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5 Ways to Guarantee Your Marketing Works
For readers looking for existing charts and score keeping check out CJ Hayden's book "Get Clients Now." She provides you the tools you need to create a bare bones marketing plan around a score card and point tallying.
I've been in that slump lately and I think this will work well to get me motivated again.
I was facing this dilemma just yesterday. Our company is always working on projects we never finish because we always trade them for the new flavor.
So yesterday I was finding a way of keeping it simple, and I wrote down everything that we left on hold and never finished. I separated the tasks into 2 groups of importance (need to do now, need to do later) and was unsure of what to do.
At first, I placed all the unfinished tasks into the 7 stages of referral, so I could see where they would fit and what I had to priorize (I found out we are very weak in the "Know" section, which explains a lot). But it still wasn't enough for me to "sell" the priorities to my bosses.
The scorecard is simply perfect. Just what I needed to kill the "everything's priority" mindset.
Sorry about the long post, but I had to thank you for yet another insight.
On one page I create a table listing all my marketing tools in left column. For example, having a Blog would be one marketing tool and having a having a newsletter might be another. Then in the next column I rank each based on the amount of effort needed to make it happen: low, medium, high. In the next column I rank them on cost using the same scale of low, medium, high. Then finally, I rank them on how soon they show results simply based on short, medium, and long-term.
Now on one page I can see for each quarter, how to prioritize my marketing efforts. Using the Blog example, it might have high effort (daily), low cost (one more page on my web site), but shows results in the medium term. This one-page score card is simple, and shows what I should be doing immediately, in the medium-term, and in the long-term.
There are a lot of great marketing tools available to small businesses as you talk about in your Blog, but not all of them have the same impact for your business as another business. This system helps me prioritize.
I agree with you. Great post.
SME's need to spend more time on concentrating on their marketing efforts. Its actually all business but just in different degrees relative to the required sales required to pay expenses.
The great part about small business (SME) is that it is the owner that usually does this and they do it better as they have the most to gain.
Thanks again.
Goran
This was one of the most reassuring marketing articles I've read in awhile. As a business owner I'm always hustling to close deals and I occasionally get caught up in trying to learn the latest elusive marketing 2.2.117 tactic.
You helped me remember that the power is my hands to take small, consistent, measurable tried and true actions. If anything I'll just hire an expert to execute those nifty web tricks to get clients.
Raza Imam
http://SoftwareSweatshop.com
The KISS principle is universally known, but generally lacking in application. So knuckle down, do the basics right, and once your solid foundation is set in place you can look at building a skyscraper on top.
I agree, its the grunt work that makes the most difference in any endeavour, end of story, all the grandiose plans and machinations in the world won't get the job done if all the small things aren't in place, if you can't market your own business you'd better learn
Duct Tape ideas are just that.
Thanks John for the simple, practical but effective tip.
I've found, both with myself and my clients, that less generally is more. Subtract out those activities that aren't working for you, save yourself some time and stress and do a great job with activities that do work!
Shawn
Where can I get an electronic scoreboard for my office :)
Awesome job on the blog. Haven't been here for a while and you have some great content.
Thanks for tip several months ago to check out Tim Ferris and The Four Hour Work Week. That book literally changed my life.
Hope to meet up with you soon.
Your pal in SE Iowa,
Shawn Frey
When you want to try another marketing approach add it after you're existing marketing systems are working automatically and then remember to aim small miss small and fail forward fast with your new marketing efforts.
Focusing on bagging the biggies, and neglecting your basics is a recipe for disaster that we're all but only too prone to follow.