In my
field I have the opportunity to talk with many business owners; in recent
meeting a lot of entrepreneurs were saying that even though the overall trend
was an increase over last year, they are still looking to increase their
revenues even more.
I found it
interesting to listen to what they thought was preventing them from achieving
their goals. The two topics that come up most often in these discussions are
marketing and sales. The thing is that I think there are a lot of entrepreneurs
who don't understand the difference between marketing and sales, and how one
impacts the other.
In this
article we are going to briefly clarify the difference between marketing and
sales; also we will hint few methods on how to enhance your marketing and sales
efforts.
Here is a
simple way of explaining it; Marketing is what happens before a client contacts
you. It's what you do to increase awareness about your business so that people
know who you are and what you do. Sales starts once the client contacts you
asking for information about working with you. It continues from the initial
contact until you have their credit card number and their signature on the
dotted line.
Once you
have the sale closed, I would say marketing kicks back in again (though I know
many business experts feel that the service you do after the sale is a
continuation of the sales process - and I can see their point on that!). The
reason I feel like it is marketing is that you are now setting the stage for
repeat and referral business. In my opinion, that's marketing.
So
basically marketing is the process of getting your name out in front of more
potential clients, of letting them know you exist and how you can help them. sales
is the process of closing those potential clients who raise their hand and say
"hey, I'm interested in that!" You could certainly break things down
even further, but for now let's go with that idea, OK?
So what's your problem?
When you
look at your business, ask yourself a couple of questions:
·
How often
are you getting new inquiries or quote requests?
·
Does your
phone ring fairly often?
·
When you
do get an inquiry, is that person the "right fit" for your business?
·
Once you
reply to the inquiry, how often are you closing the sale?
·
How hard
do you have to work to close the sale with that prospective client?
It's your marketing...
If you
aren't getting many inquiries, it's fairly easy to see that you have a
marketing problem. You aren't doing enough work to increase your business awareness.
In this case, your marketing problem is generally pretty simple - it probably
means you just aren't doing enough marketing! No one tells you that when you
open your business, you aren't just becoming a business owner, you are also
becoming a marketer... but it's true!
Not
getting enough inquiries is not the only sign that you have a marketing
problem. If those leads aren't coming in the way you want them to, if the
people contacting you aren't your ideal clients; then your marketing just isn't
getting the job done the way it should.
Great
marketing will filter your clients for you. It attracts your ideal clients and
draws them in. It gets you half the way down the sales path because they have
already "self selected" and decided that they want to work with you.
It's almost as if your marketing handles a good bit of the client qualification
process for you.
At the
same time that your marketing is attracting your ideal clients, it should also
be repelling those clients who you just don't want to work with anyway. They
should see that same message that makes your ideal client anxious to talk to
you and think, "why on earth would anyone want that" and throw your
ad in the trash.
Far too
many entrepreneurs get worried about appealing to everyone or saying something
that is off putting to some people. My answer to that; this is actually a good
thing. Those aren't the clients you are meant to work with anyway!
How do you fix it?
If you are
experiencing these marketing problems, you need to sit down and take a good
hard look at your marketing message.
·
Do you
know exactly who your ideal client really is?
·
Are you
able to clearly articulate what it is that you do for them, why they should
work with you?
·
Are you
making sure you don't put all of your eggs in one basket? You should aim to hit
them with your marketing message in at least 3 different places at the same
time whenever possible.
·
Are you
marketing consistently and regularly or only here and there?
It's your sales process...
Now if you
are getting a lot of inquiries from all of the right potential customers but
they just aren't converting into sales, then you have a sales problem! At that
point, it's time to sit down and evaluate your sales process.
For the
next month, keep track of the number of inquiries you get and the number that
you actually close and book. Keep a spreadsheet or a chart that tracks your
leads and sales. Once you have that information, you can figure out what
percentage of sales you are closing. No one is going to have a 100% close
ratio, but if you are closing less than 50% of the prospects you work with,
there is definitely significantly room for improvement in your process!
How do you fix it?
·
Review the
"script" you use as the basis for your conversations. Don't have one?
Well, that might just be your problem!
·
Take a
good look at your qualifying questions. Are you getting the info you need?
·
Review the
emails you've sent during the sales process, your emails must have a really
clear call to action on what the client needs to do next to start working with
you.
·
A big but rather
basic thing that I see happening a lot... are you actually
asking for the sale? I'm always amazed at
the number of people who present the perfect plan but then close the
conversation with "so take a look at this and let me know if you have any
questions. OK?" and never actually ask for the sale!
·
Review
your follow up procedures. Chances are you aren't following up enough!
So here's your homework...
Set aside some time to look at your business this week
and see where you can find room for improvement. No matter how successful you
are, you can always find somewhere you can be doing better! Pull out your marketing
plan for the last year; review your materials and your message. Look at your
sales process. Review those scripts and templates and see if you can adjust the
language a bit to appeal more to your ideal clients. Practice "closing the
sale" conversation with a friend or colleague and ask for their feedback.
You'll be glad you took the time to do this when you see your revenues increase
as a result.
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