Saturday 27 February 2010

D is for Directories

There are many free Directories on the internet that you can list your business on to raise your business profile.
Do a search for your area of interest or industry and include your details but remember to keep a list and keep it updated.
Social networks are also a good point at which to promote your business. Again keep a list and ensure that it is updated regularly with contact details and updates of services that you offer.

Tuesday 16 February 2010

C is for Conferences & Cold Calling


Conferences
are a good way of promoting your business to your potential consumers and a way of you showing off your knowledge to them. It does not have to be a big, swanky affair as a short 2 hour session with networking before/after will be just as effective and could convey more information than an event that has been ‘padded out’ to fill a time slot.
Being a guest speaker at a Conference is a great profile builder that you can link to for future reference & to show to your potential consumer/client.

Cold Calling is like marmite, you either love it or you hate it, but sometimes it has to be done to increase your sales/awareness potential.
To do this effectively always make sure you are in the right frame of mind and do short, regular sessions. One good trick is to end on a high. So a sale or an invitation to send info is always a good place to stop (not the first one though!)
Know what you want to achieve before you pick up the phone, there is nothing worse than being bombarded with information and being expected to make a commitment. You can always return with alternative information at a later date.
You might just want to use the phone call to find out who is the right person to post information to or whom to e-mail and then build up to selling by phone at a later date when you have built your confidence. If you get the chance to sell though, do it, don’t waste the opportunity or your competitor might be the next caller and they will reap the benefits of being pro-active and on the ball.
If you commit to sending information/samples, do it or the only memory your potential client will have of your company is one that does not deliver, so make notes and refer back to them.

Thursday 11 February 2010

B is for Business Cards & Blogs


Business Cards say a lot about you and your business so it pays to take time to design them to give as much as information as possible without looking like an advertising bill board.

It is essential to include all the ways that you wish to be contacted in whether that’s phone, e-mail, skype or through one of your Social media formats.

Have you included your website? Your logo? Did you want to include a picture of yourself?

Have you taken care with the size of the card? I recently over heard someone complaining that they had been given a card, made by vistaprint, that was slightly larger than the norm and that it didn’t fit in their card holder!

There are also arguments for and against printing on the back of cards. Some people like to use all the space available and others like to leave the back clear for contacts to write notes. What is your view on this?

Blogs are a good way of showing your knowledge and sharing trade information and can be linked to from your website and vice versa. If you have information you want to share that you do not want to have on pages of your website this is a good idea to use to invite people to have their say on information or thoughts that you are sharing. Perhaps you want an area that can be used to pass around some ideas or perhaps you want to use the arena to test out the idea of an E-book by starting a précis or overview of a chapter. Whatever you want to use it for always bear in mind that it is a forward facing element of your business so do not incorporate anything controversial, inflammatory or anything that you will regret later.