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Member You - Marketing For Profit - 6 Critical Traits
Looking For a New Job? Are You Sure You Can Pass the Background Check? customers shoes – find out what they feel about the whole buying process (remember marketing = influencing) and create an environment that sympathetically addresses their issues.Companies are taking a closer look at who they hire today. From heightened security concerns to an increase in negligent hiring lawsuits, companies understand that bad hiring decisions can cause them big problems.That’s why over 90% of employers now run background checks on potential hires.During a background check, a hiring company takes a good look at your personal and professional history. They verify your education and past employment, check to see if there is criminal activity in Trait #5 Adapt And Innovate Even if you’re the best deal in town today – you might not be tomorrow. After all, the only thing a competing business needs to do is watch you, copy you, and then improve on your offers and service. Constant innovation is required, adapt or perish as they saying goes. Innovation is a process not a destination. The object is to create a business that offers your customer a deal so perfect that they’d be a fool to shop anywhere else. Trait #6 Systemize Everything You Can Systemization is the process of ma 12 Tips For Newbies To Online And Affiliate Marketing – Part 2 of 3 Develop These Six Critical Marketing Traits...And Success Will Surely Follow.For the beginner, online marketing can be confusing, frustrating, and expensive. Make sure to read the first part of this article if you have not already done so. The newbie interested in online marketing needs to make a choice between marketing his or her own product or someone else's product. If you already have a product to market then skip to Step 3. The other choice for online marketing is to become an affiliate.What is affiliate marketing?An affiliate is someone who sells another’s pr If you are marketing for any other reason than ‘for profit’ – STOP! That’s right, stop right now. The only reason you market your business is to cause action: make more sales, make the phone ring (and make more sales), make someone visit your website (and make more sales)… Are you seeing a pattern here? Good. The root of all marketing is to ‘sell more stuff and make more money’ – that’s it. And here’s the definition of marketing: “Marketing is all about positively influencing your customer’s buying decisions so that they choose you.” Trait #1: Notice Your Own Buying Strategies Remember, it’s about influencing buying decisions, so pay attention to the way the world tries to ‘sell you’. Watch for the really good sales pitches, and pay even closer attention to the really bad ones. Pickup magazines – read the ads, watch TV – surf the commercials, join mailing lists and hoard ‘junk mail’, and when you get telemarketing calls – listen to them carefully because all this stuff is pure gold. Notice billboards, look at pictures (paying special attention to your industry sector) and just for fun, read the Yellow Pages to what’s going on in your area. If you pay attention to what catches your attention, what ads you keep seeing, what radio commercials you keep hearing, you’ll start to find things you can incorporate into your own business model. Trait #2: Cross-Pollinate Business Ideas Nothing about flowers here – this is powerful marketing 1-0-1. Cross-pollination is all about taking a proven idea from one industry and ‘borrowing’ it for yours. Essentially you need to get a little creative with ideas and throw things together that might not normally seem to make sense. Borrow ideas from everywhere. See if you can sell your products and services the same way cell phones are sold, what about selling your products like groceries, get creative – break the mould. Get yourself out of your paradigm of "what you do" and realize that, as long as it's legal, moral, and ethical, if a given idea makes money, then pursue it. Trait #3: Be Specific Let’s not get into how people are generally lazy communicators – suffice to say that 99% of what’s said in marketing and advertising is hyperbole, fluff, non-specific, non-compelling, boring, and flat. Words like best quality, best service, largest selection, #1 and lowest price abound – do you think this stuff really works? People expect you to claim you’re great – no one spends money to promote they’re bad at anything! Quantify your claims, be specific. Instead of saying “largest selection of parts”, say “We carry 1,478 types of part in stock, in 10 different sizes, and in 3 different finishes.” Trait #4: Look At Things From Your Customer's Perspective If you’ve ever bought anything that you knew nothing about, you ought to relate to this. Put yourself in your customers shoes – find out what they feel about the whole buying process (remember marketing = influencing) and create an environment that sympathetically addresses their issues. Trait #5 Adapt And Innovate Even if you’re the best deal in town today – you might not be tomorrow. After