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BUSINESS ETHICS? REALLY?? YES!

BUSINESS ETHICS? REALLY? YES!

Possessing a high standard of business ethics is an absolute requirement for successful entrepreneurs. Moral standards should steer your decisions. According to the American Marketing Association Statement of Ethics in 2014, all businesses should hold the following ethical values:

Honesty: be forthright in dealings with customers and stakeholders.

Responsibility: accept consequences for marketing decisions and strategies.

Fairness: balance justly the needs of the buyer with the interests of the seller.

Respect: acknowledge the basic human dignity of all stakeholders.

Transparency: create a spirit of openness in marketing operations.

Citizenship: fulfill the economic, legal, philanthropic, and societal responsibilities that serve stakeholders.        

Know Thy Client

Know Thy Client!

Knowing how their business / organization works is critical before pursuing them for new business. You and your colleagues should ask and answer the following questions before you begin to pursue current, recent, or prospective clients.

Who is the decision-maker?
What other firms/companies are they using now?
When was the last time they hired a new firm or purchased a new product?
Do they prefer to communicate by phone or email?
What have you done recently to build a relationship with them?
Have you asked ahead of time who else will be attending the meeting?
Do you offer periodic review meetings regarding budgets, billing, timelines for the engagement process, and report format?
Do you know their pain?
How will financial decisions be made?

ESG – A NEW SCORING SYSTEM

Environmental, Social, and Corporate Governance (ESG) is a relatively new scoring system applying non-financial factors to measure a business’s attention to the environmental and social arenas.

 

ESG is now being used by multiple start-up funding sources. These funding sources evaluate a company’s ESG ethical score in addition to the usual financial investment risks to determine their offers of any loans and grants.

Convert Your USP to Their Reality

Convert Your Unique Selling Proposition To Their Reality

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by Dr. Allan Colman, CEO of the Closers Group and author of “The Revenue Accelerator: The 21 Boosters to Launch Your Startup

Successful sales and marketing require one over-arching element. Your product or service must be seen as a brand. And the brand encompasses your USP, Unique Selling Proposition — the heart of your marketing and sales efforts.

Your USP effectively distinguishes you from competition. It can also be used as a slogan, and can even be expanded into an elevator message. Within a 20-second statement, the benefits of your product/service should be obvious.

At its core, a USP is a written statement that explains why you get new customers/clients, why they keep coming back to you, why they refer new business to you, and how you differ from the competition. It should succinctly capture the essence, strengths, and uniqueness of your product or service.

If you’ve spent any time selling in today’s competitive marketplace, you know it can be uniquely challenging. Many markets are individually idiosyncratic and often resistant. It requires special insights, strategies, and training to successfully penetrate them. This often adds a few twists and turns into your business roadmap but it’s not impossible to navigate with a clear, forceful USP.

When devising your company’s USP, ask whether it positions you as Kleenex or tissue. As plastic storage bags or Ziplocks? Are you known as among the best or simply one of the others?

When the public hears the name of your company or service, what adjectives come to their minds? Building the USP takes time and effort, but it can produce an effective offering of benefits and solutions.

In order to create your USP, look for answers to these questions:

  1. What is it that makes your company/firm stand out from your competitors?
  2. Why do your customers/clients continue doing business with you?
  3. What is it about your company/firm that makes it unique?
  4. Why should customers/clients come to you?
  5. What do you have to offer that they can’t get anywhere else?

Offer up these questions to a wide swath of peers and prospects along with friends and family and note any common themes that emerge. And, if you’ve started a business, how do your clients or any “best” customers respond, or your suppliers, vendors, manufactures, local businesses and others you’ve interacted with in your community. If you’re just opening an operation, ask what level of service should be provided, or what future refinements might be considered. Listen very closely to each answer.

Skilled entrepreneurs will ask themselves the very same questions. Have you studied the market before beginning to build or design your product or system? Do you know what might make you stand out from competitors? Is there an element that’s truly unique? Why should customers/clients come to you? Do you have something not available anywhere else?

Combining your answers and being completely, painfully honest, will allow you to come up with the most powerful quality that will set you apart from your competition or future competition. As you narrow down your feedback to a short list of answers, a few simple, focused statements should arise. Share these with key people. Which would they choose?

In asking for feedback from the people who’ve offered responses, you’re not selling; you’re asking for advice. Yet this is an excellent indirect marketing opportunity (invisible marketing).

A short, concise USP should now become visible that will signify the core message for all of your marketing and sales efforts. And, once you have it, and it becomes your brand, protect it vigilantly. In many ways the future of your business depends on it.

It’s now time to put that USP to work. In meetings and pitches, while reviewing your prospects’ needs and stating your offerings and solutions, remember to repeat that USP two to three times, no more. It should become the single-most takeaway message that they remember.

Convert your USP to their reality.

 

What is the Most Underutilized Social Media?

Paper, yes paper is the most underutilized social media.  Text, Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, emails, electronic filings are now consuming 85-90% of communications received by corporate and agency attorneys and executives.  Do you really think your social media messages pitching new work get through?

It is simple!  If you want something actually placed on a suspect’s or prospect’s desk, put it in an envelope or fax it.  Just think of the response rate you will receive.

