BillQuick Software  
 

March 2009

 
 
 

Recommendations to Survive and Thrive - Part 2

Clients, Clients, Clients

Marketing, Marketing, Marketing


Advice from BillQuick Customers, BillQuick Advisors and consultants has one consistent theme for surviving and thriving in this economic climate:
 

Don't stop marketing.

If anything,
increase your marketing activities
.

 

Marketing does not mean major advertising campaigns or expensive shotgun direct mails with fancy 4-color inserts. Successful professionals, and those who work with them, say marketing can be low cost and high impact.

The top three suggestions are:

  1. Talk to your clients - Regularly. Sending an email or talking to clients at a local meeting is not enough. You must actively nurture the relationships. That requires meeting face-to-face. To maximize your market impact with the lowest cost and time, meet with clients once or twice a week for an early morning cup of coffee or quick breakfast. Don't linger. Meet for 15-30 minutes.  (They're busy too.) Meeting before the business day starts energizes you and the client because it is a positive meeting.

Have a couple questions ready to show you care about a client as more than a revenue stream. Exchange ideas about ways to cope. Ask them for feedback on new service ideas. Most people willingly and immediately help. Your client begins thinking positively and beyond the current situation. You are attached to that positive memory. In these conversations, it is critical that you do not let them turn into commiseration sessions.

After meeting face to face, stay in touch. Set a schedule of emails and telephone calls and BURN it into your Outlook or Day Planner. There is nothing short of a natural disaster or illness that should keep you from your marketing follow-up. Try to meet every 4 to 6 weeks for another quick face-to-face. This marketing strategy puts you at the head of the line when an opportunity comes up. And who knows, your "research" might identify how to save clients money by tapping into your expertise. That's a Win-Win your client won't forget.

  1. Talk to your former clients.  Rekindle the relationships. Start soft; this is not a sales call. You are reestablishing a relationship and that takes a little time and effort. Begin with an email or phone call. Ask how they are doing. Be positive. For example, you may write:

"Hey, Bob, been a while since we talked.

"I thought about you this morning when I was having coffee with Joe. He's a member of my professional association. We meet every few weeks to talk about ways to cope and get ready for the upswing that's coming. A couple things he said reminded me of your operation. [Be specific if you can.] I thought you may want to hear about it.

"What Joe does is [example] pay for leads. His professional staff get a part of the fee for any new business they bring in. His engineers are all over the place drumming up business. They got so excited Joe brought in a business coach to give them a quick marketing tutorial - easy, quick stuff they can do. They got two new jobs within a few weeks after the sessions. Not big ones, but a start."

Something as simple as sharing does a lot to rekindle an old relationship. Share ideas you read, hear from others, and come up by yourself. Send the former client a link to a web site, blog or article. When you make the effort, you are sincere, and you are consistent (keep in contact), you open a door that most people appreciate and will reciprocate. Move toward a face-to-face meeting, then do the same as you do with clients - stay in touch.

  1. Give back to your clients and former clients. It has to be something of value. No charge, no hidden gotcha's. This is a way to say, "I like you as my client and I want to keep you."

Defining what to give is where many professionals get tied up. Some think this means a marketing premium like a keychain or business card case. Wrong. You provide services, so focus on services.  Others get bogged down in thinking about how much revenue is being lost. Important, but very short-sighted. The problem is "value" is equated with cost. Again, cost is important, but you're missing a key fundamental of marketing: It's about the client!

Think about the value from a client's point of view. What would they perceive as the value of a giveaway service? You can gauge this very easily: What would the client save or earn having received the service from you? Don't know?

Then take suggestion #1 and #2 above and ask. Meet or call a few clients. Tell them about the new service you're developing and that you need their help. Lay out the service and ask them what they think. Will this part of it help you? What if this was added at this point?

Let them tell you what they think and ACTIVELY LISTEN! That means you don't debate or argue, you ask them questions. Probing questions. Clarifying question. Open-ended questions. You are there to learn - either to test your new service in the harsh light outside your mind and offices, or to build an idea from the ground up. (By the way, this is called product management, a marketing activity.)

When you have a good handle on what the service should be, use the same clients to test market it. Give it to them free. Make sure they receive strong value. And as any good business coach will tell you, document the entire service (from prep to delivery to follow-up) like you were writing a franchise manual. This ensures you know the exact time and effort required, and will help you control the cost of giving the service away.

Now, execute! Start generating positive word of mouth among your clients. Have your staff use your "franchise manual" to deliver the same service. When the business cycle turns back up, you may well find that you have a whole new service area, tested and ready for widespread delivery.

How should you deliver the service? It could be a one-to-one analysis for a client or it could be an intimate seminar in your offices for a small group of clients. It may sessions done on the web or a teleconference. (Remember to document everything during these sessions. They help perfect your service, reduce costs, improve marketing effectiveness, and fine-tune service delivery.)

For example, an IT consultant may visit a client's back-office for a couple hours to identify possible risks. The result may be a recommendation to safeguard data with automated backup to a remote cloud site. Or an architectural or engineering firm may hold a small seminar that shows construction clients how to improve internal procedures, better deal with permitting agencies, and so on. (Wow! Your take-it-for-granted expertise has real world value to those who don't have it.) Similarly, accountants, attorneys and other professionals may offer accounting, technology, legal and other useful information (high value) to clients, and perhaps, extend the give away to the clients of their clients, too. 

As you can see, these marketing strategies are very low cost. And year after year, good times and bad, they prove to be the most effective at keeping and gaining clients. And when the economy turns from poor to good, you are in the right position, with strong marketing habits, strong client relationships, and new, highly-profitable services.

One last 'by the way', these three strategies also establish and strengthen your personal brand as a professional. Branding is a marketing activity. 
 

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