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Casual Articles - Pricing and Strategic Marketing For The Future
Focus - The Missing Marketing Ingredient you. That will waste the prospect’s time, degrade the quality of service you provide to your existing clients, and undermine your business productivity.I think one of the biggest challenges facing companies at just about any timeframe of its corporate life is focus. The focus I am referring to relates to a number of areas within the company. First is the notion of culture. Does your company have more of a sales-driven culture, (which represents a majority of companies)? Or is your company an engineering driven culture? Or is it a marketing-driven culture? In my experience, a small percentage of companies are based on a marketing-driven culture, more than half are sales-driven, and for technology, they are generally engineering-driven. Not being a marketing-driven company is big challenge to maintaining consistent focus.What I mean by marketing-driven is looking from the ground up at everything you are doing as a marketing opportunity. So, for example, looking at your sales strategy. Is your sales guy running the show? This is very common. The sales guys come in and they want the sale, no matter the cost. And that cost is what I call a "seat-of-the- pants" approach where there is a frenetic environment and the sales guy turns on a dime depending on his customer. And features and benefits of the products are sometimes even adjusted for that one customer. That is a lack of focus.What most companies are not doing is starting from scratch, looking at the market opportunity, looking at the market need, looking at what pain their product is going to solve in the marketplace. (That’s actually a key issue: "product myopia" - benefits versus features… this will be covered in a future p The Client Interview Many agencies will visit a family in their home to have the parent(s) complete a registration form and sign a contract. This practice can be very impressive to the client, but it also has drawbacks that should be considered carefully. First, under most state laws, a contract signed in a consumer’s home may be rescinded and nullified by the consumer within 72 hours. This consumer protection was put in place to undermine high-pressure sales organizations from taking advantage of innocent consumers. Consumers are often duped by highly trained and experienced con-artists into signing contracts, only to discover, after the fact, that they have agreed to buy home repairs they didn't need or entered into long term contracts to purchase unwanted services or products. These are good laws that protect consumers from fraudulent practices. However, having your prospect sign a contract with you in their home may not be in your best interest. Consider the family that signs a contract with you one night, interviews and hires an employee you refer the next day, and then subsequently sends you a letter rescinding your contract. Even if you can convince a court that your contract is binding, the cost to do so would be prohibitive. Our office manager offers a second reason to avoid in-home interviews. How many times have you Create Your Own Security Pricing of any product is a blend of science and art. It is a function of both your marketplace (what people are willing to spend for something - the 'science') and your own marketing strategy (what value your 'brand' has in the marketplace – the 'art').Because of the acceleration of change, many traditional standards of job security are not applicable to the current workplace environment. When old structures break up, there is often a time of chaos when more openness is created in teh organization.In the past, security came from being at the center of the organization, not from taking chances or rocking the boat. Now, security comes from being at the edges -- where the organization must relate to other groups. This is where learning and innovation take place.You can create personal security in a changing world of work by taking the following steps: Expand your boundaries.Learn about what other depatrments are doing, how other teams operate. When you listen across different parts of the company and interpet one group's needs to another, you become the "glue" that holds the bricks together. Expand your role.Look for work that needs to be done, whether it falls under "your job description" or not. Do not become constrained by your role, if you can contribute more. Go where the problems are, where there is much to do and not enough resources to do it. Those are the places you can add value. Expand your skills.Do not put all your eggs in one basket. If you only have one skill, you can be at risk. With multiple skills, you can shift the balance as things change. Mixing activities allows you to refocus as the environment changes. Keep learning and challenging yourself. Become comfortable in being uncomfortable and stretching I am doing consulting work with a small specialty internet retail company that sells 'aromatherapy' products. After three years of 50% annual growth, sales have flattened unexpectedly. The first question I asked the owner was “when did you last implement a price increase?” She looked at me like I was crazy and replied, "We haven't had one in years - business is down so we're thinking of lowering our prices to attract more sales." I then asked if she thought sales