Fax me your response at 310-618-1122.

CONVERSION MARKETING – A Must Read for Marketing Your Business Online

If you are searching for fresh marketing ideas for your website, take a look at CONVERSION MARKETING.  This book is loaded with suggestions on how to run promotional campaigns which convert visitors into buyers.

The book was written by Bryan Heathman, CEO of Made for Success Publishing, which contains 16 psychological tools of influence that describe how to influence the buying behavior of website visitors.

Bryan brings a colorful perspective from his Fortune 500 marketing experience for technology powerhouse Microsoft and big – brand marketer Eastman Kodak.

Endorsed by NYT best-selling authors Brian Tracy and Don Huston, CONVERSION MARKETING is a must-read and is available at bookstores everywhere including Amazon and Barnes & Noble.

How Do You Win A Client?

Continuing this series on Aulet’s 6 themes in “Disciplined Entrepreneurship” (available at Amazon), this element focuses on how do you win a client? His client development asks you to:

* Determine the client’s decision making unit

* Map the process to acquire a new client

* Map the “sales” process.

In “Own The Zone” (also available at Amazon, etc.) I recommend clients to questions to answer before meeting with a suspect or prospect. For example, do you know what is happening in their market place? What internal pressures might they be under? What do you know about their competitors and their services? And even something as simple as learning how they prefer to be invoiced.

One of the best tools available to know your prospect is social media where you can identify and evaluate businesses. Then a pre-meeting call will also facilitate your mastery of client needs and how to communicate your value proposition to them. For more details available, go to http://allancolman.com/services/

Harvest More New Business From Your Top Clients

Guest Blog from Valerie Goodman

Harvest the Cream of the Crop

Wouldn’t it be nice if you could have 80% of your entire new business income derive from 20% of your top clients — the “Cream of The Crop” clients?

When you dedicate yourself to harvesting more from your Cream of the Crop” clients you will:
1. Enjoy your work more and earn more while doing it.
2. Be busy every day working with clients whom you enjoy, clients you trust and who trust you in return.
3. Have clients who will refer more business to you.

Here’s how to identify your Cream of The Crop clients and ask for referrals:
 Select 15, 25 or 45 of your top clients, whatever number is appropriate.
These are the ones that you would like to clone if you could, so your firm would be full of clients like them.
 The next time any one of these clients sees you step up the quality of your service. Make the meeting so unexpectedly amazing and positive they’ll be extremely appreciative of your attention, remember you, and be more professionally dedicated to you. This experience begins in the reception room.
 At the start of each meeting ask him or her about significant events that have happened. To make sure you have fuel for this conversation, make it a habit to write down something new about each client after EVERY visit or every time you speak with him. Make the effort to build rapport. Without this, you will not be able to develop any referral systems.
 When you are ready to ask for a referral, send a letter to each client on your “Cream of The Crop” list or TELL THEM PERSONALLY he or she is your ideal client and you would like more clients just like them. You might be surprised how many clients aren’t really aware that you’re accepting new clients.
In a recent Closers Group Client Retention Survey one of the questions was “What percentage of your attorneys ask their clients for referrals?”

75% of the marketing professionals said “NONE.”
10 % of the attorneys said none.
What does this tell you about a huge lost opportunity?

Harvesting more from your Cream of the Crop clients doesn’t happen overnight. They won’t become your greatest fans if you are hit and miss with your efforts. You will need to keep up the momentum, the energy and your follow-through 100% of the time. Do this and a bumper crop may be happening in your not-so-distant future!

 

Have You Been Told to Grow Your Practice? – Origination Credit

As competition for legal services increases, non-equity partners are being challenged to “grow your practice.” In more and more firms, marketing and business development efforts are being intensified and carefully measured for new revenue origination.

Those who succeed have not only applied law firm marketing coaching and advisory support, but now understand how to achieve:

  • Sustainable revenue growth
  • Providing superior client value
  • Out-maneuver the competition
  • More success in less time
  • Define and use their “identity capital”

These 5 and other components of accelerating new revenue and fee origination are designed to help grow your practice by transforming your ability to market and closing multiple new opportunities.

 

Have You Been Told to Grow Your Practice?

For a complimentary consultation on growing your practice and accelerating your new business, please contact us for a free consultation.

Are There Really “Magic Pills” for New Business Development?

ACCELERATE NEW BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT NOW
Chapter 2

Are there really “magic pills” for new business development?

Following our last post, on what happens to your new business development efforts when you are not in the “accelerator zone,” one wonders why isn’t everyone in business living in an “accelerator zone”? We find in our work that a primary reason is that most people don’t know what ingredients are necessary for leaders to new business development success. 36ixty Inc. cites 12 Essential Practices that lead to new business growth. They are branding, leadership, strategy, communication, team, value creation, core story, marketing, sales, customer experience, revenue and systems to manage all of these.

These 12 are not an end-all, cure-all or a series of magic pills. What they are equates to actual implementation of a business plan. They are especially applicable to firms and companies which are too often managed by consensus or collegiality. Practicing these 12 will lead to more clarity, focus and execution in new business development.

Our next chapter will address Business Development “Impact Areas”.