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DownloadNeed a marketing strategy that can get results fast? Here is a practical and uncomplicated 1-page marketing plan that you can complete today and increase your return on investment. The 1-Page Marketing Plan provides a framework that clearly defines your marketing strategy and how to get, keep, and realize value from customers. Discover why you need to pursue an even-tighter market niche, how to get inside prospects' heads, and why you should raise prices. Learn how to be perceived as a welcomed guest rather than a marketing pest. Finally, create your tribe of loyal customers and receive successful referrals.
Questions and answers
This summary will help you create a simple marketing strategy for any small or medium-sized business. Learn the three main phases of marketing and why you shouldn't imitate large companies using brand awareness tactics. Identify your target market, develop the message you'll use in ads and offers, and select your advertising medium. Then, understand the best way to convert leads into paying customers, including why snail mail can be a good approach. Finally, consider tactics to keep past customers close at hand to maximize the lifetime value of these relationships and get endless referrals.
Questions and answers
There are three major phases in marketing: Before, During, and After. "Before" consists of all the activities to make your potential customers aware of your offering. "During" is what happens once someone makes contact with your business and becomes interested in buying. "After" is the period post-purchase, but also when the work to realize a customer's full lifetime value is far from being over. This summary will outline the main activities at each stage and pull out the best tips and tricks for a small business owner or marketer. Here's the one-page plan this summary will help you complete:
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The first thing to know about marketing for smaller businesses is that you will fail if you try to imitate major brands that use awareness marketing. Large companies have massive marketing budgets that allow them to saturate the market with brand awareness efforts. Smaller businesses typically don't have the monetary resource for that, nor will it be successful. It is therefore more effective to resort direct response marketing. Here are eight attributes of direct response marketing that small or medium companies should strive for when designing a marketing strategy:
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Identify your market
One of the biggest mistakes new businesses make is trying to be everything to everyone. They are strapped for cash and wouldn't think of turning down a customer, regardless of whether or not that customer is a good fit. The business doesn't want to exclude anyone in marketing materials, so the messages become so broad that they fall flat for everyone. Avoid this common mistake and go much narrower than you might expect. For example, rather than broadly targeting Millenials in the Midwest, go after young female professionals earning more than $80,000 who live in Chicago and Columbus.
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You'll see that targeting a narrow niche market allows you to tailor your message and really resonate with prospects. It also allows you to charge much higher prices. Think of a medical specialist. They are sought after, respected, and well-compensated. So too can you become a specialist in your field by positioning yourself as such, assuming you have the necessary knowledge and experience. Small businesses go wrong when they are already specialists but position themselves as generalists because they fear missing out on customers who don't fall within that narrow band.
The best way to identify your target market is to use the "PVP" framework – "Personal Fulfillment, Value to the Marketplace, and Profitability." Ask yourself which kinds of customers you truly enjoy working with. Who are the most pleasant, the most satisfied with what you offer them, and present the types of problems you most enjoy solving with your business? Which types of customers greatly value what you offer and have the willingness and ability to pay? And lastly, which customers generate the highest profits for you because of related costs associated with working with them? Thinking about each market segment along these dimensions can help you determine what's the best for your business.
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Identify your message
Never try to sell directly from an advertisement. Instead, design your ads to generate leads by capturing contact information or sharing helpful information. This is because only 3% of people are highly motivated and ready to make an immediate purchase. Still, another 37% are either open to or interested in making a purchase now or in the future. Making a hard sell in your ad can turn away those who may just be looking for more information and not yet ready to buy. It is therefore more important to make your message a lead-generating tool rather than an aggressive offer or sales proposition.
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In writing the actual words used in your marketing materials, position your product or service as simple yet remarkable. Confused and bored customers will walk away or keep scrolling. Even if your industry is somewhat commoditized, you can use words and descriptions to stand out. ASOS, a clothing mass retailer, does this in the way it describes the care instructions for its clothing. Instead of including the same old boring instructions in online product descriptions, it uses witty language like "Just here for the care instructions? We thought so. Check the label before washing." or "Avoid post-wash regrets. Clothes have needs, too. Always check the label." Warby Parker also takes a similar approach with the language on the boxes customers receive as part of a home try-on. They say things like "Good things await you" and "Get Excited". Most markets are already saturated, and true innovation is hard to find. Making these small changes to make your marketing remarkable can make a major difference in a crowded market. And these changes are easy to make if you allow an authentic, personality-infused voice into your copy.
