Tuesday, March 5, 2013

COME IN FROM THE COLD: WARM UP YOUR MARKETING

Do you feel uncomfortable trying to market your business to strangers? Most of us do. Making cold calls, knocking on doors, or attending networking mixers where you don't know a soul can be challenging or even painful. Happily, cold approaches like these are not all there is to marketing. In fact, you may never need to use them at all.

Perhaps you already know this, and have been marketing your business in other ways. For example, launching a website, exhibiting at trade shows, running pay-per-click ads, distributing flyers, sending emails and letters to people who don't know you, or posting promos on social media. But all of those approaches are "cold" as well, and many of them can be expensive.

Whenever you are trying to start a marketing conversation with a stranger -- with no introduction, referral, or shared connection to help you -- it's a cold approach, whether you make it on the phone, in a room, by mail, or online. And cold approaches, across the board, are less effective than warm ones.

A prospective client who becomes acquainted with your business by referral or introduction is much more likely to hire you than one who never heard of you before. A prospect who gets to know, like, and trust you over time will decide to do business with you much more easily than one who just ran across you.

Ready to warm up your marketing? Here are six ways to do it.

1. Before you engage in any pipeline-filling activity, stop to ask yourself if there is follow-up you've been neglecting. Filling your marketing pipeline with new prospects is important, but if you don't follow up with those people, they are unlikely to become clients. It's tempting to focus all your marketing on reaching out to potential new prospects. Pipeline-filling activities like launching a new website or social media profile, placing an ad, booking a speaking engagement, or writing an article may seem more interesting and less confronting to you than following up with existing prospects.

Try to resist the temptation to start something new until you've completed what you already set in motion. Follow-up calls, emails, newsletters, blog posts, or personal notes to people who already know you and your business will typically result in closed sales much more quickly than acquiring new prospects.

2. Warm up your existing prospects to make your follow-up more effective.  You may have people in your marketing pipeline who don't know you well, or with whom you've been out of touch. Before you pick up the phone to call them, consider how you might warm them up a bit more.

Is there someone you know who is a mutual acquaintance? Could you ask your acquaintance for more information about the prospect or use your acquaintance's name as a reference when you call? Do you and the prospect have other shared connections you could mention? Perhaps a school you both attended, an association you both belong to, or an interest you share? Is there a helpful resource you could send prospects in advance of calling, so they'll think of you as a trusted advisor, not a pesky salesperson?

3. Expand your view of who is in your pipeline -- it may be fuller than you think.  One more avenue to consider before you start reaching out to strangers is to make sure you have considered everyone you already know as a pipeline candidate. In your professional life, think about your former co-workers and bosses, fellow students at the training school you attended, members of your professional association, vendors who sell to you, and people in your social media network. In your personal life, consider the members of clubs you belong to, social media connections, your neighbors and neighborhood merchants, alumni of the college you went to, or the parents of your children's classmates or teammates. You may already know dozens, or even hundreds of people you could add to your marketing pipeline.

4. When you do need to fill up your pipeline, consider warm approaches first.  Before resorting to cold approach strategies -- advertising, cold calling, direct mail, trade shows, or any online strategy that involves contacting or attracting strangers -- think about how you could instead use networking, referrals, or personal introductions to make the acquaintance of more prospective clients.

Contact people who already know and trust you and let them know what type of clients you're looking for. Don't forget to include personal friends and family in this outreach -- those may be the people in your life who most want you to succeed. Seek out potential referral partners -- people who come into contact with your ideal clients every day -- and make their acquaintance.

5. In order to make use of warm contacts, remember to capture them in the first place.  An essential part of warm marketing is knowing who you know. Whenever you make contact with a new prospect, record their contact information, where they came from, what you know about them, and what they might be interested in. For prospects who find you via your website, blog, or social media, provide a way for them to join your mailing list, and an incentive for doing so.

