Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘pricing’ Category

felix-2These days we all have to consider our product carefully and how we are going to successfully bring it to market.

I had an interview with a potential client the other day.  People think they are interviewing me but I am also listening carefully to them, to what they tell me, and what they reveal about their vision.  I want to be sure if I take this person on as a client that I feel I will be able to offer them training and coaching likely to bring results.  This person I talked to the other day wants to manufacture an organic product that people already readily use and buy.  So far… well and good!  But she also wants to sell her product ONLY on the internet through individual sales, doesn’t want to do any mass marketing of her product to stores, doesn’t want to spend very much time doing marketing, has a low budget and says she needs to get some money coming in fairly quickly.  She has selected a price point 4x the regular marketing price but thinks her product will sell because of the quality difference and because there is one additional aspect to her product that makes it different from her competitor’s.  In the end, I sent her to one of my strategic partners because my partner is very good at search engine optimization for websites and could probably help her more than I could.  But in my heart, I don’t think this business is a shoe-in for success.

There are many variables you need to consider beside “I want to do this” when you start your business.  Pre-Bush administration, when the economy was better, a small business person might have gotten away with marketing a designer product for which there was a great deal of competition, at a higher cost, without putting in much effort at marketing.  Maybe.  The key there would have been a budget which would pay for a REALLY good website (one Google and Yahoo LOVED!), internet ads galore, someone to do ongoing website optimization for the business, and the hope of viral marketing.  But these days, a good solid business with a focused business and marketing plan, where the economic and demographics factors of who and where people are willing to spend money on this product have been taken into consideration, will be more likely to move a business forward… even in a bad economy.

Now, if ever, it is the time to be flexible.  Don’t get too fixated on what you ARE willing or are NOT willing to do for your business.  For myself, when I find my business in this situation, I try to rouse my interest in the challenge of doing something I don’t normally like to do. But certainly, the moral of this story is to be really careful these days not to limit your options.  Give your business more of a chance to emerge from the other side of the recession intact and thriving… as well as, perhaps, experiencing the delight of finding yourself on the other side of a challenge a more capable, flexible person than you were before!

Read Full Post »

Some of you who have read my previous blogs must be wondering what I think are the essential business skills a Marketing Introvert needs to master. Here they are in a nutshell.

  1. Strategic Planning
  2. Business Communication
  3. Marketing
  4. Sales
  5. Organization and Time Management

If you want specifics, see the list below. This list can look overwhelming to a true Marketing Introvert but if these essentials are put in place marketing will move forward much more smoothly and easily. For someone who isn’t crazy about doing marketing and sales in the first place, this is crucial! By mastering these, you will spend less time marketing and be more effective!

  1. Create a (sufficiently detailed) vision of what kind of business you want in the future
  2. Set goals (daily, weekly, monthly, etc)
  3. Make firm decisions on the revenue sources you will offer and your pricing
  4. Learn how to talk about prices easily to anyone
  5. Identify your ideal clients and why they spend money on your type of product or service
  6. Develop a marketing message based on #5
  7. Learn the psychology of business communication
  8. Develop a brief but attention-grabbing way to answer the question “What do you do?”
  9. Learn how to network effectively with other business owners
  10. Create a 10 minute presentation on your business
  11. Develop several talks if public speaking will help you get in front of your target clients. Learn the secret to getting permission for you to call interested people after the talk BEFORE they leave the room.
  12. Design 3 to 5 marketing strategies you will use on an ongoing basis that will get you directly in front of your ideal clients or people who will refer them to you.
  13. Research and use methods of getting attention for your business on the internet
  14. Create a structured way of speaking with potential clients (doing sales)
  15. Understand what sales techniques work and which don’t
  16. Be organized in your office so you don’t waste your precious time
  17. Create an “ideal” work day template for yourself and stick to it as best you are able. Again this will save you up to 8 hours a week in lost or wasted time.
  18. Be good at time management for your business since, especially if you are a sole proprietor and do everything from provide the service/oversee manufacture of the product to being the Bookkeeper, VP of Marketing, VP of Sales, Filing Clerk, and the Janitor.
  19. Regularly assess your business progress and make navigational changes to your work plan.
  20. Be able to work with yourself to continue becoming a more savvy, effective business person

Read Full Post »