The third aspect to keep in mind when crafting your message is the emotion of your prospect. Purchasing is done with emotions and justified with logic after the fact. What does your target market most desire or fear, and how does your product or service fit into that inner dialogue? One of the strongest emotions is fear, especially fear of loss. You can capitalize on your prospects' "FOMO" to motivate them to take your offer. For example, a coffee shop should say, "Don't spend your life drinking crappy coffee and miss out on life's everyday luxuries" instead of displaying a laundry list of the reasons why their coffee is superior. While leveraging this emotion may be considered unethical by some, if your product or service truly delivers value to the customer, guiding them towards a purchase could be doing them a great service.
Identify your medium
Now that you've identified your target market and the kinds of messages you plan to share with them, you need to select the best way to reach them. There are a few solid reasons why you should think twice about putting all your efforts into social media.
The real-life comparative of social media is mingling at a party. Just as you wouldn't go into sales mode to your family or friends at a social event, you should also hesitate before blasting your social media networks with your marketing efforts. This is why so many people are put off by self-promotions from their "friends" on social media.
Questions and answers
In the author's words: "Overt selling and constant pitching of offers are generally considered poor behavior on social networks and can result in repelling people from your business rather than attracting them to it."
Focus on building up media that you can completely own and control, and that allows you to capture contact information from leads and then target those who have expressed interest. Websites and email marketing is a great approach to this. The six rules to keep in mind when developing your email marketing approach are the following:
If you've implemented the steps in the first section, you should be ready to start capturing the contact information for your leads. What's the best way to do this? Become a marketing farmer. The first and obvious step for this is using a Customer Relationship Management (CRM) system. Working from this system means you're cultivating seeds that have been planted rather than hunting for new customers that may or may not be easy prey.
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How do you find people who might be interested? Some tactics include offering a free resource, an in-person event where sign-up is required, or a discount code for visitors to your website. Once you have their information, what are the cultivation tactics? Apart from keeping in regular contact and providing valuable information such as through a blog related to your product or service or other informational email series, you can use one tactic that many overlook…
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Consider the appeal of the "lumpy mail and the shock and awe package". Traditional mail is overlooked today because of the ease of email. As a result, there can be advantages in physical mail. But don't just send any old flyer. By taking the time to send leads interesting small items that relate to your business, you'll be memorable and stay on top of their mind.
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Going the final mile from nurturing to converting leads into paying customers is a matter of gaining trust and easing their fear of risk. In addition to providing valuable information and thought leadership in your field, some of the simplest and highest-impact things you can do to highlight the trustworthiness of your company include providing a real phone number and physical address, including a privacy policy, and taking the time to implement quality website design.
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Some tactics to ease customers' fear of risk with purchase is by providing an "outrageous guarantee," such as offering a try-before-you-buy. Outrageous guarantees go beyond just saying satisfaction guaranteed. An outrageous guarantee goes to great lengths to describe exactly how a customer should feel after purchasing and how they can expect their lives to improve.
People's fear in making the wrong decision is also reflected by a well-known study at Columbia. When people were offered 24 options of gourmet jams at a farmer's market, only 3% of customers who stopped by the jam stand made a purchase. When only six flavor options were offered, a whopping 30% of stand visitors made a purchase. Limiting your options can therefore also be an effective conversion tactic.
Questions and answers
Much effort goes into reaching prospects and converting leads into customers, but the job is far from finished there. You must also create a buying experience for your customers that far surpasses that of your competitors to maximize their lifetime purchases and ensure they sing your praises to their networks. Why is this so important? Studies indicate that previous buyers are 21 times more likely to buy from you than a competitor. Once you convert a customer for the first time, the remaining sales become easier wins.
Questions and answers
Creating a world-class experience can look like much more than just delivering exceptional service and being prompt and courteous in resolving customer issues. Much in the same way that businesses can stand out by imbuing authenticity in their ad copy, so too can they easily improve their customers' experiences by using personality. Think of this stage of marketing much as you would a relationship. As a business, you should be "fun and easy" to work with. You should treat customers as more than a source of short-term cash, and instead stay in touch with them to nurture a long-lasting relationship. Never let customers down and always keep your word. These small mindset shifts will help both you and your customers see beyond a monetary transaction and towards a lifetime of shared value. As you provide value over time to these customers, some specific ways to increase it include raising prices with inflation to maintain your perceived value, capitalizing on earned trust through upselling related offerings, and making it easy for customers to come back by offering reminders, subscriptions, or discounts that expire.
The value you provide to customers can come back to you in the form of referrals. But don't just sit and wait for these to come to you. There a few things you can do to maximize these. First, simply ask. Second, be specific. What types of people are most likely to need your offering? What stage of life are they in? What decisions are they making or issues are they dealing with? Ask customers if they know those types of people who may need your product or service. Then, provide value right away. Offer to send your customers some free resource materials they could pass along. That way, you're not just reaching out cold. This can ultimately serve everyone's needs and create a win-win situation.
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