Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Upgrade How You Provide Your Offerings and Why Those Offerings Are Employed to Gain Effectiveness

Upgrade How You Provide Your Offerings and Why Those Offerings Are Employed to Gain Effectiveness
Many leaders want to grow their customer or beneficiary
base. While almost all strive in this direction, few
succeed as much as they would like.

The approach that many take is to advertise more, offer
special price breaks, and send mail to potential users.
Those are all expensive and are easily offset by the
efforts of competitors.

You should instead be like Brer Rabbit who escaped Brer Fox
by complaining how much he didn't want to be put into the
briar patch: Go where competitors don't want to go but
where you can operate effectively, and you'll make enormous
progress.

Continuing business model improvement (upgrading the who,
what, when, why, where, how, and how much that are involved
in delivering for-profit offerings or nonprofit benefits)
can dramatically expand available resources or
profitability while growing an organization's ability to
serve its customers or beneficiaries. Here are some simple
examples of how the choice of "how" you operate and "why"
your offerings are used affect growth and cost performance.

How the Offering Is Provided

For-profit businesses should always be testing to see how
different ways of supplying an offering affect demand and
costs. Pizza parlors in college towns wouldn't sell nearly
as many pizzas if they didn't offer dorm delivery. Students
are willing to pay more to have a pizza delivered, so the
added cost doesn't hurt the business's volume. Enterprising
owners of such take-out pizzerias have been known to send
their drivers out stuffing menus under dormitory doors on
slow nights. Volume quickly picks up when the menus are
delivered.

Nonprofit organizations often find that demand increases
geometrically if the offering is provided in more
convenient ways. For instance, needy patients who live a
long way from hospitals seldom return for tests, even when
the tests are free, because the patients often have limited
access to and funds for transportation. Mobile clinics that
provide testing services in the evenings can increase the
quality and frequency of health care for those with the
most serious conditions at limited cost. Similarly, if food
distribution centers were willing to provide free home
delivery at recipient-selected times, few needy families
would fail to avail themselves of the service. For those
who are ill, such a service may be essential to receiving
the food. If volunteers are willing to use their own cars,
gasoline, and time to deliver the food, a nonprofit
organization can increase its reach greatly by coordinating
such improved accessibility.

Why the Offering Is Used

Adding new reasons to use an existing product or service
can provide an enormous business improvement. Our mothers
used Arm & Hammer Baking Soda in cooking when we were
young. We knew that good eating was ahead whenever one of
our moms took out her orange box. From the company's point
of view, moms couldn't bake often enough. But one teaspoon
of baking soda would produce eight dozen cookies. Church &
Dwight, which made this brand of baking soda, needed new
reasons why people should use their product. Someone
discovered that bicarbonate of soda also made a good air
freshener in a refrigerator. Suddenly, a family was using
as much of the product to deodorize its refrigerator for
six months as went into over 9,000 cookies. Revenues and
profits soared.

Literacy programs often provide free services to the poor.
Many such programs falter, however, when all they offer is
remedial reading aimed at helping the student read at a
fourth-grade level rather than a third-grade level. These
are adults, and they have limited need to add one year of
elementary school reading skill. Some programs overcome
this lack of relevance by letting prospective students
influence their curriculum to achieve some personal
purpose. Parents want to be able to help their children
with homework. Some readers want to learn how to fill out
job applications. Others need to know how to fill out forms
to apply for government benefits. Still others want to be
able to read the Bible. When the literacy programs are
customized in these ways to serve the student's purpose,
attendance improves and learning accelerates.

Copyright 2007 Donald W. Mitchell, All Rights Reserved


----------------------------------------------------
Donald Mitchell is chairman of Mitchell and Company, a
strategy and financial consulting firm in Weston, MA. He is
coauthor of six books including The 2,000 Percent Squared
Solution, The 2,000 Percent Solution, and The Ultimate
Competitive Advantage. You can find free tips for
accomplishing 20 times more by registering at:
====> http://www.2000percentsolution.com .

4 Key Niche Marketing Tips

4 Key Niche Marketing Tips
Many people are now turning to niche markets as they
realize that generalized marketing is quite expensive,
where niche marketing is cheaper and provides much better
results. This type of marketing, actually studies into how
certain customers decide to choose a certain service or
product. Then a niche marketer works to understand this
specific group and tailor make promotions to sell their
product. So, if you are involved in niche marketing no
doubt you can use some niche marketing tips to increase
your profit.

