Main Menu
Articles Home
Most Popular Articles
Top Authors
Submit Articles
Submission Guidelines
Link to Us
Bookmark
Contact Us

Articles Categories
  ·  Branding
  ·  Database Marketing
  ·  Direct Mail
  ·  Joint Ventures
  ·  Lead Generation
  ·  Market Research
  ·  Public Relations
  ·  Tools and Resources
 


Partners
 
Home / Marketing / Public Relations

How to Remove Barriers To The Sale

By:Bernadette Doyle


Copyright 2006 Bernadette Doyle



When a client is thinking about hiring you, two major questions in their mind are: ‘Can this person deliver what they say they can deliver?’ and ‘Will their approach work in our particular business?’ The trouble is no client can really answer these questions until after they have hired you. And that’s the catch 22. This is a major stumbling block which can delay if not totally grind the sales process to a halt.



You can probably think of situations with your own prospects where this is the case. It’s a frustrating stalemate.



Yet for professional service providers, there is a way out of this frustrating conundrum. Promoting your own training courses or seminars can help you avoid this stumbling block because it gives your prospective clients a chance to sample you at low cost and risk for both parties.



Here’s how it works. Think about the REAL reasons why people hire you. For example, if you are a marketing consultant, people aren’t hiring you because they want a consultant: they want a marketing system that gets results! If you are a sales trainer, they aren’t hiring you just for training, they want to increase sales. If you are an accountant, chances are they want to lower their tax bill.



If you can identify the core ‘reason why’, you could then offer a seminar built around that topic eg ‘How to Use Low Cost Marketing Techniques to Attract an Avalanche of New Clients’ or ‘How to Double Sales Within the Next 90 Days’ of ‘How to Reduce Your Next Tax Bill: Secrets That The Government Doesn’t Want You to Know’.



Don’t offer a FREE seminar. Your knowledge is valuable and is worth paying for. You will attract better quality prospects and serious buyers if you charge a fee. Now you have something that you can offer to prospective clients, that gives them a chance to sample your approach, and also get to know you better. The beauty is: instead of you having to invest your precious time in sales meetings, they’re paying for the privilege!



So you get positive cash-flow and a chance to demonstrate your expertise and build your relationship with potential clients. They get immediate solutions to their most pressing problems at lower cost and financial risk. Everybody wins!



And, if you structure your event well, a good percentage of attendees will want more. They will want your expertise, hands on help, or your expert guidance as they implement your ideas, and now having had a chance to see what you can offer, they will be more than willing to pay.



So running your own events will not only bring in positive cash flow but can also give you a chance to showcase your expertise and have clients ‘sample’ your approach before they commit to hiring you and thus remove a major barrier to the sale.



Digg del.icio.us Blink Stumble Spurl Reddit Netscape Furl

Article keywords: freelance professional services, marketing a small business, marketing small business, professional services marketing, seminar marketing

Article Source: http://www.articles2k.com

Bernadette Doyle helps people to market seminars, workshops and training courses. She can show you how to make as much as £4,000 a day promoting your own events. For her free report on how to ensure your event is a sell out success go to www.howtomarketyourworkshop.com







Top Public Relations Articles
  • 2). Finding the Right Equipment Supplier Paramount to Success in the Restaurant Industry  By : Kingston Amadan
    Most companies with any degree of overhead know that finding the right supplier of products necessary to run their business is of the utmost importance. For most businesses, it can mean a substantial savings and reduce the headaches often associated with searching for a reliable equipment dealer. For restaurants, however, finding the right equipment supplier can mean the difference between success and failure in the industry.

  • 4). How to have lasting relationship with clients?  By : CD Mohatta
    Clients are the most precious assets for a business. Without clients, there can be no business. With poor quality of clients, the business will be poor and if you manage to get very good clients and retain their loyalty, your business will only go up and up. This all sounds very exciting. But it is not easy to get very good clients and all the more difficult to retain them.

  • 5). Public Relations - and what it means for your Franchise  By : Walter Raleigh
    The First Rule for building a Successful Franchise Business is to establish a great PR operation. You need to build a good reputation and as quickly as possible. You have to understand the value and the overwhelming benefits that flow from having an impeccable, transparent and reliable reputation so make this a major goal, as the continued success of your franchise business depends on it.

