I Don’t Care if Your Only Talent is Loading up the Perfect Pencil Holder with Pencils

The title of this post is a quote from my friend, Lisbeth Tanz, of Your Words Your Voice.  She’s a one-of-a-kind amazing lady.  Check her out and be sure to follow Lis on Twitter.

Have you ever heard entrepreneurs saying things like the following?

“I don’t know fancy stuff like FTP.”

“I could never create videos.  That’s too hard.”

“I’m not good at writing.”

“I don’t understand social media. It’s complicated.”

“I’m a small fish in a big pond.  No one will ever notice me.”

“I can’t do anything technical.”

“I know I need to craft an irresistible freebie.  But I don’t have anything special to offer.”

“I can’t compete with the gurus.  They know everything.”

“I’m just a mom.  I don’t have any profitable skills.”

Yikes!!

Allow me to jump right up on my soapbox and set the record straight!

Every one of us knows how to do SOMETHING.

Just start THERE.

Rome wasn’t built in a day and neither was a website, a blog, or a business!

Being an entrepreneur means being willing to learn as you go and learn as you grow.

What advice would you give a newbie entrepreneur who thinks he or she is lacking in skills or talents?

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4 Ways to Identify Your Ideal Prospect

Your marketing messages should always be crafted and centered around “who” you serve and “how” you intend to serve them.

Today let’s focus on the “who”your ideal prospect.

To zero in on your ideal target audience …

You need to turn yourself into a prospect profiler!

4 Ways to Identify Your Ideal Prospect:


1.) GEOGRAPHICAL TARGETING – Specific locales (regions, counties, cities, communities)

2.) DEMOGRAPHIC TARGETING – Age, Gender, Marital Status, Occupation, Income, Education level

3.) PSYCHOLOGICAL TARGETING – Values, Fears, Desires, Goals

4.) ASSOCIATION TARGETING – Your ‘warm’ market (people you’ve met, know, or networked with)

Now let’s take it one step further and take a look at the …

Ideal Prospect Equation:


Physical description + Psychological description + Their problem + The Solution + Where to find them + How you will communicate with them

What steps have you taken to identify YOUR ideal prospect?

Can you add anything to what I’ve shared with you here?

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Blogs and Birdhouses Share the Same Goal

This week I was thinking about the purpose of blogging and the goals I have set for my business blog.

With the start up of a new year, I was contemplating some fresh, unique ways to make my blog work for me and some topics that would be appealing to my target audience.

At the time, I was sitting outside on my patio (It’s warm here in the winter).  I looked across the street and saw a neighbor’s birdhouse perched high atop a sturdy, square wooden post.

It suddenly dawned on me that blogs and birdhouses share the exact same goal.

Go ahead and say it.  I already know I’m a little “quirky”.  That’s okay.  That’s a big part of what makes me ME.

But think about it for a minute.

What’s the main goal for constructing a birdhouse?

And what’s the main goal for a blog?

They both need visitors!

No sense putting up a birdhouse if no birds come by to enjoy it.  And the same principle holds true for your blog.

So how do you get birds to land in a birdhouse and people to land on your blog?

Simple …

  • Create a pleasant, comfortable, interesting environment to hang around in
  • Provide lots of yummy treats
  • Consistently replenish the supply of food (for your blog – delicious content!)

Can you think of something unusual or eclectic your blog can be compared to? Just fill in the blank – “My blog is like …”

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Don’t Wait for Moses to Come Down from the Mountain with Your Niche Written on a Stone Tablet

For the long term success of your business, choosing the right niche is critical.

And figuring out what niche to focus on can be challenging, at first, and no one but you can make that all-important decision.

Even though you’ve undoubtedly read lots of stories about entrepreneurs running over to Clickbank and grabbing the hottest-selling products on dog training, for example, and making sales like crazy …

Is that the right niche for YOU?

Can you expect to experience that same kind of success over the long haul?

Most importantly …

Will you awaken every morning – inspired, enthused, and motivated- to pour hours, energy, and effort into a niche you’re not excited about?  And one you don’t really know anything about and have no firsthand experience?

I have my doubts.

Instead of focusing, solely and exclusively, on the dollar signs …

Zero in on a niche you’re passionate about!

