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Write You - The Three Ps Of Successful Marketing
It's Your Move: The First Step to Accountability absolutely critical to successful marketing? Not necessarily. If you’re an IT support service, your technical knowledge, track record and response time are more important than style. But then again, aptitude and talent can be defined, albeit loosely, as panache. And those are skills that an IT firm should have.Every place I go, if I’m in an organization long enough, I’ll hear people lament about the lack of accountability. Specifically, I hear things like: “They just don’t seem to care enough, I guess.” “Those action items never get done – I don’t know why we even identify them.” “I have trouble getting people to be committed to achieving the things they are responsible for.” “Everyone wants to blame someone else – it For most businesses, when I refer to panache, I mean that “extra something”. An edge. It might not even be anything you can define. Call it flair or spirit -- charisma or energy. It’s what makes people want to listen to what you have to say. Check Your Communication Skills If I had to come up with the three most important areas of marketing, they’d probably be the three PS:
positioning, presentation and panache.Use this check list to assess your communication skills.Focus* Do you pay complete attention to others when they are speaking? (A wandering focus discourages open communication.)* Do you manage your thoughts during a conversation, focusing them on understanding what the other person is saying? (Effective listening requires more concentration than any other form of communication. If you are Yes, I love alliteration, but that’s not the reason why. Actually, it’s what I’ve learned over years of working with small to mid-sized businesses in a variety of different industries. When companies are stumbling over their marketing, one of the three PS is generally at fault. Let’s look at how this works. Positioning is probably the most critical area of a company’s marketing. It’s your identity. It addresses who you are. What makes your product or service unique. How you differ from the competition. What clients can expect when they work with you. If you can’t answer the above, odds are your marketing can’t be working very well. You need to be able to tell prospects and customers just what your firm can do for them. For example, if you claim to be experts in time management, you should be estimate how much time a company can expect to save if they hire your firm. By translating the time into hourly wages, a company can see that working with you will help them save “x” amount of dollars per year. It’s pretty simple and a lot more effective than just saying “we can save your company a lot of wasted time”. Presentation is the second most important aspect of marketing your business. It’s the face of your company. From the receptionist in your office to the sales and marketing team and right up to the CEO. Every person in your firm represents who you are. So if the person who answers the phone does so in a dull monotone, that sets the first impression of your company – not a good one. On the other hand, a bright and friendly greeting from a person happy to help you immediately presents a positive impression. Of course, presentation isn't limited to employees. It’s reflected in your business cards and marketing material, on your website, in the professionalism of sales calls and networking, in each and every meeting and every follow-up. If you want potential clients to view your firm as a possible vendor, make sure that everything and everyone related to your company presents well. And the final “p” -- panache. Is this absolutely critical to successful marketing? Not necessarily. If you’re an IT support service, your technical knowledge, track record and response time are more important than style. But then again, aptitude and talent can be defined, albeit loosely, as panache. And those are skills that an IT firm should have. For most businesses, when I refer to panache, I mean that “extra something”. An edge. It might not even be anything you can define. Call it flair or spirit -- charisma or energy. It’s what makes people want to listen to what you have to say. O How to Get the Cash to Start a Restaurant Business . It addresses who you are. What makes your product or service unique. How you differ from the competition. What clients can expect when they work with you. If you can’t answer the above, odds are your marketing can’t be working very well.Lots of people dream of starting their own restaurant, but very few people can do it with just the cash and assets they personally have available. A restaurant is not the kind of business you can start on a shoestring, or easily bootstrap you way into a bigger operation. As a result, the financing of a restaurant startup is often the most challenging aspect of getting started for any entrepreneur looking to get into You need to be able to tell prospects and customers just what your firm can do for them. For example, if you claim to be experts in time management, you should be estimate how much time a company can expect to save if they hire your firm. By translating the time into hourly wages, a company can see that working with you will help them save “x” amount of dollars per year. It’s pretty simple and a lot more effective than just saying “we can save your company a lot of wasted time”. Presentation is the second most important aspect of marketing your business. It’s the face of your company. From the receptionist in your office to the sales and marketing team and right up to the CEO. Every person in your firm represents who you are. So if the person who answers the phone does so in a dull monotone, that sets the first impression of your company – not a good one. On the other hand, a bright and friendly greeting from a person happy to help you immediately presents a positive impression. Of course, presentation isn't limited to employees. It’s reflected in your business cards and marketing material, on your website, in the professionalism