Tip #1 - Use the Language of Your Niche Market - There are
many great niche marketing tips; however, one of the most
important is to make sure that you use the language of your
niche market. When you are writing sales letters or web
content directed towards your niche market, you will need
to use their language. Using the language of your niche
market helps you to approach your market as a peer instead
of an outsider. If you can't speak their language, they
won't hear you, so keep the language true to the market.

Tip #2 - Have a Unique Selling Proposition - Having your
own unique selling proposition is another important niche
marketing tip that you'll need to use as well. Market
saturation is continuing to increase, which means that more
and more consumers are not becoming jaded. There are more
advertisements in the market and they are bright and loud,
which can cause ads to all start looking the same to the
consumers. To stand out among the rest of the marketers in
your niche, you'll need to have a very unique selling
proposition to draw customers.

Tip #3 - Research Your Consumer Base - If you are not
familiar with your consumer base, there is no way you can
successfully market to them. Another of the many important
niche marketing tips is to make sure that you research your
consumer base. You need to know everything you can about
the consumer base and you may want to learn about any
additional services that they want as well. This can help
you avoid stagnation if you can develop other products for
your niche market.

Tip #4 - Develop a Sub-Niche - Last of all, another helpful
niche marketing tip is to develop a sub-niche. Believe it
or not, developing a sub-niche can actually help you to
expand your consumer base. For example, while women are a
niche, a sub-niche could be women under the age of 30.

If you are involved in niche marketing today, you know how
profitable it can be; however, there is always some room
for improvement. Take these niche marketing tips and put
them to use so you can increase your profits and become an
even better niche marketer.


----------------------------------------------------
You can get more quality free information about finding
your own niche in the e-course "List Building in a Niche
Market". http://www.cyber-marketing411.com/niche11

Your Natural Marketing Style

Your Natural Marketing Style
Let me ask you a question...did you become a small business
owner to become a marketing expert? I know - dumb
question. But I ask it for a very good reason. You know I
didn't get into business for myself to become an expert
marketer either. But I quickly realized that this was what
it was going to take in order for me to have any chance of
falling into the small percentage of businesses that
survive that often-quoted five-year mark.

I mean the statistics are staggering! Depending on who you
talk to less than 10 % of small businesses can survive
staying in business for 5 years. What accounts for this?
I believe one of the biggest things is lack of marketing
success.

So I started my journey to becoming a master marketer by
reading lots of books, talking to people and attending
numerous seminars. Pretty soon I had a good overview of
marketing techniques for service professionals. But while
the marketing theory was good, it left me wondering how I
could make the theory work well for me and my unique
personality.

And then one day it dawned on me - I needed to discover
what I soon started calling my Natural Marketing
Style™. I had been dabbling in lot of different
marketing activities and I enjoyed some more than others.
I started to look for patterns and I soon figured out what
my Natural Marketing Style™ looked like.

What is your Natural Marketing Style™? You have one.
We all do. Some of us are lucky enough to have more than
one. To determine yours, sit down for a moment and look
back on all of the different marketing activities you've
tried in the past. Write down as many as you can.

Next, create a spreadsheet with 5 columns across the top.
You'll want to look at your comprehensive list and break
them down into one of these five categories... "loved it,"
"liked it," "neutral," "sort of disliked it" and "really
never want to do again."

After you have your list organized into columns, take a
look and see if any patterns start to emerge. What do the
marketing activities in the "love" and "like" columns have
in common?

Notice that you loved being a guest writer for someone
else's newsletter? Maybe your Natural Marketing
Style™ is that of a writer! If so, create a
marketing plan with writing as your primary strategy.

You'll have a lot more fun and a lot more success if you
create your marketing strategy based on your own Natural
Marketing Style™. So get started right away - you'll
be glad you did!


----------------------------------------------------
Kelly L. LeFevre, MSM, and Molly A. Luffy, MBA, authors of
the upcoming book Unleash Your Marketing Karma: How to
Build Your Business by Giving It Away, are Co-Founders of
the Business Building Roundtable. This free virtual
community helps service-based solo/micropreneurs create
powerful strategies and implement innovative techniques to
achieve their ultimate success and satisfaction. To learn
more visit http://www.BusinessBuildingRoundtable.com