3 Lessons of marketing deployment

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I put together a short list of things I need to remind myself from time to time. These are just a couple of examples that make business, marketing and products all the more better when done right.

1. Marketing is made much easier with a product.

So many times people jump the gun on marketing and forget to develop a good product in an attempt to cash in on those marketing dollars. Marketing and products go hand-in-hand. To have a successful campaign in affiliate marketing, the local mom and pop store, selling shoes or whatever the case might be requires a balance between product and placement.

I know this seems very logical, but I know from my own experience that I can get very excited about things and tend to overlook some of the small details. This is when having a plan of attack and sticking to it helps. If you develop a worth-while product that people truly can use, the marketing can be much easier provided there is synergy. Develop a plan and think things through before acting them out. In the end you will save a lot of time and energy.

2. Not all products have to be useful, but the marketing has to be truthful.

People sell things all the time that no one has a use for, but they are fun, quirky, silly, bizarre, colorful, you name it. As long as the marketing that surrounds that product is telling the truth, then there is no issue with how or what is being sold. On the flip side of the coin, you can’t make people believe your product does something it doesn’t (not ethically at least).

It goes without saying that people will buy anything they latch onto at any given time. I have a friend who still buys Hot Wheels at a drop of a hat. He likes to collect Hot Wheels and views them as a neat way to splurge. But if a product is misrepresenting itself or claims to do things that it can’t, word will get around eventually that either the product or the creator cannot be trusted.

3. Market to the talkers

People in general love to talk, especially about things that have captivated their attention, are unique, highly useful and so on. People will also talk about things they didn’t like or find useful. How many times have you been in the store contemplating which item you are going to buy when a stranger out of nowhere appears and recommends one product over the other? I am sure this happens to me or someone next to me at least once a month. You want to get your product in the hands of the people like that who are doing the talking.

If your product / service is good, they will be sure to let you know also the reverse is true as well. Then it is a matter of you enabling them to talk and share with others about your product or finding a way to channel that input into bettering the product. Yes, that is correct, even bad comments and remarks are a good thing. This probably explains why software always has a never version or release. Could you imagine if we were all still running Windows 98?

I recently saw an ad on TV about some Microsoft experiment that was letting people try Microsoft’s newest operating system Vista under a different name. Then after all of the good comments and ooohs and awwws they told the participants it was Vista all along. I have to admit I was one of the ones who refused to switch to Vista until hell froze over. After being forced to use it I don’t have any notable complaints other than being on a learning curve. I am sure in the end I will adapt to the software and the software will adapt to me.

Anyways the list can go on and on forever, but ultimately it is up to you as a marketer and producer to establish what your baseline for service and quality will be.

7 Tips for Building Better Business Relationships

This guest post on building better business relationships is by Chelle of itmightbelove.com. If you haven’t visited her blog I would recommend doing so you wont regret it. You can also go to the Guest Posters page and read up on her Bio and see her other links.

One of the things I write frequently about on itmightbelove is building solid relationships. What many people probably don’t realize is that many of the techniques I share on IMBL for dating are actually successful networking and business marketing strategies I’ve picked up through my experience working in the real estate industry.

I started out in real estate thinking typical marketing strategies would help me sell houses: putting ads in the paper, sending direct mail, cold calling…after a few months of failure I realized these things don’t sell houses or gain clients effectively (I could spend $200 on mailers with zero return!). Meanwhile, the breakfast club I met with once a month started bringing me regular customers for the price of a cup of coffee.

It didn’t take me long before I stopped advertising completely and decided to solely focus on building business relationships with the people I met instead. It can take a few months before you start seeing results with this unique marketing strategy – but it will drastically improve your marketing efforts if you keep in mind these tips below:

Start off Small:

You only have to meet 3-4 new people every day for a month and follow up with them before you have over 100 new people referring business to you. It isn’t about the quantity – it’s about the quality. You’re looking for people who like to communicate, may have their own business needs to share with you, and are open minded to possibility. Do this consistently for a few months, and soon you’ll be networking with more people than you can keep track of.

