|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
As a life-long dancer, I know a bit about the importance of good preparation before performance. Before a dancer is ready for the spotlight, she has to master the basics including alignment, strength, flexibility, balance, choreography, and artistry.
The same is true for successful marketing. When you send a brochure, run an ad, promote a website, give a talk, or just tell someone what you do, you're on stage. But if you've not mastered the basics, you will not engage your audience and you risk serious injury to yourself and to your firm.
Before the Curtain Rises
Well before any performance, dancers invest time building a solid foundation. It's this foundation ? not the costumes, lighting or even music ? that enables them to give a persuasive, moving performance that connects with their audience.
With effective marketing, the same sequence applies. Before the curtain rises on your attempts to attract clients, make sure you've mastered the basics first:
Get aligned. Dancers spend years learning how to align their body properly for balance and how to keep "knees over toes" to prevent injury. What have you done to align with your customer's worldview? Do you really understand what keeps your clients up at night?what their real problems are, which may or may not have anything to do with what you currently offer? What are you doing to stay aligned? Do you say no to opportunities that aren't within your niche? Do you still have a "Plan B" in case your current direction doesn't pay off or have you fully committed to finding a good niche and making it work? How aligned are your services and pricing with what really sells in today's market?
Build strength. Accomplished dancers may look graceful and light on their feet, but the illusion is only possible because of tremendous strength and power from within. How do you demonstrate your firm's strength? By showing the market your authority to do good work through well-written case studies, client testimonials, bios, media appearances, and measurable results.
Be flexible. Without flexibility, dancers cannot move fully or prevent injury. The same can the same be said of your approach to serving your clients. Do you only offer one way to address a client's needs (i.e., high-priced consulting)? If so, you'll miss opportunities. Package what you do in several ways, at various price points.
Go slow to go fast. Dancers aren't born being able to execute complicated choreography. Ballet dancers train for years before going "en pointe" (into toe shoes). It may not take you years, but an effective, customer-focused marketing strategy takes time to develop and launch. This doesn't mean you avoid revenue-producing work in the meantime, it just means you take the time to work "under the radar" to craft the right approach that accelerates your effectiveness once you launch it.
Artistry. Every dancer interprets the music and story in her own unique way. This artistry is what differentiates truly outstanding performers and makes for a memorable audience experience. What have you done to identify and communicate your unique competitive advantage? What makes you stand out from others offering the same services? Why should customers buy from you when they have a number of choices? What about your offer, price, guarantee or standard sets you apart and how do you demonstrate that?
Expert instruction. In any sport or art form, exceptional performers receive expert instruction, feedback, and coaching. Dancers rely regularly on classes, instructors, mirrors, feedback from partners, video, and critics' reviews to continuously improve and refine their performance. What are you doing to refine yours?
Rehearsal. Only after getting aligned, building strength, developing flexibility, learning choreography, and expressing artistry is a dancer ready to rehearse for an actual performance. When you're ready to take your strategy to market, make sure you've tested it first. This means trying out your positioning statement informally at networking events, writing an article or two and getting feedback, conducting a small amount of telephone research with people in your target market, and so on.
Before you spend the money to develop a new logo, print new business stationary, design new brochures, revise your website, or go on a sales call test and rehearse your message. When you start getting a "that's for me!" response from your audience, you're ready for the spotlight.
On Stage & In the Spotlight
Once you're on stage, your hard work and preparation pay off. However the marketing process continues:
Lights, camera, action! Being in the spotlight means it's time to shine. The dancer's hard work pays off, enhanced by music, lighting, sets, costumes and makeup. The same is true of how you present your message to the market. Your website, brochures, talks, published articles, how you introduce yourself when networking, and the sales process are simply vehicles for communicating the fundamentals you've put in place before the curtain rises. If you start with them, without the basics outlined above, you risk looking foolish and off the mark when it comes to connecting with your audience.
Connect with your audience. Being on stage doesn't guarantee that a dancer will engage the audience. You've gotta work it! At a recent repertory performance of amateur dancers at Joy of Motion, a local dance school, the audience enthusiastically hooted and hollered as the Street Jam dancers fully engaged them with their energy, funk, attitude, and huge smiles of joy. The audience fed off that energy and, in turn, motivated the dancers to give their best. What are you doing to build and sustain a relationship with your clients? Are you pushing a stale portfolio of products and services or are you listening to what your clients want and responding in kind?
Exceptional performance. Long-term success at the box office depends on an exceptional performance time after time. So once you've closed the deal, what are you doing to ensure exceptional performance for your clients? Your most powerful marketing strategy is turning in a great performance time after time.