were flat because customers believed the products were too expensive. She replied confidently that price was not a sales objection, which led to the obvious next questions: “Then why lower your prices? Instead, why not raise them and increase your marketing, advertising and promotional efforts?” It's a classic mistake made by companies when sales get tough: they lower prices and cut expenses in the areas that drive sales, (marketing, promotion, customer service), and then wonder – as if it were not a self-fulfilling prophecy - why sales and earnings continue to fall. On Jan 1, 2000 I purchased a small, well-established domestic placements service company. Between then and Jan 2003 I slowly raised our fees by approximately 30%. Our placement fee for a permanent domestic employee went from $1,495 to $1,595, then to $1,750, and finally to $1,950. I set a minimum fee of $1,200 for part-time placements (formerly, we charged a flat fee of 10% of the annualized part-time salary - so if a client hired a nanny for one day/wk @ $90 our fee was only $468). Lastly, I raised the on-call fee from $14/day - to $15/day, then to $16/day with an additional $9 surcharge for job orders placed with less than a day’s notice. A few clients balked - but fewer than you might think - and after a few weeks we never heard another complaint. Our annual sales are up 48% this year, in a slow economy. We are far more efficient than we have ever been and the quality of our service has improved measurably. Yes, our client count is up, but not by 48%. The increase in revenue (and profit) has come primarily from our effective implementation of price increases. We strive to offer the best product in our marketplace, and we never discount our services or negotiate fees. Our pricing reflects our marketing strategy of being the most respected and professional service company of its in kind in our market. Higher fees dissuade unqualified prospects and bring you clients who appreciate your services. Qualified clients will understand that the decision of which agency to engage is one of quality and service, not price. Pricing your products and services below the market can backfire, attracting clients who are both more difficult to work with and more focused on price than quality. Those clients that make a purchase decision based primarily on a price comparison are simply not the clients we want to attract. That type of customer costs us MORE to work with, and is far LESS profitable to our organization. UNDER-SELL, OVER-DELIVER: EXCEED EXPECTATIONS One colleague wrote: "I am confident that I provide a better service. Confidence is everything! And customer service, of course." True, and if you're planning on growing the business, it helps to deliver a superior product and have a strategy to guide you. Over 75% of new clients and domestic employees that register with our organization come to us through Word-of-Mouth referrals. Some agencies use reward and loyalty programs very effectively. We, however, choose never to pay for a referral. We want our clients to send us business because they are thrilled with their experience. Our client retention rate is well over 80%. People come to us because they believe in the quality of our service or know someone who believes in us. We demonstrate our commitment to our clients by presenting a reality-based assessment of the position they are seeking to fill and the candidates we believe may be interested in interviewing for the position. By ‘under-promising’ we have the opportunity to ‘over-deliver’ and exceed our customer’s expectations. During a recent conference of industry experts, agency owners discussed the idea of 'negotiating fees' to capture borderline prospects. Some felt that in challenging economic times the practice of negotiating fees to capture a sale was necessary. This makes no sense to me. When the PRICE of a service becomes the central focus of your conversation with a client, it becomes increasingly difficult to convey the VALUE and BENEFITS of the services you offer. Unless you believe that price is the most important factor to be considered when evaluating your services, then whenever a conversation turns to the topic of price it should be steered back to the subjects of value and benefits. Consider: If a client has a problem with a $2,000 agency fee, then they are going to have all kinds of other problems down the road; they do not value your services - or do not understand them. When a prospective client tells you that they can't afford a placement fee, don’t you wonder how they will be able to afford an employee salary of $30,000/year? Qualifying A Prospect As you can see, pricing is just another one of the tools we use to 'qualify' a client. As any sales veteran will tell you, qualifying your prospects is the most important part of the sales process. While it sounds like a terribly insensitive term, “qualifying” is actually the first step toward providing excellent customer service. Through the qualifying process you come to understand both your client’s needs and desires, and determine how you can best meet them. Fail to employ a well thought out qualifying process and you will spend an inordinate amount of time with people who will never do business with you. That will waste the prospect’s time, degrade the quality of service you provide to your existing clients, and undermine your business productivity. The Client Interview