s mighty damn important work! Letting your buyer’s silence marginalize the importance you play in their lives is not only narrow-minded, it’s also extraordinarily selfish of you. How dare you keep your buyers from the success your solutions can produce for them.

Force your buyer with everything you have to commit to something.

A “Yes” is a commitment. A “No,” while far less desirable, is also a commitment. Here are three key ways I attempt with every pitch to get a commitment from my buyers.

1. Remind them that clarity is your goal, not the sale.

Early, you’re likely busy pledging time to building trust. Those initial efforts should be led by declarative statements that convey your desire for clarity, over the sale. A few things happen when you take this approach: (a), you send a disarming message to the buyer that you’re actually happy to walk away promptly if it doesn’t fit. (B), you’re conversing! You’ve engaged your buyer in conversation that has nothing to do with your proposal, but rather the ease with which communicating with you occurs. This is a wonderful and organic way to establish a trusting partnership. And (c), You’re standing out. Imagine how many pressure sales situations your buyers have seen throughout their careers. Now imagine how unlike theirs is by comparison to yours. Nice job! You’re now rising above the noise.

2. If your initial attempts are met with silence, double down.

Weakness gets you nowhere. Buyers are busy, in demand and frankly probably have a lot of bad habits that cause your email to drop to the bottom of their inbox.

They’re not saying, “No” because they know your service is important to them. You’re just not important enough to move up their poorly conceived list of priorities. Get them to commit by asking them tough questions about the very things that matter to them: their legacy with their firm, cash flow, payroll.

Be direct and respectful. Believe it or not, those two characteristics can reside within the same conversation – written or spoken. You can be both frank and professional. Is your buyer so swimming in success that five minutes with you would constitute a colossal and categorical waste of their time? Of course not. And this leads me to #3.

3. Reduce the scale and grandiosity of your “Ask.”

Stop leading with, “OMG, I gotta get this sale!” Try downgrading the size and requirements of your “Ask.” Instead of asking to present, ask for an appointment. Better yet, instead of the appointment, ask for five minutes. Compel them to give you five minutes. Say something like, “you’ll know in two minutes, if the additional three will be worth your time.” Or perhaps combine ideas #2 and #3 to form something like this: “Surely you’ve blown five minutes professionally on tasks far less important than how to generate new revenue channels.” Heck, I bet your buyers have wasted more time thinking of reasons not to give you those five measly minutes.

Remember, you are not a sales person. That’s just a label lazy people give to people skilled enough to create revenue. You are a facilitator of commerce. You direct revenue from your buyer’s customers into your buyer’s hands. I can think of few vocations more honorable, more integral and frankly, more worthy of your time.

Obligate your buyers to commit to their future. A “No” is a commitment to an outcome, same as is a “Yes.” Stop letting them enjoy the view from the cheap seats and help them see the outcome of their decision to say, “Yes” or their decision to say, “No.”

So, next month if you continue to have a bucket overflowing with “Unknowns,” stop believing what can be done, has been done. Demand clarity. Get them to commit to an answer. If they want you, but can’t find a way to prioritize you, then help them see the loss in their silence. Help them see the enormity of the decision to answer with silence. And in those less complex cases when they simply don’t want you, make them declare that to you.

Make them say it: “I. Don’t. Want. You.”

Author’s Bio: Scott Dailey is the Director of Strategic Development for the digital marketing company Single Throw, in Wall, New Jersey. Scott leads the marketing and sales department for Single Throw and is an ardent lover of all things digital marketing and lead generation. You can follow Scott on Twitter at @scottpdailey or visit his blog at scottpdailey.com.

Image via Flickr creative commons by marfis75.

Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media Tagged With: bc, sales

Effective social media sales gets personal

October 3, 2014 by Rosemary

By Diana Gomez

Figuring out how to use social media effectively for your business is a lot like trying to hit a moving target…about the size of a pea, three hundred yards away, from the bow of a skiff in fifteen-foot-high seas. Did I mention that you’re also trying to use an unwieldy, twenty-pound harpoon? (You get the picture.)

speedboat going fast

Getting the attention of your target market, let alone followers and regular activity on your social media sites, is one of the biggest challenges in today’s marketplace. However, it’s not impossible. As with our seafaring harpoon-ist, the best way to hit that target is with practice, patience and a little bit of luck. And with social media marketing, your odds also go up in proportion to your creativity: the more you use, the better chance you have of hitting home.

Remember: It’s Social Media, not Sales Media

Before launching any type of social media sales campaign, be sure that you have the following in place: a strong following and a good relationship with your followers and friends.

This may seem like a no-brainer, but a lot of businesses come into the social media world expecting people to start following them simply because they’re posting regularly, or that they can launch a campaign the same day they open their social media page and get instant results.