Join Local Organizations:

Your chamber of commerce, nonprofit groups or clubs with similar interests as you are all good places to start. You can volunteer for a good cause, be active in your community or even resort to knocking on doors. If there’s not a group near you – start one.

Be Personable Online:

With blog directories, forums and hundreds of social networking sites, it’s easier to reach out to people online than ever before. But before you start adding friends with wild abandon in all of these places, take some time to send personalized messages and leave thoughtful comments first. Sending copy and pasted messages will turn a lot of people off or worse, they’ll call you a spammer and ban you from the site.

Be Consistent:

You have to regularly follow up with someone in order to build a solid relationship. If you meet someone, make it a point to stay in touch with them every few weeks. Ask them how they are and what they’re doing – they’ll naturally ask the same of you. Visit their blog regularly and set up a system to remind you to stay in touch with them.

Provide Exceptional Service:

Customer service is a dying art. It doesn’t matter where I go anymore – the service is just terrible. When I do meet someone who actually takes time to listen or help, it leaves a long lasting impression. Don’t get so tied up in rules or fighting over a few dollars that it causes you to lose business.

Create a Referral Program:

Once you have business relationships and loyal customers established you can reward those who send more business your way. Offering things like gift cards after a sale, future discounts or other rewards will make people feel appreciated anytime they send you business.

Show Some Pride:

If you’re not confident in your business or stand behind it, nobody else is going to either. Everyone you know and meet should be aware of what you do. Add a signature line to your outgoing emails, hand out business cards (hint: if it’s plastic they will be less likely to lose it/throw it away) and routinely talk about what you do in a positive manner.

Learning to build solid business relationships takes time. You won’t have instant success. But if you do these things you will find within a few months that marketing suddenly became a lot easier and business is growing. More importantly, your clients and others you work with will come to respect and trust you.

Sunday’s Random Rants 8-3

Whats new at the Unconventional Marketing Blog?

Well last week I did a featured series for a blogger appreciation week, where I made mention of those who wanted to be recognized. I believe I got everyone. If you slipped through, send me a message and I will make up for it. Here are the posts:

Overall I feel it went very well and I really enjoyed talking and sharing some of my reader’s blogs with the rest of my readers. From time to time I really like to give back and make a mention the best I can for those who help support my blog. I wish I could shower you with lavish prizes and tons of cash but not quite yet ;).

Guest Posters

I have offered up guest posting in the past and have not received much attention until out of the blue Shaun Connell stepped up to the plate and shared his thoughts on Google Adsense. I would like to thank Shaun and welcome him to guest post anytime.

Also, you might have noticed a new guest poster page at the top of the blog. To encourage some more guest posting and share a little more about those who do guest posts, I created a page to show off a mug shot and brief bio for all to see. Shaun is lonely on that page and is looking for some more company. If you are interested, feel free to use the contact page to let me know of your interest to join Shaun.

Goals

I am a big fan of goals for both this blog and my personal life, and this month was a great month for goals on this blog.

Here were my goals:

Page Views : 70,000
Alexa: under 125,000
Technorati Rank: 30,000
Technorati Authority: 200
RSS Subscribers : 250

Here is what I got:

Page Views : 106,953 Unique Visits 53,000
Alexa: under 122,000
Technorati Rank: 26,138
Technorati Authority: 193 (just missed)
RSS Subscribers : 308 (last day of the month)

As you can see, I made all but one of my goals of the month with which I am really pleased. I didn’t meet all my goals in the last two months and so I did not set July goals as out of reach as the others. I also was not anticipating all of the new subscribers to the blog but would like to welcome all of you. Seeing that I just missed the Technorati goal by a few, if you would like to add my blog to your favorites to help me meet my goal, I would be eternally grateful. Heres the link.

Four blogs worth checking out

This is the fifth installment of the Blogger appreciation week, found here. Blogger appreciation week was designed for me to give back to those who have contributed to this blog through many intellectually stimulating conversations.

