Archive for get more business
There’s Magic In Your List
Posted by: | CommentsYou know all those people who’ve bought your products and services? We talked about them in a previous post – they’re your customers.
But do you have them all in one place?
Do you have a database with their contact information – email address? Home address? Phone number?
If you answered no – why not?
Chances are you never got around to it. Or you’re not sure about the best place to start or how to even capture that information.
Starting from scratch, I advise my clients to start with what they have. Most have Microsoft Outlook already on their computers. While it’s not the optimum platform for getting online, it works to gather all the information you already have from various sources (spreadsheets, business cards, emails, etc) and get them all into one place. There are tools which can help you grab addresses from emails. Simply Google “address grabber” and there are pages of them. You can then easily export that data into a format that can be moved to any online system you end up using. It’s difficult to use social media tools like Twitter, LinkedIn or Facebook without at least a database of First Name and email address. It’s impossible to email market without this data.
I recently worked with a law firm that had some client and vendor data in paper files, in emails, and in their billing system. But nowhere did they have ALL of the data they needed to consistently reach out and communicate
If you answered yes – you’re doing great! And there’s much more you can be doing with your information.
Once you have basic contact info for your list, you can begin to use the new media tools, like newsletters or email marketing, to be in front of your customers and prospects on a regular basis.
And once you get going, you can always get more sophisticated. There are even services which will help you “clone” your client database and help you market to them offline to bring them into your pipeline online.
People ask me about buying lists, and this can be a great way to build your business – if you are working with a reputable list broker and you know what you are doing. I always recommend that you start with what you have. Figure out what’s going to work marketing-wise with your current customers, and then think about expanding outwards. At least that way you are not wasting valuable time and resources on a hope or a prayer.
Ask yourself this question – How many people have done business with you at least once? How many of those have come back to you a second or third time? What if you could double that number? You already acquired them once. You lost a large number of them the next time around because you didn’t have a system in place to STAY in front of them until they needed you again. It’s a costly mistake. One I myself have made in the past.
It can be daunting to get started. The number one thing I see with small businesses is that they simply fail to get started because they don’t know what they don’t know – so they do nothing. If you find yourself in that place, please reach out to get some help. Because the only thing standing between you and increased profitability is your inaction.
Contact me to find out more about getting your project started.
Building Business Is Still About Fundamentals
Posted by: | CommentsIn these challenging economic times, we’re all facing the same question – How do I get more new customers and cut my expenses?
My Answer – Go back to fundamentals.
In the next several posts, we’ll explore how to take time-tested client acquisition fundamentals and apply them to new media tools that can help you grow your business, and have it be even healthier than it was when things were “booming”. There are lots of digital marketing tools to help us LEVERAGE fundamentals once we figure out what they are. And they cost much less than you think.
Let’s start with the basics – Who do you want to be working with?
It’s easy to find yourself all over the place trying to get business in the door it you aren’t crystal clear who you want to be working with. In fact, most of us started out with the “y’all come” strategy. And our customer base reflects that.
Unfortunately, when times get challenging, it’s difficult to spend resources to attract “everyone” and “anyone” because our marketing messages don’t attract as powerfully from that huge pool of customers with limited resources. It’s one thing if you’re a large corporation with a huge advertising budget – you can afford the “shotgun” approach. It’s quite another if you are a local business with limited marketing dollars.
So figure out who your Perfect Customer is.
Who’s your bread-bread-and-butter? Who is your most profitable customer? Create a profile capturing the essence of the clients who make your business profitable in this economy. You can download a worksheet from my website that will help you nail your profile down. Find it at here.
Once you know this – options begin to open up in terms of finding these folks and getting them into your sales pipeline. Additionally, you can focus your marketing time, resources, and messages to appeal to that Perfect Client.
In upcoming posts, I’ll discuss how to apply this idea to your digital marketing – such as drip-marketing via e-mail, blogging, tweeting via Twitter.com, using LinkedIn.com, Facebooking, and more.
Let’s look first, though, at what you’re currently doing – How do you get in front of people? Where do your leads come from?
Examine my first stab at a list of common lead generation strategies.
Imagine how effective you would be if you got crystal clear who you were trying to attract and applied it to what you were already doing. It alters what you say. It alters where you advertise. It alters where you network and how you network. It makes it easier to ask for referrals. It tells you what to say when you write an article, blog, tweet, or post on your Fan Page. Focus gives you insight into the psychology of your client, so you know what to write in your e-mail drip campaigns.
