How To Market Your Business
I have had thousands of people (well 7 people at
least) come up to me and say, "My marketing
isn't working for me, I am not winning any new
clients - do me a cost effective campaign".
When we sit down and talk through what has happened so
far with their marketing campaigns and what has worked
and what hasn't, the majority kind of just look at
me and say, "I don't know".
This newsletter is aimed at getting you ready for a
marketing campaign, and even a few practical ideas for a
simple campaign.
Quite often businesses take a shotgun approach to
marketing, they get a load of different ideas, such as a
mailshot1, press release, small ring a round to a few
business or alike and then fire them all at once to see
what comes back.
I mention this newsletter
on sales letters I put out, in conversations I have with
people on the phone, on various websites I post messages
on and if I had chance, on a banner attached to a plane.
What people don't realise is how vital it is to
understand which of the marketing channels2 you have used
have worked. What is more, understanding this is really
easy.
Take this newsletter, I don't hide the fact that
for me it is a marketing channel, I want you to get ideas
from reading it, but I would also like it if you came to
me off the back of it for a campaign of sorts. I track
how successful it is by asking people to tell me how they
have heard of the newsletter when they come to subscribe
or download it from my website. I mention this newsletter
on sales letters I put out, in conversations I have with
people on the phone, on various websites I post messages
on and if I had chance, on a banner attached to a plane.
When people come to get the newsletter and they say where
they found out about it I can then see which messages
people are more receptive to.
"Big wow" I hear you shout... but no,
stick with me. After a while I can see what marketing
areas are working for me, even to some extent I can then
begin to measure the financial value of a particular
marketing channel by reading the data in the box that
simply says, "how did you hear about this
newsletter".
If from that data, the majority of people say that it has
come via a web post I can see that for me so far, this is
the most effective message and I can concentrate on that
area rather than moving into another more expensive area
such as telemarketing or advertising. Now, experienced
marketing people will say this is a flawed idea as it
depends how good each message was i.e. how well written
the sales letter was etc, but in the SME market you need
quick client wins and this is why understanding where
leads have come from is vital.
Understanding the origin of a lead is also a real good
conversational ice-breaker when you are talking to
someone for the first time, a simple "how did you
hear about us" gets the conversation moving and
gives you a vital bit of information to log somewhere.
Hopefully you are starting to see the benefit. It is
important that you ask your staff or colleagues to do
this to, if you give them the thinking behind it they
will, hopefully, also see the benefit.
There is no point
getting the phones ringing but not being able to help
everyone within the timescales stated on the marketing
material.
Another important area for you to think about before you
start a campaign is, can you service all the enquiries
that are generated by a campaign. There is no point
getting the phones ringing but not being able to help
everyone within the timescales stated on the marketing
material.
A good national example of this is in the mortgage world.
In the Guardian on Saturday 16 April there was a piece
about a leading High St Bank having a very low rate
mortgage that was attracting thousands of enquiries. The
down side was that they could not cope with the response
and were in fact losing big clients such as mortgage
brokers (who they rely heavily upon for long-term
business). This will have a huge long term effect, and
all the people they have upset by not servicing on time
will be unlikely to use them again, or worst case
scenario, recommend to their friends that they do not use
this company. The fact it got into the paper makes the
situation even more bleak.
At the other end of the spectrum you need to think about
this as well. You need to have a really realistic idea of
how many clients/enquiries you could cope with without
struggling. At this vital stage in your business
development, can you cope with losing clients by not
responding quickly enough?
There are technical aspects to think about to, can your
website stand up to high volumes of traffic, can your
phone system cope with loads of calls and what is the
effect of an ‘engaged’ phone line to a new
customer trying to get through?
All this quite often leads me to suggest to people that
they try a few ideas at a time, or even, one marketing
idea at a time. This can work really well for keeping
your message in front of your target audience. If you
keep having various marketing material appearing in front
of them, maybe a press release one week, then a mailing
the next, then a small advert the following, you are
going to start sticking in their mind.
Moving on... as promised, three very short but simple
marketing ideas:

Do you market your business
in all the ways you can? Do your invoices carry not only
your logo, but also details of your new range or new
service? Do your envelopes have your logo on, or at least
your company name? Can you put a sign up outside your
business?

Do you have case studies of
satisfied customers? These can be used in marketing
literature, in conversations with new clients and quite
importantly, if you are submitting a press release to
media - a case study is a really strong idea.

Do you contact existing
customers to see how they are getting on? Sounds really
straight forward, but not many businesses do this and it
is a great way to stand out and get a good reputation for
excellent customer services. Plus, it is a good way of
getting repeat sales.
Well, enough from me. As ever I hope this helps and
remember if you have any special requests for future
newsletters, please don't hesitate to get in
touch.
For more information email
andy@10yetis.co.uk.
1. JARGON BUSTER - Mailshot = sending a bucket full of sales letters introducing your service or product.
2. JARGON BUSTER - Marketing Channel = Each area of marketing is called a channel, i.e. sending a press release is one marketing channel, sending a mailshot is another channel, a radio ad is another channel etc etc.