Many agencies will visit a family in their home to have the parent(s) complete a registration form and sign a contract. This practice can be very impressive to the client, but it also has drawbacks that should be considered carefully. First, under most state laws, a contract signed in a consumer’s home may be rescinded and nullified by the consumer within 72 hours. This consumer protection was put in place to undermine high-pressure sales organizations from taking advantage of innocent consumers. Consumers are often duped by highly trained and experienced con-artists into signing contracts, only to discover, after the fact, that they have agreed to buy home repairs they didn't need or entered into long term contracts to purchase unwanted services or products. These are good laws that protect consumers from fraudulent practices. However, having your prospect sign a contract with you in their home may not be in your best interest. Consider the family that signs a contract with you one night, interviews and hires an employee you refer the next day, and then subsequently sends you a letter rescinding your contract. Even if you can convince a court that your contract is binding, the cost to do so would be prohibitive. Our office manager offers a second reason to avoid in-home interviews. How many times have you s Successful Business Marketing nt domestic employee went from $1,495 to $1,595, then to $1,750, and finally to $1,950. I set a minimum fee of $1,200 for part-time placements (formerly, we charged a flat fee of 10% of the annualized part-time salary - so if a client hired a nanny for one day/wk @ $90 our fee was only $468). Lastly, I raised the on-call fee from $14/day - to $15/day, then to $16/day with an additional $9 surcharge for job orders placed with less than a day’s notice. A few clients balked - but fewer than you might think - and after a few weeks we never heard another complaint.Successful Business Marketing means different things to different people but the bottom line is that whether you are marketing a product, a brand, the business itself or anything else, your success will depend on having a plan - and following it.Every now and then in marketing, as in life, a series of unplanned or unexpected events take place and voila! – you have an unexpected but successful outcome. For example, a mysterious foreign millionaire takes a liking to the plastic gizmo your factory produces and you suddenly land an export order worth millions.That is NOT successfull business marketing! It's nice to have it happen but it's not wise to count on for your future prosperity!For sustained successful business marketing, you must have a marketing plan in place. And not just any old marketing plan that is looked at once a year and then stashed in the bottom draw to gather dust while the companies marketing efforts stumble from one disjointed attempt to the next.Successful business marketing depends on having a simple, functional yet effective marketing plan in place against which all marketing efforts and marketing spend can be measured. In this way, irrespective if you are a one man home-based business or the next Microsoft, you ensure that your marketing efforts are coordinated and focused on your outcome.Unfortunately, a simple yet effective marketing plan is not that simple to come by. Traditionally a marketing plan is a pretty expensive document that can run to hundreds of pages and seems to be s Our annual sales are up 48% this year, in a slow economy. We are far more efficient than we have ever been and the quality of our service has improved measurably. Yes, our client count is up, but not by 48%. The increase in revenue (and profit) has come primarily from our effective implementation of price increases. We strive to offer the best product in our marketplace, and we never discount our services or negotiate fees. Our pricing reflects our marketing strategy of being the most respected and professional service company of its in kind in our market. Higher fees dissuade unqualified prospects and bring you clients who appreciate your services. Qualified clients will understand that the decision of which agency to engage is one of quality and service, not price. Pricing your products and services below the market can backfire, attracting clients who are both more difficult to work with and more focused on price than quality. Those clients that make a purchase decision based primarily on a price comparison are simply not the clients we want to attract. That type of customer costs us MORE to work with, and is far LESS profitable to our organization. UNDER-SELL, OVER-DELIVER: EXCEED EXPECTATIONS One colleague wrote: "I am confident that I provide a better service. Confidence is everything! And customer service, of course." True, and if you're planning on growing the business, it helps to deliver a superior product and have a strategy to guide you. Over 75% of new clients and domestic employees that register with our organization come to us through Word-of-Mouth referrals. Some agencies use reward and loyalty programs very effectively. We, however, choose never to pay for a referral. We want our clients to send us business because they are thrilled with their experience. Our client retention rate is well over 80%. People come to us because they believe in the quality of our service or know someone who believes in us. We demonstrate our commitment to our clients