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As usual, great advice. Small business owners have a tendency to complicate what they think needs to be done in order to market their busines.
I'm a little torn over the placement of "Educate" in the list, though... not that it shouldn't be done, but that may be is comes after being found and should include the education of one's customer base in communicating the core message and helping them understand the value proposition.
Just my 2c
- Daiv http://Twitter.com/DaivRawks
Another great post. We must be on the same wavelength of late. I just wrote a blog post about the same idea from a little different viewpoint.
Simplicity in the 2009!
Great post and thank you for the insight!
Jeremy
Refocusing Technology
Thanks for publishing your Duct Tape diagram which has given me food for thought for both my Eight Pillars of Business Prosperity and Hidden Profit approaches.
Good resource for this subject is Bill Jensen who wrote several books on the subject, most notable "Simplicity"
I like the Simplicity Survival Handbook best.
I really enjoy him, would follow him any day!
My opinion of enjoying his way of thinking remains the same.
1. If a question seems or sounds too simple, that's exactly why you should ask it.
2. Customers crave simplicity.
3. If you can’t describe your product eight words or less, it's not simple enough.
4. If you can’t explain your idea on the back of a business card, it’s not simple enough.
5. If you can’t explain your idea to a five year old, it’s not simple enough.
6. Simple can always BECOME complex, but not the other way around.
Great thread John!
REMEMBER: Simplicity IS sophistication.
I love the Mark Twain quote - "I would have written a shorter letter if I would have had more time."
May I recommend a fantastic book "Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die" by Chip and Dan Heath:
http://adjix.com/2ikf
The ideas that stick are:
Simple. Unexpected. Concrete. Credible. Emotional. A story.
A fantastic book that...well, sticks in your mind :)
It's a must read when form
Namely, that the easiest and simplest way to sell anything to anyone is using stories, metaphors and analogies in order to get the point across quickly and communicate with the part of the brain that makes the buying decision.