Keep track of your prospects in some sort of contact management system. This can be a comprehensive CMS like Salesforce.com, a simple contact manager like Google Contacts or the app on your phone, an Excel spreadsheet, or even a notebook. It doesn't matter how you do it, as long as you do it.

6. Don't discard warm approaches until you've really tried them. It's common to hear entrepreneurs say about marketing tactics: "I tried that and it didn't work for me." But did you really? Did you try networking, for example, by going to a few events, but then never calling anyone you met there or setting up a coffee date? Or did you try referral-building by telling some folks, "I would welcome your referrals," without ever letting them know who would be a good client for you, or asking what you could do for them in return?

Warm approaches are all about building relationships. You need to have multiple contacts with your prospects and referral sources over time. You must build your contacts' trust by becoming a helpful resource or returning favors. You have to follow through on what you start.
But as your reward, you may just be able to walk away from uncomfortable, anxiety-provoking, expensive, cold approaches forever. And that's a goal worth striving for.
Copyright © 2013, C.J. Hayden

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Friday, March 1, 2013

Photo Theft, Bogus Property Watch, Fake DMV and More

While you take steps to protect your computer data, are you doing enough to protect your PC from photo theft?

And what else might you unknowingly give away to crooks -- like your upcoming travel plans?

Or how about falling for a simple con trick that uses an official name to sell you auto insurance?

Click here to read the full article.



©Copyright Audri and Jim Lanford. All rights reserved.
Reprinted with permission.
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Friday, February 22, 2013

Disaster Scams Special Part 2: What To Do and Where To Get Help

This is the second part of our special report on disaster scams -- the tricks that con artists, unscrupulous traders and sick-minded individuals play on us in the wake of natural disasters like storms and earthquakes and human-induced incidents like shooting tragedies and power station meltdowns.

In Part One we listed the 20 most frequent tricks both disaster victims and the public are likely to encounter.

This time, we provide the 10 rules you should follow to avoid also becoming a scam victim, and the places you can turn to for more help.

Click here to read the full article. 



©Copyright Audri and Jim Lanford. All rights reserved.
Reprinted with permission.
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Friday, February 15, 2013

Disaster Scams Special Part 1: 20 Tricks to Watch For

Disaster scams are now established as a major crime in our society.

And no wonder. Just take a look at the map at the bottom of the FEMA home page, showing where disasters currently are located in the US. Most of them you may never have heard of.

So, since we live in a world where, sadly, emergencies happen all too frequently, the Scambusters team has pulled together a definitive checklist of the most common tricks, how to avoid them and where to get information and help.

These cruel scams, hoaxes and malicious messages cover the full gamut of incidents, from natural disasters like hurricanes, floods, earthquakes and wildfires, to human-created tragedies like mass shootings and terrorist attacks.

Click here to read the full article. 


©Copyright Audri and Jim Lanford. All rights reserved.
Reprinted with permission.
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Thursday, February 14, 2013

THE ART AND SKILL OF FOLLOW-UP

If I had to name one thing that causes more independent professionals to fail at marketing than any other, it would be lack of follow-up. Every day, I see entrepreneurs do a fabulous job at filling their marketing pipeline with prospective clients, and then fail miserably at following up with them.

Effective follow-up is both an art and a skill. The skill of follow-up consists of the mechanics -- how to make contact, how often to do it, what to say when you follow up, and keeping track of it all.

The art of follow-up lies in the way you go about it -- or don't. You can avoid follow-up completely, do it only reluctantly, follow up in an insincere way... or you can follow up consistently, with respect for the buyer, and with an honest desire to build a relationship with your prospective clients.