by presenting a reality-based assessment of the position they are seeking to fill and the candidates we believe may be interested in interviewing for the position. By ‘under-promising’ we have the opportunity to ‘over-deliver’ and exceed our customer’s expectations. During a recent conference of industry experts, agency owners discussed the idea of 'negotiating fees' to capture borderline prospects. Some felt that in challenging economic times the practice of negotiating fees to capture a sale was necessary. This makes no sense to me. When the PRICE of a service becomes the central focus of your conversation with a client, it becomes increasingly difficult to convey the VALUE and BENEFITS of the services you offer. Unless you believe that price is the most important factor to be considered when evaluating your services, then whenever a conversation turns to the topic of price it should be steered back to the subjects of value and benefits. Consider: If a client has a problem with a $2,000 agency fee, then they are going to have all kinds of other problems down the road; they do not value your services - or do not understand them. When a prospective client tells you that they can't afford a placement fee, don’t you wonder how they will be able to afford an employee salary of $30,000/year? Qualifying A Prospect As you can see, pricing is just another one of the tools we use to 'qualify' a client. As any sales veteran will tell you, qualifying your prospects is the most important part of the sales process. While it sounds like a terribly insensitive term, “qualifying” is actually the first step toward providing excellent customer service. Through the qualifying process you come to understand both your client’s needs and desires, and determine how you can best meet them. Fail to employ a well thought out qualifying process and you will spend an inordinate amount of time with people who will never do business with you. That will waste the prospect’s time, degrade the quality of service you provide to your existing clients, and undermine your business productivity. The Client Interview Many agencies will visit a family in their home to have the parent(s) complete a registration form and sign a contract. This practice can be very impressive to the client, but it also has drawbacks that should be considered carefully. First, under most state laws, a contract signed in a consumer’s home may be rescinded and nullified by the consumer within 72 hours. This consumer protection was put in place to undermine high-pressure sales organizations from taking advantage of innocent consumers. Consumers are often duped by highly trained and experienced con-artists into signing contracts, only to discover, after the fact, that they have agreed to buy home repairs they didn't need or entered into long term contracts to purchase unwanted services or products. These are good laws that protect consumers from fraudulent practices. However, having your prospect sign a contract with you in their home may not be in your best interest. Consider the family that signs a contract with you one night, interviews and hires an employee you refer the next day, and then subsequently sends you a letter rescinding your contract. Even if you can convince a court that your contract is binding, the cost to do so would be prohibitive. Our office manager offers a second reason to avoid in-home interviews. How many times have you Slatwall Panels and Accessories Turn Ordinary Walls into Product Showcases e clients that make a purchase decision based primarily on a price comparison are simply not the clients we want to attract. That type of customer costs us MORE to work with, and is far LESS profitable to our organization.For retailers of all sizes, space is usually an issue at some point or another. But it’s especially critical for smaller retailers who typically have less space to begin with. It is an age old problem- you can’t grow your business if you don’t get more space. But you can’t afford the space if you don’t grow your business. So retailers need to find innovative ways to overcome the issue.Most of the time when retailers think they need more space, they really just need to make better use of their space. Slatwall panels are a good way to accomplish that. Slatwall panels give retailers the opportunity to turn ordinary wall space into a viable product display space easily and affordably. And because there are a wide variety of compatible accessories, slatwall panels are ideal for almost any type of retailer.In retail, success often comes down to creativity. Retailers need to do what they can to find a competitive edge and offer more to their customers. Sometimes that means recognizing layout and display opportunities and capitalizing on them. Slatwall panels are ideal for a wide variety of products, including CDs, DVDs, books, apparel, headwear, and more. Slatwall panels also come in a variety of styles as well, including textured laminate and mirrored, to fit any store’s decor.Here are a few tips for taking advantage of slatwall panels in your retail store:Be Prepared: Slatwall panels are among the most versatile display fixtures in your retail store. Capitalize on that versatility by havi UNDER-SELL, OVER-DELIVER: EXCEED EXPECTATIONS One colleague wrote: "I am confident that I provide a better service. Confidence is everything! And customer service, of course." True, and if you're