Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,505,983 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Grow a business from your client base.


WHAT is marketing? Marketing is about understanding deeply the needs and wants of your customers and providing them with value to meet those needs and wants. And, it's it's  

1. Contraction of it is.

2. Contraction of it has. See Usage Note at its.


it's it is or it has
it's be ~have
 about measuring your effectiveness in meeting those needs.

To be an effective marketer, you must clearly identify the demand for your product or service. At a minimum, most businesses can improve significantly in this area. However, the real power and leverage of marketing comes from the next level of influence, communicating convincingly your unique and superior value proposition.

Marketing is about communicating with and educating your customers, prospects, and referral sources why it's in their best interest to do business with your company. It is about educating the right target audience on the unique and superior advantages, benefits, value, and results you can provide and sharing the credible--evidence/reasons that support and back up such promises. In short, marketing is about educating your target market on the advantages of doing business with you and the reasons why they should trust you to deliver on your promises.

Instead of impacting one prospect at a time (i.e. direct selling Direct selling is the marketing of products or services to consumers through sales tactics including presentations, demonstrations, and phone calls. It is sometimes also considered to be a sale that does not utilize a "middle man" such as a retail outlets, distributors or brokers. ), marketing allows you to communicate with, educate, and influence many buyers at once. In a sense, marketing is a one-to-many selling system. Marketing allows you to target and influence large groups of customers, prospects, alliances, referral sources, reporters, etc. in a single action.

Unfortunately, most business owners mistakenly mis·tak·en  
v.
Past participle of mistake.

adj.
1. Wrong or incorrect in opinion, understanding, or perception.

2. Based on error; wrong: a mistaken view of the situation.
 try to tackle most goals (i.e. growing sales) with a one-to-one, single weapon, combat mentality men·tal·i·ty
n.
The sum of a person's intellectual capabilities or endowment.
. For example, instead of considering the leverage of marketing (i.e. strategic alliances, referral systems, direct mail, telemarketing telemarketing, the practice of selling goods or services to customers by means of the telephone or of surveying consumer preferences in telephone conversations. , etc.) to grow sales, many owners remain in the same comfort zone and deadly rut of using a single weapon like direct selling. They miss the chance to use air support (marketing) to vastly aid their ground war (selling). They fail to consider and try new options, new approaches, and new strategies.

While all businesses have a selling process (converting leads to customers), most do not have a legitimate marketing process (generating qualified leads). As such, they miss out on tremendous leverage and revenue opportunities.

As a business owner, professional, or manager, your goal should be to add an ongoing marketing process to your business. Again, marketing is nothing more than understanding the needs of your customers and then communicating to them the superior advantages/benefits they can derive by doing business with you.

Educating customers

Think of marketing as ongoing education. You are educating customers, prospects, and referral sources why it's in their best interest to do business with your company.

There are only 5 ways to grow your business:

* Keep the customers you have,

* Bring in more customers,

* Increase the average transaction size (unit sale),

* Increase the frequency of purchases, and

* Say "no" to bad customers/prospects. In short, keep what you have, bring in more customers, sell larger amounts to them, and sell to them more often. Do one of these ways and your business grows. Do two or more of these well, and your business can grow by quantum leaps quantum leap
n.
An abrupt change or step, especially in method, information, or knowledge: "War was going to take a quantum leap; it would never be the same" Garry Wills.
 and bounds, geometric growth instead of mere linear growth.

In this article, we will focus only on strategy #1, keeping the customers you have. Don't underestimate the need to satisfy and retain customers. / Most businesses put too much money, time, and effort into chasing new customers/prospects and far too little resources trying to keep their current ones. However, we all know that you can't fill up a bucket A reserved amount of memory that holds a single item or multiple items of data. Bucket is somewhat synonymous to "buffer," although buffers are usually memory locations for incoming data records, while buckets tend to be smaller holding areas for calculations. See hash table, buffer and variable.  if you don't plug the current leaks. Real profits and stable revenue streams come from long-term Long-term

Three or more years. In the context of accounting, more than 1 year.


long-term

1. Of or relating to a gain or loss in the value of a security that has been held over a specific length of time. Compare short-term.
 relationships and repeat business with your current loyal, profitable customers. Some experts declare that 80 percent of a company's future growth comes from existing clients, if served and cultivated cultivated,
n in herbal medicine, used to describe plants that are commercially farmed rather than collected from the wild.
 properly. As such, customer satisfaction and retention should be your #1 marketing priority.

Again, the purpose of a business is to attract and retain customers. You can't grow and remain in business without keeping the customers you currently have. First, you must measure your current attrition rate Noun 1. attrition rate - the rate of shrinkage in size or number
rate of attrition

rate - a magnitude or frequency relative to a time unit; "they traveled at a rate of 55 miles per hour"; "the rate of change was faster than expected"


 (loss of customers) and set a goal for dramatically reducing this rate. For example, let's say, on average, that you lose 20 percent of your customers every year. A realistic goal would be to reduce this attrition rate to l0 percent per year. Bottom line, it is easier and nearly eight times cheaper to serve and retain current clients/customers than to pursue new ones.

Jonathan Goldhill is CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board.  of The Growth Coach--Los Angeles, a Woodland Hills-based business coaching Introduction to Business Coaching
Business Coaching is a business support service industry aimed at helping owners plan, start, grow & even remove themselves from business.
 and growth consulting firm Noun 1. consulting firm - a firm of experts providing professional advice to an organization for a fee
consulting company

business firm, firm, house - the members of a business organization that owns or operates one or more establishments; "he worked for a
. Jonathan can be reached via his website www.TheGrowthCoachLA.com, or call (818) 716-8826 or email at Jon@TheGrowthCoach-LA.com.
COPYRIGHT 2005 CBJ, L.P.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Guest Column
Author:Goldhill, Jonathan
Publication:San Fernando Valley Business Journal
Article Type:Column
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Feb 28, 2005
Words:776
Previous Article:Construction companies: greater San Fernando Valley firms ranked by total revenue in 2004.(The List)
Next Article:Non traditional budget procedures hurt California.(Guest Column)
Topics:



Related Articles
Making it: the Write stuff.(publicist Regina Lynch-Hudson uses arsenal of public relations tools in her Atlanta-based firm The Write...
'Outlooks' feature outlives its usefulness. (op-ed section dropped by The Cedar Rapids Gazette)
Guest columns: readers respond.
Putting in her two cents.(Brief Article)(Interview)
Who Hatches Up These Ideas?(Brief Article)
A former space hog sees the light.(standards for op-ed pages)
Reconstituting memories of Martha.(Columns)(Column)
Sanctuary: Sedalia. CO.(Best golf event: venue)(Colorado)
Building Character: weighing the differences between right and wrong.(Brief Article)
Contributing your words to our pages.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles