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The Quintessential Survival Guide in the Corporate Quagmire! | |
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Six Honest Business Friends - They Guide Me In All I Do
SIX "HONEST BUSINESS FRIENDS" - THEY GUIDE ME IN ALL I DO I keep six honest serving-men (They taught me all I knew); Their names are What and Why and When And How and Where and Who. A few days ago I posted a very simple question on an Internet Marketing Forum. I knew I would kick myself when I heard the answer. And I did. DNO - "Do Not Open". Obvious really. What I hadn't expected was to be flamed for being stupid by an, allegedly, 12 year old MENSA member. While I am old enough and thick skinned enough to cope with his response it did cause me to reflect on the nature of learning and Kipling's words. Words that still provide the basis of my business philosophy today. i.e. If you don't know, ask. So I got to thinking. Is there a modern business equivalent to Kipling's six honest serving-men? To be fair, Kipling is a bit of a hard act to follow. But thats not going to stop me? KIPLING UPDATED: THE SIX MOST POWERFUL BUSINESS ACRONYMS OF ALL TIME Here we go - 6 acronyms that have the capactity to transform any business. SWOT Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats - the most famous business acronym of all time. SWOT provides a great framework for brainstorming sessions. Done honestly and openly your SWOT analysis holds a mirror up to your business that highlights just what you do well and can exploit, and what you dont do well and which your competitors can exploit. To get started take each term in turn and answer the following questions: Strengths: - What are your businesses core strengths? - What are you really good at? - What makes you stand out from your competitors? - What proprietary tools, technology or process do you have? - What do our competitors see as our strengths? - What do our customers see as our strengths? Weaknesses: - What dont you do well? - What do you want to improve? - Where do you lose out to your competitors? - What dont your customers like about you? Opportunities: - What changes are taking place in your business environment Social, Technological, Economic, Political, Legal, Environmental (STEPLE - another acronym snuck in there)? - What do customers want that you could deliver? - What are your competitors weaknesses? - How else could you exploit your strengths? Threats: - What is your competition doing? - Do you have bad debt or cash-flow problems? - Could any of your weaknesses seriously threaten your business? - Could any of those STEPLE factors threaten your business? Use these questions to get started. Remember, you are meant to be brainstorming - anything goes. Your SWOT is the starting point. Your real challenge is to use your SWOT to develop a strategy and plans that you can pursue to turn your weaknesses into strengths, your threats into opportunities, and to maximise on the opportunities that are presented. SMART If there is one key to turning busy, ineffectual organisations into models of streamlined efficiency then this is it. Probably as well known as SWOT, SMART turns goals, objectives and tasks into concrete deliverables. More accurately SMART ought to be SMARRRT. There are at least three equally valid definitions for the R. OK, the 10 second introduction to working smarter: SPECIFIC: Be completely clear on the outcome expected of the goal, objective or task MEASURABLE: Phrase the statement of what is to be achieved so that the achievement of that outcome can be clearly measured. ACHIEVABLE: The idea is to clarify and motivate. There is nothing more demoralising than carefully constructed, but utterly impossible, goals. REALISTIC: Given your current situation: is your goal realistic? RELEVANT: Is this specific task, or goal relevant to the overall aims of the company or plan? RESOURCED: Are the relevant time, people, facilities and equipment available to deliver the desired outcome? TIME BOUND: Make sure there is a claim time limit on the completion of the activity. Properly applied, SMART transforms your business. WIIFM "Whats In It For Me?" WIIFM should be at the top of your thoughts whenever you think about your prospects or customers. But is has nothing to do with you at all. To get to the me you must put yourself in your ideal customers position. Think like that customer. Try to walk a mile (or several) in their shoes. Ask yourself : - What problems plague their lives? - What are they afraid of? - What are they angry about? - Who are they angry with? Stay in your customers shoes. Imagine someone is trying to sell you your own product or service. Ask yourself (repeatedly) - Whats In It For Me? How does it solve my problems? How does it make my life better? These are the benefits your product or service must deliver to your customer. You should apply this simple principle to every piece of sales and marketing material you use. Does it call out to what your customers really want? Is it written in terms of your customers viewpoint? Does it promote the benefits? In short does it tell me - your customer - Whats In It For Me? AIDA No, not the Opera. Attention, Interest, Desire, Action. AIDA has been in use in advertising for over 100 years. It is just as valid today for use on the web as it is for crafting sales letters, brochures, radio broadcasts, your elevator pitch.... In fact, just about any marketing pitch. ATTENTION: If you are to sell anything you have first got to get peoples attention. The normal way of doing this is to use a benefit Driven Headline. Some famous, proven headlines include: How to Win Friends and Influence People
Eye movement studies show that 95% of the time people don't read advertisements. Even worse for marketers, of the 5% of readers who might read your advertisement - 95% never read beyond the headline. You do use headlines in all your advertisements and marketing materials don't you? INTEREST: You've got your readers attention. Now you must make them interested. This is where all that work thinking like a customer comes into play. Dont mess around. In the first sentence fire your biggest gun. Hit your readers with the biggest benefit that your product or service brings to them. Explain how you deliver that benefit and then hit them again with the next biggest gun you have. And keep on doing it. Got more benefits? Good, keep them coming. Marketing copy cannot be too long only too boring. Keep it interesting, keep firing your benefits and your message will get read. DESIRE: You've aroused interest. Now create desire. Make it impossible for your prospects not to buy. Make them an irresistible offer. Add some urgency: - Call now - offer applies to the first 100 customers. -