Spend 30 days and learn everything you can about who your Perfect Client is, what their issues are, what problems they have, what keeps them up at night, what groups they belong to, what websites they frequent, what publications they read, etc., and watch how it influences your interactions with and marketing to them.
Doing this work will prepare you to bridge the traditional and technological marketing gap.
Economic Changes Call for Tactical Adjustments
Posted by: | CommentsEspecially Now, Relationships Are the Key to Good Referrals
In these uncertain economic times, my experience tells me that there are still people out there who need your services. But because they are more concerned with getting the best value for their increasingly scarce resources, they turn to the people they trust to introduce them to professionals who deliver value.
Said another way, referrals are how good business gets done when times get challenging.
Who are your best referrers?
Have you thanked them?
Have you reached out to find out how you can help them?
Are you relying on a small group of people to refer you or have you systematically positioned yourself to be the recipient of your perfect referral over and over again?
Or are you still relying on a random stream of referrals?
I’ve been advising my clients to get proactive. Especially now. Because even if only 25% of their business comes from referral, if that business dries up and goes to someone else, they are in trouble.
Take action now!
1. Audit your last 3 years of clients.
Determine to the best of your ability where each piece of business came from. What did it add to your top-line revenues? What did it add to your overall profitability? What source stands out as needing immediate attention? If it is a person or a firm, what’s the current state of your relationship?
One client who did this exercise noticed that there were several distinct groups of people who referred him business. He broke them up into areas – real estate, import/export and invited them to a luncheon at his office. He introduced them all to each other and had them share what they needed to be successful – resources, contacts, etc. He shared the same thing – and his practice grew 30% in under 6 months.
2. Connect with your referral sources.
Cement your relationships. You know what needs to be done. Do it. Don’t put it off. In the current economic climate, those relationships can be the access to your very best clients – because those sources have social capital behind their recommendations and provide social proof that you are the attorney with whom they should be speaking.
I spoke on the phone this morning with another client who had changed firms and never reconnected with old sources of referrals. She shared that just by picking up the phone and reaching out to people who used to send her cases, she increased her business immediately – one sent her a new case that morning.
Connecting frequently and consistently is the key to staying top of mind. Enlist your staff to help you make this happen.
3. Actively reproduce your best referral sources.
Take a look at the characteristics of your best referral sources. What is their profession? Do they belong to a specific professional association? Get clear about which are your best sources and begin recruiting new ones just like them. LinkedIn® is a great resource for this project. If you don’t know how to use it – Learn.
Think about what would happen to your practice and your pocketbook if you added a zero to the number of people who actively refer you your ideal client. Come up with a project to build 20-30 relationships who can keep you and your firm busy and profitable.
4. Develop a regular touch strategy.
I know you are busy. All professionals are. But the most productive have systems in place that allow them to accomplish the repetitive tasks that create continuity in relationship. The old adage “Out of sight, out of mind” can wreak havoc on your referrability. Set – or have your staff set – lunches at regular intervals. Get a system to regularly send out birthday and anniversary cards. Involve your support staff in collecting and sending clippings of pertinent articles or snippets of what they read in on-line news. The key here is to stay ‘top-of-mind’ while you deepen the relationship.
5. Train your referral sources
You know what you do. But do your referral sources? Really? Ask them what they think you do. You’ll be surprised at some of the responses. If your sources don’t know what you do and who is best to send your way, chances are referral quality is poor.
Most importantly, get clear which problems you solve that keep your clients up at night – from their perspective, not yours. “I’m a intellectual property attorney” is very different from “I help the creative protect and defend their million dollar ideas.”
Draft a document which illustrates what you do (not just a list of services) and for whom. Clearly articulate who your ideal clients are and then share that with your sources. Encourage them to do the same for you.
Building reciprocity builds relatedness. Relatedness is a trigger for referrals.
6. Develop a stable of professionals that you can refer – and refer them.
Referrals out can be tricky for some attorneys. The concern about liability is one I often hear from my clients. However, reciprocity doesn’t work if you don’t refer out. One of my clients dealt with his concern this way – when he passes a referral he uses this disclaimer – “I recommend X – s/he’s done a great job for my clients in the past. You should do your own due diligence, though, as s/he’s not always a fit for everyone.”