The fact is that social media is just that: social. If you were to walk into a room and hand out business cards, talking only about your business, people would get tired of you pretty quickly. But if you were to engage others, answer their questions, talk a little about yourself and comment on their personal accomplishments, you’d not only be welcome in that social circle, you might also be invited to other, bigger parties.

Social Campaigning

Once you’ve built up that all-too-important following, it’s time to break out the campaign strategies. From Instagram picture challenges to pop quiz prize questions on Facebook, there are potentially thousands of ways you can start actively engaging your customer base. And don’t let anyone try to pigeonhole your business by saying a particular social media type isn’t “right” for your company. An accounting firm can have just as much fun with a photo challenge as a nail salon. In fact, it might shine an even brighter spotlight on your business when you take a more unconventional campaign route.

Following are several social media campaign ideas, but keep in mind that creativity is the key to standing out in an overcrowded social media market.

Ideally, these suggestions should only be a basis for creating your own innovative spin-off.

  • Say it like you meme it: Random pictures transformed into funny, witty memes is a great way to build connections through shares and likes. And for small businesses, using local references or images can help engage area residents.
  • Caption captivation: Don’t have the time to make a meme? Get your friends and followers to do it for you by posting a picture and inviting them to caption it for you. The cuter, funnier or more surprising you can make the image, the better.
  • Local resource: If your small business is located in or near an active community/business hub, take the opportunity to become a go-to resource for local events. No matter your business, if you post regularly about upcoming events in your neighborhood, people will begin to seek you out as a reliable resource. And as an added bonus, your business would likely become known as a strong supporter of the local community.
  • What we’re up to: Show off some of your company’s personality by sharing family album-type images. Pictures of some regulars who dropped by, renovations, even a picture of you fixing a leaky sink in the break room will make your business feel more relatable and consequently, more engaging.
  • Pop quiz: Everyone knows at least a few random facts for no apparent reason, so why not give them a chance to show off their odd knowledge by posting a pop quiz question? From movie trivia to microbiology, you can pick a question that pertains to your industry or go with something totally random. Either way, it’s a great way to build on your following.
  • Image open invite: This is another one that can work for virtually any business. Invite your followers to post images following a theme – any theme. It doesn’t necessarily have to relate to your business, but there are plenty of ways to tie photos in with your line of work. An accounting firm, for example, could welcome pictures of frugal DIY projects (ex: turning old VHS cases into mod picture frames), or a lawn care service could post images of bizarre yard art and invite others to share their own.

Whatever your approach, just remember to keep it creative and relatable. People spend time on social media sites to escape from the business world and to engage with friends and family. By gearing your campaigns more toward the light-hearted and entertaining, you’ll eventually be able to expand your social outreach exponentially.

Author’s Bio: Diana Gomez is the Marketing Coordinator at Lyoness America, where she is instrumental in the implementation of marketing and social media strategies for USA and Canada. Lyoness is an international shopping community and loyalty rewards program, where businesses and consumers benefit with free membership and money back with every purchase.

Photo Credit: Keith Marshall via Compfight cc

Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, sales, social-media

Stop Calling it Content

August 21, 2014 by Rosemary

It’s official. The push for “content” has pervaded society so completely that I had this actual conversation with my 10 year old the other day:

10 Yr Old: “Mom, no-one is visiting my website.”
Me: “I visited it just yesterday.”
10 Yr Old: “I think I need to make more content.”

Boom. Throw down the microphone and walk off stage.

assembly line

There has been a robust conversation surrounding the sheer amount of “content” debris (go read Mark Schaefer’s original Content Shock post), but I think the larger issue has to do with the attitude of the “content” creator.

I propose that we just stop calling it “content,” and whip out some Barron’s vocabulary words to describe what we’re doing instead.

  • Research paper
  • Investigative journalism
  • Marketing video
  • Customer photos
  • Online brochure or catalog
  • Case studies
  • Interviews
  • Company news item

See where I’m going with this?

One result will be that we ourselves recognize when we’re writing sales copy vs telling a story. If you call it “content,” it could be anything.

If you call it what it is, maybe it shifts your point of view as a creator. You are no longer a robot on the assembly line, you are an artist, a designer, a writer.

It’s the difference between mass-produced frozen fish sticks and fresh-caught grilled trout.

Your homework today, should you choose to accept it, is to go through your marketing plan, campaign strategy, and/or social media plan and highlight everywhere it says “content.” Replace that word with phrases and words that mean something to your customers.

Are you content with “content?”

Author’s Bio: Rosemary O’Neill is an insightful spirit who works for social strata — a top ten company to work for on the Internet . Check out the Social Strata blog. You can find Rosemary on Google+ and on Twitter as @rhogroupee

Photo Credit: jamesjyu via Compfight cc

Filed Under: Content, Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog, Writing Tagged With: bc, content marketing, copywriting

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