planning on growing the business, it helps to deliver a superior product and have a strategy to guide you. Over 75% of new clients and domestic employees that register with our organization come to us through Word-of-Mouth referrals. Some agencies use reward and loyalty programs very effectively. We, however, choose never to pay for a referral. We want our clients to send us business because they are thrilled with their experience. Our client retention rate is well over 80%. People come to us because they believe in the quality of our service or know someone who believes in us. We demonstrate our commitment to our clients by presenting a reality-based assessment of the position they are seeking to fill and the candidates we believe may be interested in interviewing for the position. By ‘under-promising’ we have the opportunity to ‘over-deliver’ and exceed our customer’s expectations. During a recent conference of industry experts, agency owners discussed the idea of 'negotiating fees' to capture borderline prospects. Some felt that in challenging economic times the practice of negotiating fees to capture a sale was necessary. This makes no sense to me. When the PRICE of a service becomes the central focus of your conversation with a client, it becomes increasingly difficult to convey the VALUE and BENEFITS of the services you offer. Unless you believe that price is the most important factor to be considered when evaluating your services, then whenever a conversation turns to the topic of price it should be steered back to the subjects of value and benefits. Consider: If a client has a problem with a $2,000 agency fee, then they are going to have all kinds of other problems down the road; they do not value your services - or do not understand them. When a prospective client tells you that they can't afford a placement fee, don’t you wonder how they will be able to afford an employee salary of $30,000/year? Qualifying A Prospect As you can see, pricing is just another one of the tools we use to 'qualify' a client. As any sales veteran will tell you, qualifying your prospects is the most important part of the sales process. While it sounds like a terribly insensitive term, “qualifying” is actually the first step toward providing excellent customer service. Through the qualifying process you come to understand both your client’s needs and desires, and determine how you can best meet them. Fail to employ a well thought out qualifying process and you will spend an inordinate amount of time with people who will never do business with you. That will waste the prospect’s time, degrade the quality of service you provide to your existing clients, and undermine your business productivity. The Client Interview Many agencies will visit a family in their home to have the parent(s) complete a registration form and sign a contract. This practice can be very impressive to the client, but it also has drawbacks that should be considered carefully. First, under most state laws, a contract signed in a consumer’s home may be rescinded and nullified by the consumer within 72 hours. This consumer protection was put in place to undermine high-pressure sales organizations from taking advantage of innocent consumers. Consumers are often duped by highly trained and experienced con-artists into signing contracts, only to discover, after the fact, that they have agreed to buy home repairs they didn't need or entered into long term contracts to purchase unwanted services or products. These are good laws that protect consumers from fraudulent practices. However, having your prospect sign a contract with you in their home may not be in your best interest. Consider the family that signs a contract with you one night, interviews and hires an employee you refer the next day, and then subsequently sends you a letter rescinding your contract. Even if you can convince a court that your contract is binding, the cost to do so would be prohibitive. Our office manager offers a second reason to avoid in-home interviews. How many times have you Job Market Promising onomic times the practice of negotiating fees to capture a sale was necessary. This makes no sense to me. When the PRICE of a service becomes the central focus of your conversation with a client, it becomes increasingly difficult to convey the VALUE and BENEFITS of the services you offer. Unless you believe that price is the most important factor to be considered when evaluating your services, then whenever a conversation turns to the topic of price it should be steered back to the subjects of value and benefits.As more students graduate from college than ever before, America’s job market has grown to accommodate these eager job-hunters. Employers are expected to hire about 17.4% more college graduates from the Class of 2007 than last year’s college alumni. An increasing number of re-entry students or those over the age of 25 are also trying their luck in the university system.It is not uncommon for 2007’s graduating classes to be characterized by diversity in age and walks of life. A grandmother who simply wants to learn about art history may sit next to a 20-year-old who dreams of becoming the next Picasso. While elderly college students may not have a job search on their minds, today’s career world is drastically different than even just a year ago.Did you know these job market facts?• The most popular degree for the 2006-2007 school year was accounting.