You do not serve all your clients’ needs. You can position yourself, in their minds, to do so by developing a stable of reliable professionals who serve those needs which you do not, and educating your clients as to their availability. Listen for opportunities to refer. Be known as a resource for your clients AND as a referrer by your key sources.
7. Repeat this process
Referral development is a process, not an event. Relationships are not event driven and credibility is something that is built – over time. If you have three to five hours a week – think lunches and breakfasts – you can easily roll this out over a year long program. It takes some planning and discipline, but the payoff far exceeds the perceived pain.
It takes something to alter results you are currently getting. The biggest hurdle you will have to conquer is the belief that you “don’t have the time” or that you are “too busy” to do something different.
The most productive and profitable firms have handled these conversations and developed the skills and the networks to consistently land the right kind of profitable business.
I encourage you to do the same.
Raymond Chip Lambert
Network 2 Networth
Your Outsourced Business Development Training Partner
Law Firm Marketing – Seven Steps for Using LinkedIn.com as a Business Development Magnet
Posted by: | CommentsOriginally published in the inaugural Edition of The Rainmaker Advisor – for attorneys
Let’s face it – you’re busy. You may even fall under the classification of “very busy”. When it comes to developing business, you are faced with all kinds of options: a website, blogging, networking, referrals from current clients. The question is often where do I start? And how do I manage the ethical considerations? Especially because I’m so busy.
My advice – start with what you’ve already got. Then leverage it.
Enter LinkedIn.com, a free online social networking site for professionals.
Unlike Facebook.com or Myspace.com, LinkedIn® focuses on a business demographic1:
- Average Age – 41;
- Average Years of Experience – 15;
- Average Household Income – $109,000;
- 46% of it’s users are Decision Makers;
- Executive from All Fortune 500 companies are represented inside LinkedIn®.
These are folks who use legal services.
I train my clients to view LinkedIn® as a technological backbone to place underneath their already existing network of relationships. With 21 million people using the service, you may be surprised to find that many of the people that you know professionally are already users.
Add three levels of depth (seeing who your contacts know, and who their contacts know) and a search engine to explore those resources, and you have an extremely valuable resource to leverage.
By having a systematic approach, you can use this free service to become a magnet for referrals, business opportunities, and profitable alliances.
Here are the Seven Steps for Using LinkedIn® as a Business Development Magnet:
1. Perfect your Profile
Your LinkedIn® Profile is an online hub for Business Development Objectives. A well designed profile lets your contacts, prospective clients, and prospective referral sources know who you are, what you do, and what you are looking to accomplish. Make sure that you spend plenty of time perfecting it. Fill out all of your education. Fill out your past employment and experience. People feel like they know you when you disclose those things. Because LinkedIn is a Social Media, you want to bring down the barriers that people experience to getting to know you and your firm. This step is critical.
2. Learn the system
The power of LinkedIn® is the platform. The social software allows you to do advanced searches, connect to your current websites and blogs, promote your profile to current connections and people who could be connections, answer questions of users who are looking for someone like you and your firm, etc. Understanding the capabilities of LinkedIn® will allow you to leverage them once you’ve built out your network in their system.
3. Reach out to people you already know and build your network
You’ve spent a lifetime making connections. You already belong to multiple networks: your firm, your law school, your alma mater, your professional organizations, your place of worship, the PTA. All of these people know people. They all have connections that have potential value to you. And you have connections that have potential value to them. By reaching out to your already existing contacts, you will quickly reproduce your existing networks and be ready to use the technology to explore the opportunities that already exist in your first level connections, as well as your second and third level connections. You will never know if you don’t build it.
4. Get strategic
Know exactly what you want to accomplish. Write out your Business Development Objectives clearly and concisely such that anyone who read them could tell if you reached them or not. Are they specific? Are they measurable? Once you are clear, consider that you have an enormous network of resources available to you via your LinkedIn® network. Now answer the following questions:
- · How are you positioned with the people in your network?
- · Do they really know what you and your firm offer? If not, why not?
- · How could you communicate that to them?
- · Does your firm have a newsletter? Put a link in your profile so people can subscribe.
- · Do you blog? Via your profile you can direct people to your blog so they can read more about you.
- · Who refers you on a regular basis and why?
- · Do you have enough of these people in your network?
- · Do the people you know have contacts that could be referring you?
