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An article on marketing by Patricia Fripp, CSP, CPAE
If you want your marketing to make money for you, focus
on your customers' feelings and beliefs. Unless you can
convince them that you understand them and their problems
-- that you're empathetic -- they're probably not going to buy
from you.
The headline on one of my marketing pieces says, "Hiring a
speaker is an awesome responsibility." It is. These days, if
you hire the wrong speaker in a corporate job, you could end
up in severe trouble. Many professional speakers focus their
marketing on themselves -- how good they are, how
successful. It works, but readers don't get the message that
the speaker really knows who they are and can fill their
needs. Your customers need to believe that you know,
understand, and care about them.
There's a good way to do this when you're writing or creating
your marketing piece.
1. Make a list of the prospects' biggest problems from their
point of view. (If you don't know what they are, ask them!)
2. Decide how these problems make your prospects feel.
Tell a story about someone experiencing the same problem.
What does this encounter look like, sound like, smell like?
What external and internal forces cause these feelings and
sensations? Be really creative in putting yourself in the
prospects' shoes.
3. Address those feelings. Write about your
prospects' feelings and reactions. Prove to them that you
understand and care. Then prove that you can solve the problem.
Why be empathetic? When you just relate the facts -- "We
have a store at such-and-such location" -- "We sell a
product that does this and that" -- "We're consultants in
this field" -- you're implying that you're similar to
everyone else. You make yourself an ordinary commodity. Do
you know what people do with commodities? They try to get
the lowest price.
So, when you market yourself, capitalize on your unique
ability to understand and solve problems. It will greatly
increase your client base and their loyalty to you. As a
side benefit, it will also help you get paid what you're
worth. As noted businessman Nido Qubein says, "When you
solve the problems that keep CEOs awake at night, they never
ask you what you charge."
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Patricia Fripp is an executive speech coach, sales presentation skills trainer, and award-winning keynote speaker.
What do poor sales presentations really cost? What impressions are your sales presentations making? Patricia Fripp provides sales presentation skills training to sales teams and individuals that gets results.
Improve your sales presentation skills with Patricia Fripp's CDs, DVDs, books, and downloads.
Check out Fripp's The Executive Speech Coach blog and learn more about sales presentation skills.
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