Want Steady Sales, Even in Slower Markets? Market Before You Have To…

Here’s Sandy Geroux’s great marketing tip for the month of September …

Sandy GerouxWant Steady Sales, Even in Slower Markets? Market Before You Have To…

What happens when you wait until the last minute to do anything in life?

You become stressed out, trying to get something done too quickly;
The project is rushed, causing items to be overlooked, poorly done or completely missed
You often do the wrong thing… just to do something!

This is no way to run your life – and certainly is no way to run your business.

When we wait until we NEED business to do some marketing, it’s the same thing as pushing off a necessary task until the last moment… and it causes all the same kinds of stress, with one additional stressor – financial stress… the kind of stress we can all live without.

Marketing is not a one-time, do-it-as-you-need-to event. It is a constant reminder to the world that you’re still in business, that you’re going to be there for your customers for the long-term, and that you are a good businessperson.

There are many reasons to make marketing a part of your daily/weekly/ monthly business practice:

  1. Marketing takes time. It is an “awareness” program that constantly and consistently promotes you, your services and your brand.
  2. Marketing is different from sales. Marketing does not necessarily produce income now; effective sales efforts produce income now. If you need business now, you need effective sales efforts, not simply marketing efforts. However, good marketing sets you up as the “vendor of choice” for future sales.
  3. Marketing helps customers choose you (rather than your competition) when they’re ready to buy. Customers are not always ready to buy at the exact moment your marketing and sales efforts reach them. By getting (and keeping) your name out there, and consistently and reliably maintaining top-of-mind awareness, customers are more apt to choose you when they’re ready to buy. If you disappear after one sales call, or one marketing campaign, customers who are not ready to buy at that moment will forget about you. Consistent marketing ensures that they don’t – in fact, can’t – forget about you.
  4. An effective marketing plan helps you stay on target with regard to timeframes and budgets. If you don’t have a sound marketing plan, but will simply try anything and everything that “sounds good at the time,” you will probably get a poor return on your investment, and will likely miss your sales targets, as well as taking a chance on being out of business very quickly… not to mention there will likely be no cohesiveness to your message and branding if you do everything “piecemeal.”

Marketing doesn’t have to be mysterious or difficult. But it does take planning, budgeting and a vision of the message you want to distribute in the public eye. Good marketing plans include your vision, mission and commitment, as well as identification of your target markets, unique offerings and where and how you want to market your products.

Target your best potential customers and keep yourself in front of them on a regular basis. You can do this through:

  • Traditional mailings (not just one-shot, but consistent periodic mailings)
  • E-mails (offering advice, services and free information, such as that found in e-zines, e-newsletters and blogs)
  • Print ads, such as those in print magazines, newspapers and newsletters
  • Radio and TV ads

Start small, especially if your budget is limited: identify the most cost-effective solutions that fit your budget and goals at this time… and include plans for how you will grow and continue to expand your marketing and target audience over time. And don’t forget the fact that good old-fashioned sales efforts can help you build your target customer base quickly, making your marketing efforts more successful much more quickly!

Have a great month!

Sandy

Sandy has been a national speaker, trainer and coach since the year 2000, speaking to organizations and individuals across the U.S. to help them achieve breakthrough performance in sales, customer service and personal and professional productivity through effective risk-taking.

She is a member of the National Speakers Association, is a former Dean of the Speakers’ Academy for the Central Florida Chapter of NSA and now serves on the Board of Directors for that Chapter. For more information, visit Sandy’s website at http://www.sandygeroux.com.

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