Most people hate it. That’s because it means ‘there is a chance, however remote, that every marketing strategy you try will not work the first time’. In other words, it’s possible you’ll spend money without seeing any returns.
But consider this – you’ve probably been testing and
measuring all your business life. Remember the newspaper advertising you tried
that ‘didn’t work’, and the radio spots that ‘did OK’.
That’s all testing is… Testing what works and what
doesn’t…
The next step is to do it properly, here’s the five
steps to successfully working out what ‘works’ and what doesn’t…
1.
Start asking people where
they heard about you.
Start right NOW, immediately. If there’s one thing I
stress to business owners when coaching with them, it’s this – if you don’t
know what’s working and what’s not, you can’t possibly make informed decisions
and you’ll never know which ads to run. You may keep running an ad that never
brings a sale, and accidentally kill a good one.
Customers usually come from so many sources, it’s
impossible to judge how an ad is working on sales alone. You need to find out
for sure. Create a tally sheet, including the ways someone could hear about you
– newspaper ads, direct mail, fliers, phone directory, referrals, walk-by
traffic etc
Every time someone inquires about your business and/or buys from you, ask them this question – “By the
way, can I just ask where you heard about my business’.
Make a mark on your tally sheet in the relevant
column. Keep track, and ensure every member of your team does the same. At the
end of 14 or 28 days, tally up and get the figures.
Without this information you can't determine how much it costs you to buy a lead or buy a customer. Until you know this number you will continue to waste your money on poor marketing decisions
Now you can start making starter decisions…
2.
Prune, modify and increase.
The first thing to do is see what’s not working. If
you ad is getting a very low response (which means the profit margin from the
sales is not at least paying for the ad), kill it straight away.
Now you only have one option – improve your ad to
ensure you get a great response.
There’s a couple of things you can do to make the
task simpler.
First, go back over your past ads and think about how
well each one worked. Pull out the best couple and see if you can pick what
gave them their edge. Next, read a couple of books, or at least flick through
them. Last, look at what your competitors are doing. Do they have an ad, which
they can run every week? What can you learn from it?
Go through this process with each marketing piece
that you are currently using… Kill, examine, modify… Kill, examine, modify…
Remember – the true test of a marketing strategy is whether it pays for itself.
If you run an ad and it costs you $600 and makes you $1300 in profit, it’s a
good ad.
Also run through each of the strategies you know are
working in depth, examining why these are producing results and the others
aren’t. See if you can pick the one important attractive point about each. This
in itself will teach you a massive amount about your business.
Next, think of a way to use each strategy that is
working on a larger scale. If it’s
fliers, the answer is simple – drop twice as many fliers. That should bring
twice the sales. If it’s an ad, run it in more papers, or increase its size. If it’s in a phone directory, book a bigger space
next time.
But whatever you do, don’t meddle – just do the same
thing on a larger scale.
3.
Test and measure for another
two weeks.
Measure the leads with the new revised
strategies. Also compare this with how much you’re spending on marketing.
You’ll probably find you barely miss those dud
strategies and the ‘larger scale’ working strategies are paying out nicely
indeed. If it’s not, return to the
original size.
4.
Check your conversion.
Conversion is the number of leads that become
sales… So many times when analysing a business, I discover that poor marketing
is not the problem – it’s inadequate sales techniques. There are stacks of
businesses that have ample leads, but no skill to make them sales.
Be honest with yourself – how many leads do you
convert into sales? Is it possible to increase this ratio, even just a little?
… In almost every case, it is.
You just have to give the customer a reason to buy
from your business. Price is not the only reason a customer spends with your
business.
What if the salesperson at the more expensive shop actually took an
interest in your needs? And what if they were that little bit friendlier? And
what if they were willing to back their product with a guarantee? And what if
they offered free delivery? All of these ‘what ifs’ add up, and can tip the
sale your way.
5.
Consolidate.
Leave it for a month or so, just working on
converting the supply of leads you have. A better conversion technique, plus
more leads from bigger scale successful marketing strategies should give your
business a boost.
6.
Branch out.
Remember all those marketing strategies you examined
and modified? Now is the time to pull them out of the drawer, and give them a
run.
Do one at a time, and track the result meticulously.
Note down exactly how many leads it brings you, and how many of those turn into
sales. Compare that with the marketing cost, and judge whether it has been a
good strategy.
If so, add it to your list of ongoing strategies. If
not, try it again – testing a different headline, medium, offer, look etc… If
it doesn’t work again, give it another try…
Very soon, you’ll develop a
collection of marketing strategies that work, and weed out all the costly ones.
Now that’s a business success formula!
Is Your Company's Marketing Awesome or Lame?
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Is Your Company's Marketing Awesome or Lame?
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ReplyDeleteI can't agree more or say enough about the importance of testing and measuring all that you do in business. Especially in marketing. Unfortunately most small businesses neglect this all together. You your readers don't
ReplyDelete