• The second most popular degree this year was in business administration.• Employers plan to hire about 22% more grads holding an M.B.A. this year.• Employers in the South plan to hire the most this year, increasing their percentages over one quarter.• About 40% of employers plan to hire those with Associate’s Degrees this year.• Many employers frequently list communication skills in writing, grammar and presentations as their number one qualm with new hires.• Grads holding doctorates will often be hired for engineering or computer-related industries.For those who only hold Associate’s Degrees, this year’s job market is especi Consider: If a client has a problem with a $2,000 agency fee, then they are going to have all kinds of other problems down the road; they do not value your services - or do not understand them. When a prospective client tells you that they can't afford a placement fee, don’t you wonder how they will be able to afford an employee salary of $30,000/year? Qualifying A Prospect As you can see, pricing is just another one of the tools we use to 'qualify' a client. As any sales veteran will tell you, qualifying your prospects is the most important part of the sales process. While it sounds like a terribly insensitive term, “qualifying” is actually the first step toward providing excellent customer service. Through the qualifying process you come to understand both your client’s needs and desires, and determine how you can best meet them. Fail to employ a well thought out qualifying process and you will spend an inordinate amount of time with people who will never do business with you. That will waste the prospect’s time, degrade the quality of service you provide to your existing clients, and undermine your business productivity. The Client Interview Many agencies will visit a family in their home to have the parent(s) complete a registration form and sign a contract. This practice can be very impressive to the client, but it also has drawbacks that should be considered carefully. First, under most state laws, a contract signed in a consumer’s home may be rescinded and nullified by the consumer within 72 hours. This consumer protection was put in place to undermine high-pressure sales organizations from taking advantage of innocent consumers. Consumers are often duped by highly trained and experienced con-artists into signing contracts, only to discover, after the fact, that they have agreed to buy home repairs they didn't need or entered into long term contracts to purchase unwanted services or products. These are good laws that protect consumers from fraudulent practices. However, having your prospect sign a contract with you in their home may not be in your best interest. Consider the family that signs a contract with you one night, interviews and hires an employee you refer the next day, and then subsequently sends you a letter rescinding your contract. Even if you can convince a court that your contract is binding, the cost to do so would be prohibitive. Our office manager offers a second reason to avoid in-home interviews. How many times have you Reverse Merger: Have They Taken the Reverse out of Reverse Merger? you. That will waste the prospect’s time, degrade the quality of service you provide to your existing clients, and undermine your business productivity.Are the promoters and consultants destroying the market for Reverse Merger? First lets take a look at reverse merger. In a Reverse Merger, an operating private company merges with a public company that has little or no assets, nor know liabilities (the “shell”).In some rare instances, the shell may have some amount of cash remaining for investment in the new enterprise. The public corporation is called a “shell” since all that exists of the original company is its corporate shell structure and shareholders.The private company owners obtain the majority of the shell corporation stock (usually 90-95%) through a new issue of stock for the private enterprise or assets.The public corporation will normally change its name to the private company’s name and elect a new board of directors which will appoint the officers.The public corporation will usually have a base of shareholder sufficient to to meet the 300 shareholder requirement for eventual admission to quotation on the NASDAQ Small-Cap Market, Or some other market.Now to the problem or the devil is in the details: The private company goes out perform the proper due diligence on a “shell” after finding it to be clean, and with no adverse past history to disqualify it, goes ahead completes the purchase.After paying an astronomical price, say in the neighborhood of $500,000.00- to 700,000.00 for a Bulletin Board shell they get 90-95% of the stock.Not only is the price extravagant, he will also take the reverse out of Reverse Merger The Client Interview Many agencies will visit a family in their home to have the parent(s) complete a registration form and sign a contract. This practice can be very impressive to the client, but it also has drawbacks that should be considered carefully. First, under most state laws, a contract signed in a consumer’s home may be rescinded and nullified by the consumer within 72 hours. This consumer protection was put in place to undermine high-pressure sales organizations from taking advantage of innocent consumers. Consumers are often duped by highly trained and experienced