Let's examine first some essential follow-up skills:
  • Who to follow up with -- Everyone who appears to match your target market description and with whom you have had some prior contact (whether you initiated the contact or they did). And, everyone who you have reason to believe could consistently refer people in your target market.
  • When to follow up -- On a regular basis: more often for hot prospects, less often for warm or cool ones. You might contact a hot prospect weekly, a warm prospect every 2-4 weeks, and a cool prospect every 2-3 months. Don't let hot and warm prospects languish! Always follow up your initial contact promptly.
  • How to make contact -- Depends on the nature of your prior contact and the path you typically follow to a sale. Might be by phone, email, postal mail, social media, text message, or all of the above. Some communications may be generic (e.g., your ezine or a public social media post), but at least some contacts should be personally directed to each prospect.
  • What to say -- With a hot or warm prospect, it can be perfectly okay to simply call or email, and ask if they are ready to act on your offer. When following up multiple times over a longer period, add value to your contacts by periodically providing helpful information or advice instead of just pitching business.
  • When to stop following up -- Consider the value of the eventual sale. If your prospect is likely to spend only a small amount, only a few personal contacts may be appropriate. But when the possible sale is large, keep following up indefinitely.
  • Tracking your follow-up -- Capture every prospect and potential referral source in some type of automated or manual contact management system, where you can record when and how you make each contact. That's the only way you'll know when it's time to follow up again.
Working on developing your follow-up skills and tools will be time well spent, but it's not the whole picture. You also need to pay attention to the art of follow-up in order for it to succeed.
Here's how to make your follow-up more artful:
  • Find the right mindset -- Before you pick up the phone or sit at the keyboard, get your head into a positive space. Gritting your teeth, envisioning failure, or stressing about your need to make a sale are not frames of mind that lead to success. Instead, think about how you can best be of service to the person you are about to contact.
  • Notice your attitude -- When you notice you are avoiding or delaying follow-up activities, use this as a clue that you haven't yet found the right mindset. Don't make the mistake of just thinking you are "too busy" to get it done. Procrastination is a signal that fear, anxiety, or resentment is at work.
  • Focus on your prospects -- The first goal of following up is to build a relationship with your prospective client. Closing the sale is a secondary goal that will follow much more easily once you've achieve the first one. Keep asking yourself not what you need, but what the prospect needs.
  • Show respect but not awe -- Treat your prospects as peers, not as either lords or peons. Respect their time and concerns, and they will do the same for you.
  • Demonstrate consistency -- Consistent, timely follow-up is professional, not pushy. Your prospects are expecting to hear from you; don't disappoint them. Your performance as a potential service provider may be judged by how well you perform your follow-up... or don't.
Pay attention to both the art and the skill of follow-up, and you'll master this essential marketing capacity. And that will bring you the rewards due to such a multi-talented entrepreneur.
Copyright © 2013, C.J. Hayden

Read more free articles by C.J. Hayden or subscribe to the GET CLIENTS NOW! E-Letter.

Friday, February 8, 2013

Phishing Update: Key Trends and Warning Signs

Information-stealing phishing attacks now number almost 3 billion a year and are growing at an annual rate of 37%.

With crooks now selling "phishing kits" to the criminally minded, we can expect the crime to escalate further and faster.

This week's issue shows how clever the scammers have become, focuses on the most common current phishing tricks, and highlights the four red flags that should put you on the alert.

Click here to read the full article.


©Copyright Audri and Jim Lanford. All rights reserved.
Reprinted with permission.
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Friday, February 1, 2013

Scammers Dump Flooded Cars on Unsuspecting Buyers

Widespread flooding and storm waters this winter are about to dump another painful legacy on us -- flooded cars offered for sale but disguised to look like they're in good condition.


Hurricane Sandy alone flood-damaged an estimated 230,000 cars.

In addition, according to one leading auto records company, thousands more cars are damaged by water every year and then returned to our roads.

Superficially, many of these may still look quite good and, inevitably, find their way onto the market in the hands of individual owners and unscrupulous dealers.

Click here to read the full article. 



©Copyright Audri and Jim Lanford. All rights reserved.
Reprinted with permission.
Subscribe free to Internet Scambusters at