  • 6). Change Your Tone - Media Coverage Shouldn't Be Toned By Software  By : Chris Morrison
    The world of PR is benefiting from dramatic changes in the way media coverage is being delivered electronically to your computer desktop or PDA of choice. Perhaps the nuisance of ink on your fingers is being replaced by a bad case of "BlackBerry thumb" -- but nevertheless getting your media coverage electronically has never been easier or more mobile.

  • 7). What is Human Resources Consulting?  By : Maureen Cook
    Human Resources: sounds depersonalizing, doesn't it, to describe workers in this way? It smacks of older attitudes to the workforce which are now seen as increasingly outdated.

  • 8). Protection from Protectors  By : James Hayes
    This article discusses the vulnerabilities and security holes introduced by security suites, the very programs that are supposed to protect a PC, not make it more vulnerable!


New Public Relations Articles
  • 1). Guerrilla Marketing  By : Jaci Rae
    How you can use guerrilla marketing, tips, tricks and ideas that will help you make money and sell online.

  • 2). Your Expertise is Boring!  By : David Avrin
    I see your lips moving, but all I hear is “Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.” I know it’s not what you want to hear, but quite simply, if you are a speaker, author, consultant or other "expert" I see being interviewed by the news media, your expertise just isn’t very interesting. Information is a dime-a-dozen and yours is no different. So in this age of round-the-clock, on-demand, blue tooth, on line, high def.

  • 3). One of America's brightest leaders and thinkers  By : eyelogic
    Marshawn Evans, J.D., has garnered a reputation as an inspiring, articulate and intelligent orator. In the same mode as multitalented trailblazing women such as Oprah Winfrey, Katie Couric, Tyra Banks and Kimora Lee Simmons, Marshawn is a: media personality, distinguished entrepreneur, passionate youth advocate, inspirational speaker and up-and-coming litigator.

  • 4). Are You Ignoring Your Customers' Requests?  By : Willie Crawford
    Copyright 2006 Willie Crawford Many Internet marketing experts will tell you that the best way to find out what your customers want from you is to ask them. While that may be true, I believe that an even more accurate way is to just listen to what they're telling you, and to what they're asking you for. To illustrate my point, I'll use a couple of examples from one of my own niches.

  • 5). Send Business greeting card this holiday season  By : thomsonchemmanoor
    The holiday season is around the season. There are lots of cards and gifts being exchanged, with lots of money being spent in the air. This is the season to be jolly, and also to make others jolly through greeting cards and phone calls. When the holiday season comes, one starts deciding on whom to send business greeting cards to, and on whom not to send cards to.

  • 6). How to Create a Better News Release  By : Robert F. Abbott
    Many organizations and businesses want media coverage of their activities, and at the same time many newsrooms are looking for local (or even national and international) topics to cover. If you're belong to an organization that wants coverage, you can increase the odds of getting it by following a few simple news release (or press release) conventions.

  • 7). Public Relations - and what it means for your Franchise  By : Walter Raleigh
    The First Rule for building a Successful Franchise Business is to establish a great PR operation. You need to build a good reputation and as quickly as possible. You have to understand the value and the overwhelming benefits that flow from having an impeccable, transparent and reliable reputation so make this a major goal, as the continued success of your franchise business depends on it.

  • 8). How to Remove Barriers To The Sale  By : Bernadette Doyle
    Copyright 2006 Bernadette Doyle When a client is thinking about hiring you, two major questions in their mind are: ‘Can this person deliver what they say they can deliver?’ and ‘Will their approach work in our particular business?’ The trouble is no client can really answer these questions until after they have hired you. And that’s the catch 22. This is a major stumbling block which can delay if not totally grind the sales process to a halt.

  • 9). Public Relations Strategies For Manufacturers and Industrial Suppliers  By : Conrad Bailey
    By Conrad Bailey What you are about to read here is not what you would expect to learn about marketing industrial products via public relations, or what you would normally find from other PR sources. The reason is because the majority of public relations articles you'll find online are nothing more than hidden sales pitches from PR firms that offer advice based on what's best for their agency - and not the client.

  • 10). Communication & Corporate Social Responsibility  By : Robert F. Abbott
    In the past few years, the anti-corporate movement (including those opposed to globalization) has gained a bit of steam. What many people in the movement promote now is called Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), the idea that corporations should be responsible to all of society and the environment, as well as to shareholders. It's a shame they've gained momentum.



 


© 2006 articles2k.com - Privacy Policy