Add a no quibbles, iron cast guarantee. Add free bonuses (Free is the second most powerful word in the English language). Use your imagination. Give people a great reason to want to buy now. ACTION: You've done the hard work. Your customer is ready to buy. So make it really easy for them. Tell them exactly what they need to do right now to make an order: - Call 01636 605 707 now, ask to speak to Keith and quote ad001. - Click this button to place your order now. - Register for our newsletter by filling in this box now. Keep it simple. Make it clear and quick to do. The easier it is to do business with you the more sales you will make. SWAT SWAT is not actually an acronym. It is a compaction of the question so what? You see, one of the biggest problems that even experienced copywriters and marketers fall into is being clear on what benefits their product or service actually delivers to their customers. SWAT provides the solution. Here is how it works: - Take a piece of paper. Divide it into columns one headed features and one headed benefits. - Under the features column list all the features you can think of. - Under the benefits column list all the benefits you can think of. (Dont worry about neatness there will not be a one-to-one correspondence between features and benefits) - Now, get yourself back in your customers mindset. Take each feature in turn and ask yourself SO WHAT? - And keep on asking the question if the answers you produce until you can't think of any sensible answer. - Do this for every feature in your list and then for every benefit It is pretty certain that the same benefits will occur many times over as you run through this exercise. That's fine. These are the ultimate benefits you have been looking for. These are the benefits you will 'sell' to your customer. KISS KISS: Keep It Simple Stupid needs little introduction. In all business environments there is a tendency to over elaborate. In marketing the problem is particularly acute. Marketing is populated by creative wanabees. There is always another idea to try. A more eye-catching and creative design. Dont fall into this trap. Remember KISS. And taking my own advice that's where I am going to leave this article. Over to you. What do you think are the most powerful acronyms in use today? Which do you think are the biggest waste of time. Drop me a line and let me know. I will feature the best comments and suggestions on the JKL website. Just keep it clean :) Keith Longmire is a business development and long-time business change programme manager. His company, JKL Business Growth Solutions, specialises in helping smaller businesses achieve rapid, sustainable growth. Keith works exclusively with the owners of owner managed businesses to bring main stream corporate expertise within the reach of smaller companies. http://www.jkl-small-business-marketing-solutions.com
MORE RESOURCES: A look at economic developments around the globe (AP) AP - A look at economic developments and activity in major stock markets around the world Friday: NY's AG isn't backing down from Wall Street probe (AP)
Summary Box: Commodities fall on Greece debt woes (AP) AP - GREEK WOES: Commodity prices fell broadly as a plan to fix Greece's crippling debt crisis remained far from settled, renewing concerns about global economic growth. Most commodity prices fall on Greece debt woes (AP) AP - Commodity prices fell broadly Friday after a plan to fix Greece's crippling debt crisis suffered a setback, renewing concerns about global economic growth. Bernanke urges action to heal housing markets (Reuters) Reuters - Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke on Friday issued a call to action to restore U.S. housing markets, saying depressed house prices and sales are a serious drag on the economic recovery. Obama call for manufacturing revival a tough goal (AP) AP - President Barack Obama is making a strong election-year push for an economic revival "built on American manufacturing." But he faces an uphill slog, with little consensus even within his own party on how to do it. Gov't on pace for $1T deficit despite January dip (AP) AP - The federal deficit was lower through the first four months of the budget year than the same period last year. Still, the deficit is expected to top $1 trillion for the fourth year in a row, putting more pressure on Congress and President Barack Obama in an election year. Bernanke: Weak housing has hurt consumer spending (AP)
January budget gap shrinks (Reuters) Reuters - The monthly budget deficit narrowed to $27.4 billion in January from $49.8 billion in the same month a year earlier, partly because some benefit payments normally made in January were shifted to December, the Treasury Department said on Friday. Anxiety over incomes hits consumer morale (Reuters) Reuters - Americans felt worse about their personal finances in early February, but rising confidence in the labor market's prospects should help to support spending and the broader economy. Romney appeals to U.S. business with harsh China talk (Reuters) Reuters - Mitt Romney slammed China's "autocratic model" of capitalism in a speech to technology executives on Friday, keeping up attacks on the economic powerhouse days before a visit from a Chinese official expected to be the country's next leader. Housing a "significant headwind" to recovery: Fed's Pianalto (Reuters) Reuters - The housing market is holding back the broader economic recovery now that foreclosures have become "a national crisis," a top Federal Reserve official said on Friday. Exclusive: Future of bank benchmark rate under review (Reuters) Reuters - A global probe into whether banks colluded to set the interest rates at which they borrow money from each other has thrown into question the future of the benchmark they use to price financial products worth an estimated $360 trillion. Bernanke urges action to heal U.S. housing markets (Reuters)
Spain cuts firing costs in new labor reform (Reuters) Reuters - Spain cut severance pay for workers on Friday and watered down collective bargaining rights, giving more power to employers as it attempts to kick start its moribund jobs market and slash Europe's highest unemployment rate. Portugal watches Greek debt drama with foreboding (Reuters) Reuters - Portugal's economy will shrink as much as Greece's this year, according to IMF projections. The two will have identical current account deficits and the red ink in Portugal's budget will be almost as deep as in Greece's. Trade deficit widens to $48.8 billion in December (AP)
U.S. jobless rate projected to fall sharply (Reuters) Reuters - Economists in a survey see the unemployment rate falling much faster this year than previously expected, an improvement in the jobs market that could help President Obama's re-election chances. Consumer mood worsens in February on income worries (Reuters) Reuters - Americans felt worse about their personal finances in early February, even as they saw a light at the end of the tunnel for the jobs market, a survey released on Friday showed. Instant View: Consumer mood worsens in early February (Reuters) Reuters - Americans turned less optimistic about the economy in early February on worries about falling income even as their outlook on the jobs market rose to a record high, a survey released on Friday showed. |
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