of sales calls and networking, in each and every meeting and every follow-up. If you want potential clients to view your firm as a possible vendor, make sure that everything and everyone related to your company presents well. And the final “p” -- panache. Is this absolutely critical to successful marketing? Not necessarily. If you’re an IT support service, your technical knowledge, track record and response time are more important than style. But then again, aptitude and talent can be defined, albeit loosely, as panache. And those are skills that an IT firm should have. For most businesses, when I refer to panache, I mean that “extra something”. An edge. It might not even be anything you can define. Call it flair or spirit -- charisma or energy. It’s what makes people want to listen to what you have to say. ISO 9001 - 2000 -- Implement Your Quality Management System With Minimum Headaches ith you will help them save “x” amount of dollars per year. It’s pretty simple and a lot more effective than just saying “we can save your company a lot of wasted time”.If you have been unlucky enough to have been saddled with the onerous task of achieving ISO 9001:2000 compliance for your company, this article may prove to be your big break. At the very least it will put you on a minimum fuss path to ISO 9001 certification. It may very well also rescue your career, because--as you already know--as a great deal is riding on your success.ISO, of course, stands fo Presentation is the second most important aspect of marketing your business. It’s the face of your company. From the receptionist in your office to the sales and marketing team and right up to the CEO. Every person in your firm represents who you are. So if the person who answers the phone does so in a dull monotone, that sets the first impression of your company – not a good one. On the other hand, a bright and friendly greeting from a person happy to help you immediately presents a positive impression. Of course, presentation isn't limited to employees. It’s reflected in your business cards and marketing material, on your website, in the professionalism of sales calls and networking, in each and every meeting and every follow-up. If you want potential clients to view your firm as a possible vendor, make sure that everything and everyone related to your company presents well. And the final “p” -- panache. Is this absolutely critical to successful marketing? Not necessarily. If you’re an IT support service, your technical knowledge, track record and response time are more important than style. But then again, aptitude and talent can be defined, albeit loosely, as panache. And those are skills that an IT firm should have. For most businesses, when I refer to panache, I mean that “extra something”. An edge. It might not even be anything you can define. Call it flair or spirit -- charisma or energy. It’s what makes people want to listen to what you have to say. Small Business Marketing - Should You Toot Your Own Horn? On the other hand, a bright and friendly greeting from a person happy to help you immediately presents a positive impression.Someone recently asked me, "How do you learn to feel comfortable tooting your own horn to promote your business?"Well, first let me tell you that I too used to suffer from this business-stifling problem (even though at the time I had a job - it STILL had a great big negative impact on me). You can read the article I wrote about it on my website.You see, I figured (like so many people do) if I did a grea Of course, presentation isn't limited to employees. It’s reflected in your business cards and marketing material, on your website, in the professionalism of sales calls and networking, in each and every meeting and every follow-up. If you want potential clients to view your firm as a possible vendor, make sure that everything and everyone related to your company presents well. And the final “p” -- panache. Is this absolutely critical to successful marketing? Not necessarily. If you’re an IT support service, your technical knowledge, track record and response time are more important than style. But then again, aptitude and talent can be defined, albeit loosely, as panache. And those are skills that an IT firm should have. For most businesses, when I refer to panache, I mean that “extra something”. An edge. It might not even be anything you can define. Call it flair or spirit -- charisma or energy. It’s what makes people want to listen to what you have to say. Drop Shipping: The Quickest Way to Open Your Online Store absolutely critical to successful marketing? Not necessarily. If you’re an IT support service, your technical knowledge, track record and response time are more important than style. But then again, aptitude and talent can be defined, albeit loosely, as panache. And those are skills that an IT firm should have.Drop shipping is an industry that is proving to be considerably successful for businesspersons. For those who do not know what drop shipping is, it is a term used in business that refers to a condition where the seller assigns a retail price for an item, then collects the payment and sends the wholesale cost to the drop shipper, who in turn ships the item directly from the warehouse. The drop shipper takes care of ev For most businesses, when I refer to panache, I mean that “extra something”. An edge. It might not even be anything you can define. Call it flair or spirit -- charisma or energy. It’s what makes people want to listen to what you have to say. Or see what you have to sell. For a retailer, it could be fabulous taste and unique products, invitingly displayed. Or a merchandising flair that creates drop dead gorgeous windows where people just have to stop and look. Throw in a warm and friendly sales staff and you’ve got the elements for a successful retail shopping experience. Savvy marketers want people to stop, look, listen….and buy. Those with the right positioning, professional presentation and a bit of panache have a much better chance of succeeding than those that don’t.
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