You’ll have a much greater chance at long term success if you choose a niche:

1.) You enjoy researching

2.) You love writing about

3.) You have some firsthand knowledge and experience in

4.) Where the novelty won’t wear off a month or a week from now

5.) You feel comfortable and proud to share with others

Have you ever tried building a business in a niche that was dead wringer wrong for you?

What made you decide it simply wasn’t going to work?


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Do You Have an Indestructible Business?

You can go broke being successful (I mean literally, lose your shirt)

Even if you have plenty of clients and/or customers and lots of work coming in, spreading yourself too thin and not paying attention to the fundamentals can really take a toll on your ability to serve your target market and grow your business successfully.

Just being passionate and good at your craft won’t keep you in business.

Yes, you may be keeping your clients and customers very happy.  But are you sure you can always pay the bills?  And do you have any idea what will happen next year, next month, or even next week?

You can do an excellent job for those you serve but you can also undervalue your contribution to them.

You see where your genius lies but the “undervaluing” can result in: [Read more...]

A Confused Audience Won’t Take Action and You Won’t Make Sales

Today’s post is a sequel to “Twitter update – What Are You Cooking for Dinner Tonight?”

Consistent and Clear messaging across social media venues is what you want to aim for in your communications with your target audience.

Nothing breaks down trust and destroys credibility faster than being all over the map with messages that confuse your target market.  And once they get confused, they disappear!

To keep your prospects, clients, and customers from doing the disappearing act, you need to strike a “balance” of sharing relationship-building messages and messages that are promotional in nature.

Be a savvy social media marketer and use the 80/20 rule (or even the 90/10 rule!) when posting your messages.  The majority of what you share should be focused on relationship-building.

Thanks to my awesome mentor and colleague, Jessica Swanson, I’ve learned buckets full of tips and strategies to build lasting relationships with mompreneurs and moms who want to ditch the 9-5 and work from home.

Now it’s my turn to share them with you.

The best way to begin building a relationship with your target audience is to offer them your tantalizing freebie!

Here are 50 “free offer” ideas from my mentor to me to YOU: [Read more...]

Marketing Strengths of Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn

Even though volumes of information has been published and shared about social media marketing, are you still wondering “why” you should have a presence on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn?

And more importantly …

Are you still a bit fuzzy about the core marketing strengths of the Big 3?

Today’s post is going to be concise (My thought is that you already have a PLENTIFUL collection of tips, reports, e-courses, and e-books about social media).

Who doesn’t?! Unless you’ve been residing under a cabbage leaf, your inbox and your hard drive is over-stuffed with social media basics and marketing strategies.

Maybe I should hold a contest to see who’s storing up the MOST social media stuff! Would you be the winner? :-)

Marketing Strengths

Facebook:

  • One of the fastest growing social networks
  • Find people from every industry, age group, and demographic area
  • Great way to brand yourself and your products and/or services
  • Allows you to further relationships with prospects, customers, and potential customers or clients
  • Ideal place to start if you are new to social media

Twitter:

  • Fast and easy to use
  • Search feature allows you to find, not only people, but you can also search by subject to find your target audience
  • Can be used to drive traffic to your blog or website
  • Twitter profile is the easiest to create

LinkedIn:

  • Known for its use by professionals (business-to-business networking)
  • Great place to demonstrate your expertise
  • Join groups formed around specific ideas or industries (you can join up to 50 groups)
  • Allows you to connect with people in your niche both in your geographical location and from all over the world
  • Excellent venue for building your community and finding potential customers

Which list of strengths would best serve you and your online marketing business?


How To Reach Desperate Buyers

Before becoming an online marketer, the word, “Desperate”, would leave a bitter taste in my mouth.

It reminded me of moments in my life when I was …

Desperate for clear skin!

Or …

Desperate for money!

Or …

Desperate for a date to the prom!

(Never did get that date, by the way) :)

Now that I have some years of online marketing experience under my belt and a clear understanding of what it takes to be successful, “Desperate” has taken on a new meaning and stands in a much more positive and flattering light.

What it really means is “highly anxious”. People with throbbing problems, pressing issues, and insane drives (impulse buyers) are who you should target.