That’s Great PR

I met Justin, the creator of That’s Great PR, recently online while exchanging blog comments. He has recently embarked on his journey to build up a blog to go along with the PR group he works with. I see some great potential in his writing and really enjoy watching new bloggers try their hand at it. One of the most important things I noticed about his writing and with his subject is the passion that is prevalent in it. Passion online will carry you through the times of uncertainty and to continuing to write when it all seems as if it is for nothing. Kudos, Justin.

What I like the most:

I like the coverage of different topics that is presented and how nicely Justin ties it into his primary subject, PR (press releases).

Quick Point:

I know Justin has a lot of PR experience and insight. As a person from the outside looking in, I would love to see PR marketing campaigns and the best ways to plan a PR marketing strategy for the absolute best results. ( One example here) I know he has the knowledge to share.

Down On Our Luck

Brenda Carter, the author and founder of Down On Our Luck has appropriately named the blog so. She set out to have an outlet to the world in which she could share her life experiences and day-to-day struggles. Don’t look now but if you read some of her posts about switching over to a new server and upgrading Wordpress at the same time, you will think the blog was appropriately named (remember to always back up your blog before doing anything remotely major).

What I like the most:

Brenda is an open book with her life, troubles and experiences. In an online world where it is easy to hide behind avatars and fake names, that is something to be desired. If you have the time and want to learn about her and her husband Q, I would read through her “my story” tagged posts.

Quick Point:

I know that her goal is to interact, share and talk with others who are facing some of the same or similar problems she has gone through. I recommend a weekly question-and-answer series with readers. My girlfriend does a similar thing with her readers and has gotten a good response over a short time period.

It Might Be Love

Everybody needs a little love from time to time and you’ll find it at It Might Be Love. Chelle has collected quite a montage of love-related pieces that cover just about every angle except the kind not allowed at work. I have found some really funny posts on her site that are totally worth sharing, but instead of listing all I will give you a couple of my favorites and let you discover the rest.

What I like the most:

I love the vast quantity of posts and articles written. With a subject that can be as broad as ever, she has put together a great collection to covering many areas.

Quick Point:

I think some passionate colors intermixed throughout the blog would really draw the reader in, almost as if setting the mood for the subject at hand. I also grew up in a house with no white walls anywhere, blame my mom :)

The Blue Workhorse

The Blue Workhorse is a collection of sports writers (6 by my count) who have come together to share in a subject they all love. My favorite stat on the About page is the combined 100 years in sports. I would expect to find nothing less than a lot of good stats on this blog. If for some reason you don’t like sports, I bet you could still find their posts full of humorous writings. I am also sure their hands will be pretty full in about a week with the Olympics.

What I like the most:

a group of writers are working together to share about the subject they all like. I am envious of the collaboration they have in building their blog.

Quick Point:

I would like to see some rugby discussion or updates. My girlfriend and I have played rugby for a number of years and really enjoy the sport. If not rugby, the second sport I wish you to discussion is Jai-Alai. Well…, because that would be cool.

The MLM’s best friend, John Leonard

This is the third installment of the Blogger appreciation week, found here.

I don’t know much about John Leonard of Master Networker’s MLM and Internet Marketing Blog for Professional Entrepreneurs other than what I have seen over the past two days checking out his blog. But I do know one thing for sure, he is a seller. Just combing through a few of his posts, I am almost tempted to sign up for some multi-level marketing programs. From a marketing standpoint, I should steal incorporate some of his techniques into my own blog.

John uses a lot of eye candy (words in different colors or in bold, not risky photos) to emphasize key phases and draw your attention to specific areas. Within the descriptions of products or different multi-level marketing programs, he is sure to state the credibility of the originator as well as the pros and some cons.

What I like the most:

The diversity of information on various different mlm programs, tips and tricks. He has some good info on building up a list here.

Quick point:

I would like to see some more success and failure stories. I know with mlm, the potential to fail is pretty high from time and time, and I think sharing those experiences could be very beneficial to anyone who is interested in a particular mlm program.