all, the only thing a competing business needs to do is watch you, copy you, and then improve on your offers and service. Constant innovation is required, adapt or perish as they saying goes. Innovation is a process not a destination. The object is to create a business that offers your customer a deal so perfect that they’d be a fool to shop anywhere else. Trait #6 Systemize Everything You Can Systemization is the process of mak Management Barriers in Company Growth and Transitions ay attention to the way the world tries to ‘sell you’. Watch for the really good sales pitches, and pay even closer attention to the really bad ones. Pickup magazines – read the ads, watch TV – surf the commercials, join mailing lists and hoard ‘junk mail’, and when you get telemarketing calls – listen to them carefully because all this stuff is pure gold. Notice billboards, look at pictures (paying special attention to your industry sector) and just for fun, read the Yellow Pages to what’s going on in your area.Are you a manager in a company that is ready to improve growth in all ranks, you may even have a system in place, but something is going haywire with this growth phase? Could it be your management style is the root cause? Then follow this coach advice.In his book, The Next Level, James Wood discusses “five growth barriers that threaten companies during the Transition stage (1) The Treadmill Mentality, (2) Management by Insanity, (3) Rear-view Mirror Management, (4) Management by ESP, and (5) Midas T If you pay attention to what catches your attention, what ads you keep seeing, what radio commercials you keep hearing, you’ll start to find things you can incorporate into your own business model. Trait #2: Cross-Pollinate Business Ideas Nothing about flowers here – this is powerful marketing 1-0-1. Cross-pollination is all about taking a proven idea from one industry and ‘borrowing’ it for yours. Essentially you need to get a little creative with ideas and throw things together that might not normally seem to make sense. Borrow ideas from everywhere. See if you can sell your products and services the same way cell phones are sold, what about selling your products like groceries, get creative – break the mould. Get yourself out of your paradigm of "what you do" and realize that, as long as it's legal, moral, and ethical, if a given idea makes money, then pursue it. Trait #3: Be Specific Let’s not get into how people are generally lazy communicators – suffice to say that 99% of what’s said in marketing and advertising is hyperbole, fluff, non-specific, non-compelling, boring, and flat. Words like best quality, best service, largest selection, #1 and lowest price abound – do you think this stuff really works? People expect you to claim you’re great – no one spends money to promote they’re bad at anything! Quantify your claims, be specific. Instead of saying “largest selection of parts”, say “We carry 1,478 types of part in stock, in 10 different sizes, and in 3 different finishes.” Trait #4: Look At Things From Your Customer's Perspective If you’ve ever bought anything that you knew nothing about, you ought to relate to this. Put yourself in your customers shoes – find out what they feel about the whole buying process (remember marketing = influencing) and create an environment that sympathetically addresses their issues. Trait #5 Adapt And Innovate Even if you’re the best deal in town today – you might not be tomorrow. After all, the only thing a competing business needs to do is watch you, copy you, and then improve on your offers and service. Constant innovation is required, adapt or perish as they saying goes. Innovation is a process not a destination. The object is to create a business that offers your customer a deal so perfect that they’d be a fool to shop anywhere else. Trait #6 Systemize Everything You Can Systemization is the process of ma Where are You Coming From? - A Question to Assess Your Dominant Intention e Business IdeasWhen you are starting off on any kind of business, a question that you should ask yourself is “Where am I coming from?” This question is meant to get at the foundation of your business.The question may initially seem confusing, but what it is actually asking is “What is your purpose for creating or carrying out this business? What is your intention?”What you should realize is that every answer will provide a lens or a view-point of how you are working. If your answer is “I created this busin Nothing about flowers here – this is powerful marketing 1-0-1. Cross-pollination is all about taking a proven idea from one industry and ‘borrowing’ it for yours. Essentially you need to get a little creative with ideas and throw things together that might not normally seem to make sense. Borrow ideas from everywhere. See if you can sell your products and services the same way cell phones are sold, what about selling your products like groceries, get creative – break the mould. Get yourself out of your paradigm of "what you do" and realize that, as long as it's legal, moral, and ethical, if a given idea makes money, then pursue it. Trait #3: Be Specific Let’s not get into how people are generally lazy communicators – suffice to say that 99% of what’s said in marketing and advertising is hyperbole, fluff, non-specific, non-compelling, boring, and flat. Words like best quality, best service, largest selection, #1 and lowest price abound – do you think this stuff really works? People expect you to claim you’re great – no one spends money to promote they’re bad at anything! Quantify your claims, be specific. Instead of saying “largest selection of parts”, say “We carry 1,478 types of part in stock, in 10 different sizes, and in 3 different finishes.” Trait #4: Look At Things From Your Customer's Perspective If you’ve ever bought anything that you knew nothing about, you ought to relate to this. Put yourself in your customers shoes – find out what they feel about the whole buying process (remember marketing = influencing) and create an environment that sympathetically addresses their issues. Trait #5 Adapt And Innovate Even if you’re the best deal in town today – you might not be tomorrow. After all, the only thing a competing business needs to do is watch you, copy you, and then improve on your offers and service. Constant innovation is required, adapt or perish as they saying goes. Innovation is a process not a destination. The object is to create a business that offers your customer a deal so perfect that they’d be a fool to shop anywhere else. Trait #6 Systemize Everything You Can Systemization is the process of ma Paper Gowns Will Be Provided ly lazy communicators – suffice to say that 99% of what’s said in marketing and advertising is hyperbole, fluff, non-specific, non-compelling, boring, and flat. Words like best quality, best service, largest selection, #1 and lowest price abound – do you think this stuff really works?Time and time again I meet business owners with a wicked sense of humor, sarcastic wit and language that could make even a trucker blush. Yet, the small business community is riddled with boring, uncreative, overly politically correct marketing collateral that lacks personality or worse fails to speak to a target market.How could such a contrast exist in a hot bed of creative, forward thinking individuals who have broken free from the shackles of the corporate world to pursue the very essence of the A People expect you to claim you’re great – no one spends money to promote they’re bad at anything! Quantify your claims, be specific. Instead of saying “largest selection of parts”, say “We carry 1,478 types of part in stock, in 10 different sizes, and in 3 different finishes.” Trait #4: Look At Things From Your Customer's Perspective If you’ve ever bought anything that you knew nothing about, you ought to relate to this. Put yourself in your customers shoes – find out what they feel about the whole buying process (remember marketing = influencing) and create an environment that sympathetically addresses their issues. Trait #5 Adapt And Innovate Even if you’re the best deal in town today – you might not be tomorrow. After all, the only thing a competing business needs to do is watch you, copy you, and then improve on your offers and service. Constant innovation is required, adapt or perish as they saying goes. Innovation is a process not a destination. The object is to create a business that offers your customer a deal so perfect that they’d be a fool to shop anywhere else. Trait #6 Systemize Everything You Can Systemization is the process of ma Getting The Greatest Creative From Your Advertising Agency customers shoes – find out what they feel about the whole buying process (remember marketing = influencing) and create an environment that sympathetically addresses their issues.After working at 10 different advertising agencies, I was fortunate to work with many smart clients. Along the way, I learned how they got the best out of their creatives. And here is what I’ve found.1. Great clients wanted the best creatives working on their account. Not just any creative team.2. Those clients gave a brief document that was simple and to the point. It had a single message that creatives were to follow to come up with concept ideas. The clients were even open minded if an Trait #5 Adapt And Innovate Even if you’re the best deal in town today – you might not be tomorrow. After all, the only thing a competing business needs to do is watch you, copy you, and then improve on your offers and service. Constant innovation is required, adapt or perish as they saying goes. Innovation is a process not a destination. The object is to create a business that offers your customer a deal so perfect that they’d be a fool to shop anywhere else. Trait #6 Systemize Everything You Can Systemization is the process of making decisions about your marketing in advance so that you are always doing what needs to be done. Instead of trying to create everything as you go, or worse, flying by the seat of your pants and wondering what to do next. Plan, excute, adjust, repeat. And that’s it. Six traits that will get you moving in the right direction.
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