- · Do you know the characteristics of the people who refer you?
Once you have the answers, look newly at the network you’ve built. You will see opportunities that you didn’t see before. They were always there. Now leverage them.
5. Use the system to manage relationships
The advanced features contained in the toolbars that LinkedIn® offers give you powerful tools to manage your interactions with the people in your network. Download them and learn to use them. You can keep track of birthdays and overlooked emails. You can get updates from the people in your network as their profile information changes. You can keep track of your searches. Via a scan of your regular emails, you can find new people to connect with and continue to build and cultivate your network.
6. Reach out to meet new people through your contacts
Once you’ve built out your network and cultivated deeper relationships with the people you already know, begin to browse their networks. Look to see if they know people that will help you achieve your Business Development Objectives. You can even do deep, specific searches to find experts, vendors, specific people, and specific companies. Using the built in features of LinkedIn®, reach out to those people through the people that you already know. Use some of that Social Capital that you’ve built up with people. You’ll be surprised how willing they are to help you achieve your goals.
7. Be Consistent
The key to any Business Development strategy is consistency. Schedule 10 minutes a day for the next 90 days to work inside the LinkedIn® system. Not only will you find it enjoyable discovering new sources of business, but you will also build a habit that will transfer into your day-to-day habits and translate into a profitable world of new opportunities.
Social Networking is not a new thing. Professionals have been doing it from the dawn of commerce. Social Networking Software like LinkedIn, however, provides an opportunity to take those networks you’ve built over a lifetime and put them to use.
By developing a systematic approach to developing your network, and a technological backbone to uncover the hidden connections contained in that network, you have the opportunity to set yourself apart from other firms, and produce the kinds of result that Senior Partners in the big firms produce on a regular basis.
In our next article, we’ll address privacy concerns, ethical concerns, and demonstrate how LinkedIn®’s system is built to handle this.
Meanwhile, enjoy building what will likely be one of the best Business Development
tools you will ever encounter.
Raymond Chip Lambert, of Network2Networth, is a Business Development expert who works exclusively with seasoned professionals to leverage their existing relationships through time tested Business Development strategies and online Social Media strategy thereby unlocking the value of their existing network connections. He can be reached at 602-635-4541 or www.network2networth.com.
1Linkedin.com-http://www.linkedin.com/static?key=advertising_info&trk=hb_ft_ads
So Many Sources . . .
Posted by: | CommentsI met today with one of my students who has been in his industry for decades. He said something that I found intensely interesting – he was so confused and suprised about how he was getting business. He recently brought on a younger associate who was flyering and was getting business that way. “I thought that was long dead” he said to me.
It got me thinking – how many of you are confused and surprised about where your business comes from? How many of you are so busy trying to get business that you’ve forgotten to really look and see where your business really comes from?
We spent about a half hour really looking and came up with the following assessment:
General marketing – flyering, direct mail
Telemarketing
Referrals from past clients
Referrals from a specific set of industry partners
I asked him what his strategy was with each and he looked at me blankly. “What do you mean?” I just do whatever comes my way (not an exact quote – just the gist).
Sound familiar?
Imagine what could happen to your bottom line if you put some thought into your general marketing strategy – what tactics actually produce results? And are those tactics habituated or are they only there when you get to them? How could you systematize those strategies that work?
Do you consistently touch base with your past clients and offer them something of value? Are you at the top of their mind when they need what you sell? If not, why not? What could you do to habituate consistent past client follow up? What patterns could you put in place in your daily routine? And are you asking for referrals to people like them? Do they know that you grow your buisness by referrals? Or are you functioning under the hope that because you did such a good job that they are going to refer you in the future? Face it – if you don’t keep yourself in front of these folks, they forget you – they have lives of their own with problems that crop up every day. They aren’t thinking about you. You have to be thinking of them.
Have you identified key industry partners who could be referring you because you are a natural complement to what they offer? Have you considered how you could make them look good? Have you approached them to propose an alliance? Think about the impact of habituating contact with these folks – a steady stream of referrals to your perfect client.
Getting business is not hard. Getting good business is even easier. But you have to step out of the day to day operations of your enterpise and examine what you are doing in order to tap into the opportuinties that are right under your nose.
There’s an old saying in the insurance industry “That worked so well we stopped doing it.” What have you stopped doing that gets you the kind of buisness you really want?
