The Nine Great Lies of Sales & Marketing – Part 4

Lie #4:

‘Prove to your customer that you’re willing to work harder, drive more miles, and bend over further than everyone else to earn his business.’

~~~

Kevin,

This one’s pretty subtle.  At first glance it seems like foolishness to say that anything less than fantastic customer service is going to cut it in today’s marketplace.

But here’s the thing:  Most sales people try to communicate this way too soon, in the process of being way too eager to win the customer’s business.

So what happens is, you’re chasing the guy, saying ‘Call me any time, day or night, page me, here’s my home phone number.

‘Heck, I’ll even jump out of bed and come and

see you if I’m right in the middle of making

love to my wife, because man, lemme tell ya, I’m eager to win your business!!’

Of course customers know that after the salesman has made every conceivable promise to win their business, they still end up dealing with a bunch of apathetic yo-yos in customer service or tech support, and the project will STILL probably be late anyway – regardless of how eager the sales person is.

That’s why your enthusiasm doesn’t help you.

Here’s a great way to fix the problem:

1) Don’t act so darn hungry to get the guy’s business.  Your customer service and tech support people ARE busy, and they don’t have time to hold the hands of problem customers.

Don’t be afraid to tell your prospects that they have to *qualify* to do business with you.  It’s counter intuitive, but when the customer finds out that you’re not drooling all over yourself to get his purchase order, he’s going to respect you more.

2) *Guarantee* results to the customer – with teeth.  Guarantee on-time delivery, specific levels of performance, with negative consequences for YOUR company if it doesn’t deliver the goods.  You do not have to promise people

the moon!   You just have to keep the promises

you DO make.

Now this requires support from the president of the company on down.  And most companies don’t like to guarantee anything.  (When push comes to shove, you still have to deliver results anyway, right?  Giving a guarantee often just means clearly stating what’s already

true.)

And if you aren’t willing to guarantee anything, why the heck not?  Why should your customers take all the risk after they’ve heard a bunch of empty promises?

Even a modest guarantee can enormously empower your sales message.  Define what you can and can’t deliver, go to the mat to keep your promises, and draw the line right there.  Customers will be far more responsive and you won’t appear desperate.

People are cynical, and they’ll only believe what you can prove.  Here’s an article on how to erase that cynicism and earn more trust than your competitors:

http://www.perrymarshall.com/marketing/19.htm

By the way, here’s my guarantee:

“If you purchase my marketing system toolkit, and you do not put at least $10,000 into your bank account that you know you wouldn’t have gotten without it, then all you have to do is prove to me that you did ONE measly thing in that toolkit — and I’ll give you your money back, every penny.”

http://www.perrymarshall.com/inabox.htm

When you seamlessly integrate bold

sales messages and meaningful guarantees with the other ingredients of my system, the results are exciting.

Tomorrow I’ll attack Lie #5:

‘You have to pay your dues now, but in only 2-3 years you’ll have enough customers and referrals that you won’t have to cold prospect hardly at all.’

Best of Success,

Perry Marshall

http://www.perrymarshall.com/renaissance

Terry Petrovick Says it Well–Avoid Social Media Quicksand!!!

My friend Terry has posted an incredible article on his blog regarding Social Media and what not to do.

A must read– http://terrypetrovick.com/internetmarketing/social-media/are-you-stuck-in-social-media-quicksand/

Be Blessed,

Kevin D. Robinson

The Nine Great Lies of Sales & Marketing – Part 3 ~~~

Perry Marshall has some time and money saving knowledge…Here is number 3 incase you missed it:

Lie #3:

‘You’ve just got to run some ads and get your name out there.’

~~~

Dear Kevin,

This one costs companies BILLIONS of dollars.

It was also one of the key causes of the DOT COM disaster that tanked the stock market in 2000.

Advertising is a crucial ingredient, yet it actually works against many companies.  But when it works in your favor, amazing things can happen.

All advertising MUST do one of two things:

1)  Generate Sales or 2)  Generate Sales Leads.

And do so in a measurable, quantifiable way.

If you do either of those things, you’ll have no problem ‘getting your name out there’

and you’ll also make money in the process.

But if you simply attempt to get your name out there, it’s very likely that you won’t generate sales OR sales leads.

Worse yet, if you hire an ad agency, your ads will usually be written by some English major who’s never had a sales job in his life (a colossal mistake, since advertising and selling two sides of the same coin) and the agency account rep will try to win you over with a song and dance about winning awards.

Here’s an ugly truth: Ads that win awards rarely generate sales.  And ads that sell rarely win awards.

Remember the Talking Sock in the PETS.COM superbowl commercial?  It was cute and memorable, but it didn’t save those guys from the Dot Com Boneyard.

Dead Dot Coms Don’t Lie.

People don’t expect nearly enough from their advertising, and they don’t hold it accountable for results.  So they waste millions of dollars…

then they start pounding their sales people for orders on the 26th of every month.

Most companies also try to make their advertising do too much.  Let me explain.

When you’re generating sales leads, you must remember that all you’re really trying to do is get people to raise their hands and identify themselves as someone who has a problem – and tell you who they are.

Anything beyond that dilutes the effectiveness of your ad.

So don’t make the mistake of telling them too much.  The purpose of pure lead generation advertising is NOT for you to tell them all about yourself – not in the first step anyway.

The purpose is for them to tell you who they are.

When you do this correctly, it’s simple, elegant, and outrageously effective.  And most importantly, nobody feels like you’re chasing them.

Oh, and one more thing:  Everything you say in advertising must be very, very specific, including what you do and who you do it for.

If you’re busy being all things to all people–if you’ve got a huge list of things that you can do, you’re probably not going to sell anything to anybody.

You must define a niche for yourself that’s reasonably unique.

In fact even if you don’t have a niche, you need to invent one where it did not exist before.

Over a period of five years, I perfected a formula for generating sales leads this way, and I would never, ever consider going back to the old-fashioned formula for advertising.

Here’s an article about what’s so desperately wrong with most business-to-business advertising, and what to do about it:

http://perrymarshall.com/marketing/b2b_marketing.pdf

Tomorrow I’ll attack Lie #4:

‘Prove to your customer that you’re willing to work harder, drive more miles, and bend over further than everyone else to earn his business.’

Talk to you soon,

Perry Marshall

http://www.perrymarshall.com/renaissance/