Remember your supporting cast & crew. Nobody tolerates a prima ballerina that alienates those around her for long, no matter how talented she is. Likewise, if you don't attend to relationships with employees, peers, supervisors, vendors, and allied professionals, you'll find yourself wondering why everyone around you is so "difficult to work with." What are you doing to nurture relationships and alignment within and beyond your firm to ensure your strategy to attract more clients moves forward?
In the end, if you give your audience a good value, at a fair price, based on solid preparation and a stellar performance, you'll garner good reviews, and have a long, fruitful run at the box office. Break a leg!
(c) 2004 TurningPointe Marketing, Inc. All rights reserved.
Marketing educator, Kelly O'Brien, is creator of the "Create a
TurningPointe!" Marketing Bootcamp. To learn more about this step-by-step
program, and to sign up for FREE how-to articles and 20-page marketing
guide, visit http://www.turningpointemarketing.com
Wind Chimes and more... Trade show rentals allow you more flexibility and the opportunity... Read More CD Business cards allows any type of business that dynamic... Read More I often talk with business owners who tell me how... Read More Why would you use an email or online survey when... Read More Everything you do - or don't do sends a message... Read More There seems to be a never ending argument among marketing... Read More Have you ever studied your best donors and wished you... Read More What do you do if your business, product or service... Read More HOW YOUR LIST AFFECTS POSTAGE COSTS AND WHAT YOU CAN... Read More I often wonder how people without a plan know where... Read More Starting and managing a successful small business takes time, energy,... Read More Marketing public relations gives you cost effective ways to reach... Read More As the owner of a creative services boutique - I... Read More When used correctly, testimonials can boost your response dramatically. They... Read More Without a doubt, if you asked me, Shane if there... Read More Marketing results should be measured in only one way ?... Read More Printed material is just as important today as it was... Read More As we study the demographic regional variations for small service... Read More A powerful consumer market with annual spending power exceeding $350... Read More Your customers don't know what they want. And to assume... Read More Triple your response from expos by avoiding the top ten... Read More You may be engaged in a marketing activities that are... Read More Our bodies work like our small businesses. They work best... Read More Celebrities are the tastemakers that drive brand awareness and usage.... Read More Do you have an elevator speech? Does it get people's... Read More
Windchimes
for great gifts!
Tips for Trade Show Rentals
Getting Your Marketing Message Across with CD Business Cards
How To Successfully Launch A New Business Activity
Successful Surveys: 10 Tips for Better Results
You Cannot - Not Market
What IS the Difference Between Marketing and Sales?
Where to Look for New Donors for Your Fundraising Letter Appeals
Marketing A Misunderstood or Scary Product or Service
How Your List Affects Postage Costs
Tracking Your Way to the Top!
Take My Commitment (to Your Biz) Quiz!
How to Run a Successful News Release Program
Preventive Marketing Offers Small-Mid Sized Business Owners An Ideal Way To Maximize Their Results
Boost Your Business With Testimonials
How To Start With Absolutely Nothing And Create Wealth online in 30 days or less.
Principles of Marketing 101
One-Two-Three Punch Marketing
Data Map Charting for Mobile Businesses
Marketing to Hispanics/Latinos
What Your Customers Want
Top Ten Blunders Exhibitors Make in Expos/Tradeshows
Make Your Marketing Solve a Problem
Small Business Marketing; Abstract Philosophical Discussion
Top 7 Ways to Get Your Products in the Hands of Celebrities
Your Elevator Speech ? Have You Updated Yours Recently?
Whether you go to a Chamber of Commerce event, a... Read More
Things have to change. Cross selling is not going to... Read More
Most marketers believe that anything is achievable if you are... Read More
Do you know what the majority of people sell? I... Read More
Our bodies work like our small businesses. They work best... Read More
More And MoreIt was notable that when I started my... Read More
Marketing A Resume BusinessWhen starting a resume business, your marketing... Read More
Imagine having at your disposal a means to immediately inform... Read More
It is often difficult to manage to do marketing tasks... Read More
What's black and white and read all over? A newsletter... Read More
I knew this one would get your attention. How can... Read More
As a professional service provider, you're paid for what you... Read More
The single biggest, non-renewable asset you have is your time.... Read More
With the increase in number of tradeshows being held across... Read More
Special Requirements for Reprint: we ask only that... Read More
Simply put the marketing people and the sales people depend... Read More
In business, having competitors goes with the territory. There's almost... Read More
I don't mean you, I mean the YOU that is... Read More
The internet of course brings a huge arena of marketing... Read More
With the advent of spring, trade shows begin to blossom.... Read More
Step 1: Where Am I Now? Before you decide where... Read More
The customer is king/queen. We have all heard this mantra.... Read More
Some years ago, a prominent Australian hi-tech company... Read More
Over the past 30 years, I've read so much on... Read More
When marketing your practice, as well as designing yourbrochure, web... Read More
Marketing |