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3 BIGGEST MARKETING MISTAKES EVERY BUSINESS
MANAGER MAKES Who hasn’t let a typo slip by or misspelled the CEO’s name or printed the wrong phone number somewhere? Those marketing mistakes don’t warrant an article. In fact, just one word of how-to-fix-it advice is sufficient: proofread! Here are a few more important marketing mistakes that just about every business manager out there makes, along with a recommended fix that will help you attract more business and get better results from your marketing, regardless of how big or small your marketing budget is. Mistake #1: We think that marketing is something
we ‘do’. The real fix is to expand your definition of marketing. Instead of thinking of it as something you ‘do’, think of marketing as anything that helps or hinders the sale or use of your product or service. This includes: your location, the attitudes of the person who answers the phone, your name, pricing, policies, proposals, personality and more. Before you write a promotional word, do a ‘help or hinder’ once-over. Make a list of what’s helping you attract business and what’s getting in the way. Figure out what obstacles you can quickly fix or remove? What ‘helps’ can you enhance or spotlight? Until the help-or-hinder homework is done, working on promotion is premature. Mistake #2: We breathe too much of our own exhaust. If your marketing is going to get any response at all, the first thing it must do is connect to something prospects care about. Connect before you convince. Try this four-step exercise: 1. Describe
your products and services. Get the exhaust fumes out. For example: Joy dishwashing liquid (description) has real lemon (attribute) that cuts grease and leaves dishes shinier (benefit). What a nice reflection on you! (Connects to what a mother cares about.) Connect to what people want. Not to what you do. Mistake #3: We all look alike. Consider identical twins. What’s the first thing you do when you meet a pair? You try to find a little something to tell them apart. The same is true for your business. Your prospects are looking for a point of difference (just about anything) they can use to set you apart from your competition. To find your points of difference, start with your points of contact, or ‘touch points’ in your company. Make a list. Business card, fax cover sheet, invoice, phone greeting, front door, home page, etc. Then look at what the competition does and ask yourself how you can do it differently. Just a little bit will make a big difference, because your prospects are looking for them. For now, try the Help or Hinder, Connect Before You Convince and Find Your Points of Difference tools to make your marketing more meaningful and effective. Be wary, too, of unrealistic expectations, faulty research, deadly bullet points and lack of follow through - four other common marketing mistakes. Terri Langhans is the author of the book: “The
7 Marketing Mistakes Every Business Makes and (How To Fix Them)”. |
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