Marketing information to people who live with these types of problems is easy because the problem is clear, obvious, bothersome, and quite possibly embarrassing to the person who has the problem.

As long as you’re selling information to help people solve a desperate problem, they’re going to buy it.

If it seems like nobody wants to wait for results anymore, it’s because nobody wants to wait for results anymore.

When you’re trying to sell how-to information, you’ve got to jump through a bunch of fiery hoops.

How to plant tulip bulbs, how to polish your car, or how to craft your own Christmas ornaments, etc., aren’t “pressing” issues.

No one lays awake at night or paces the floor wondering or worrying about how to do any of these kinds of things.

Would you like to come up with a topic to write about (in most cases, in less than an hour) and learn how to reach desperate buyers?

Ordinary to us can be extraordinary to someone else who desperately needs the information.

Give Me Desperate Buyers Only was recommended to me by a well-respected professional copywriter I met about four years ago and this 174-page, power-packed e-book has earned my highest recommendation.

This is one e-book that won’t be forgotten or tossed aside!

Integrity vs Scarcity

Guest Post by Yvonne Jones

I recently read an article in the Wall Street Journal Sunday edition entitled “Sales Pitches You Can’t Resist – and Why?”  The first paragraph alluded to the fact that many shoppers head to the mall with good intentions, but retailers know how to get inside their brain and derail their good intentions.

The article mentioned some triggers and their appeal.  I selected just two:

1) “Our Big Sale Ends Tomorrow/Today/In a Few Hours!”  This is aimed at your survival instincts, and its appeal is that you want to grab what’s available or be left behind.

2) “Save $250! (New Price $500)” This is aimed at your price-sensitive side.  According to Lars Perner of the University of Southern California’s Marshall School of Business, you fall for it because the idea of big savings puts the deal at the center.  Your brain often perceives the actual price as more reasonable because of that big price difference.

The article made me think of those of us who market our business online, whether we are in the Internet Marketing niche or some other niche.  Do we consistently demonstrate integrity or do we feed on other’s scarcity mentality?

There are lots of marketers with tremendous integrity.  We know that if they announce a limited time offer with a deadline, they will adhere to that.  If they say a particular offer is limited to a certain number of copies, we can trust that will be the case.  I confirmed the truth of such an offer recently as there was a valuable PLR product I wanted to purchase and kept putting it off. When I finally got to the sales page they were sold out.

Many of us are on various e-mail lists and often receive warning notices of pending price increases or removal of a product or service after a certain date.  Some of these may be products or services that you genuinely want to take advantage of.

The challenge may be that some small business owners are operating their business on a budget, whereas others have a specific budget for how much they will spend on products or services in a given period.  How do you feel when you exceed your budget to make the purchase and find that weeks later the price remained unchanged?  Or the product or service that was going to be taken off the market is still there?  Do you feel cheated?  How do you feel about that marketer going forward?  It certainly erodes any trust you had in that person.

Relationships in business, and especially in our online business depends on the know, like, and trust factor.  Promoting a scarcity mentality for personal gain is hardly worth sacrificing your reputation as someone of integrity.

Has this ever happened to you and how did it make you feel?  What action, if any, did you take?

Yvonne says: I’m a Solo Entrepreneur who teaches Relationship Building and Marketing skills to entrepreneurs and small business owners by helping them to see the value in building and maintaining long-term relationships with their clients and customers.  I’ve recently begun actively working with work-at-home moms, other home-based entrepreneurs including Direct Sales consultants with the goal of helping them to cultivate an entrepreneur’s mindset and build their brand online.

You can follow Yvonne on Twitter at @YvonneAJones and visit her at Maintain A Success Circle.

Business Building Strategy – Smaller Is Better

You might suspect this post is about …

Chunking down your bigger projects into smaller, more manageable bite-size tasks for better organization and to help you stay on track.

Or …

Having a smaller number of words in your blog posts than most other bloggers doesn’t mean your message is any less powerful or has any less impact on your readers.

Or …

Instead of trying to accomplish some daunting, humongous goal – having a series of smaller goals leading up to that giant one is a more sensible approach.

But …

It’s none of the above. [Read more...]