con-artists into signing contracts, only to discover, after the fact, that they have agreed to buy home repairs they didn't need or entered into long term contracts to purchase unwanted services or products. These are good laws that protect consumers from fraudulent practices. However, having your prospect sign a contract with you in their home may not be in your best interest. Consider the family that signs a contract with you one night, interviews and hires an employee you refer the next day, and then subsequently sends you a letter rescinding your contract. Even if you can convince a court that your contract is binding, the cost to do so would be prohibitive. Our office manager offers a second reason to avoid in-home interviews. How many times have you set an appointment with a prospect that turns out to be a 'no-show' or a last minute cancellation? After years of setting appointments, both in families’ homes and in our office, she has discovered a universal truth: 'No-Shows' are unqualified clients. We have found that those prospects that do not respect our time enough to call and let us know they cannot keep their appointment, also do not value the services we provide. They are, therefore, more likely to be extremely difficult to work with - even if they do choose to eventually sign-up with us. If a client is committed enough to show up at an appointment in your office, they are far more likely to engage your agency to help them hire a high quality household employee. Our interview process, first on the telephone, and then in our office, becomes another tool in our qualifying process. There are side benefits to office interviews as well. Clients come away with a mental image of your offices and staff; subsequently they feel more comfortable with your fees because they know you are a “real” business, just like the other professionals whose services they engage: their accountant, doctors, attorney, etc. The benefits of an In-Office interview compound because:
Properly and effectively qualify a prospect and you will have a great new client, a great new ambassador for your company – or both! Identifying qualified prospects is usually not difficult. The challenging part is turning an unqualified prospect in to a walking, talking billboard for your organization. I know that sounds contradictory; so let me explain by way of an example: A prospective client arrives at our office and speaks with a consultant who will quickly determine that the client is not a good match for our services. We could just sign the prospect up knowing that it is unlikely we will ever make a successful placement, but what good would that do anyone? Many agencies charge an application or 'search' fee - and there is no way that a small application fee will make up for the time you will spend over the next two months not doing business with an unqualified client. When you don't serve a client well, they are sure to tell lots of people how ineffective you were for them. And it gets worse; it is a mistake to under-estimate how much damage can be caused by an unhappy client. When it comes to personal service companies, word spreads very quickly in communities. Instead of telling a client we can’t (or don’t want to) help them, our consultant will explain that the job order is one that may take some time to fill due to the current 'market conditions'. Here's the kicker - we will then send this prospect to our strongest competitor. Imagine: With the client sitting in front of her, our consultant will pick up the phone and call our competitor: "Hi Sally, it's Vicky - how are you?... Listen, I'm sitting here with Mary Jo McDermott and I don't think that I'm going to be able to help her find what she's looking for... She can be at your office in half an hour; do you have time to meet with her today?" Sounds crazy doesn't it? Remember ‘Miracle On 34th Street’? The client is enormously grateful when you put her needs above your own desire to generate fees. She will likely say wonderful things about you to everyone she knows - for a very long time to come. Your competitor can never say anything negative about you because you’re the one who made the referral to her. (What can she say to the client? "…they only sent you here because you're crazy and difficult to work with." - I don't think so!) If you are lucky, your competitor will actually make a placement with the family, which you know will likely fall apart down the road. How do you know that? - Because you have properly qualified them as being a poor client. And even if your competitor makes a successful placement, you still benefit because that client will always remember that it was YOUR agency that helped her find the solution she was looking for – and she will tell her friends. I find this scenario far more attractive than telling a client that they are too cheap or too insane to work with (i.e., that they don't 'qualify'). Our own client consultant is fond of saying "the best clients I have are often the ones that I choose not to work with." In the end, pricing is important, but it is only one piece of a puzzle that makes up the overall marketing strategy for a business. As consumers, we hate to be sold anything – but we sure love to buy. If you develop, implement, and execute your marketing strategy properly - and qualify effectively - clients will be competing for your attention.
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