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Choo! Choo! All Aboard!
CREATE A MARKETING TRAIN ©
By
Catherine Franz
Is your marketing program sporadic? A
"what-feels-good-this-week" kind of plan? Is it working for you? If
not, then here is a solution.
In order to create a gratifying and profitable
professional service business you need to have an effective long-term marketing
system in place. And the long-term system needs to include plans that generate
revenue on a short-term, medium-term and long-term basis.
Here's a well-planned, tested and executed system,
designed specifically to funnel prospective clients into your business because
it gives you focus and clarity.
For visual effects, let us call it your "Marketing
Train."
Just like a regular train, there are three prime
components of a Marketing Train. (1) The locomotive, also called the engine, (2)
the cars, and (3) the caboose. Close your eyes and picture your train right now.
If you can, manually draw one right now to help anchor that visually. Don't let
the simplicity of this metaphor pull the wool over your eyes. This is effective!
Okay, you have your Marketing Train vividly available to
you whenever you need it. Right?
Great!
Let's talk about these three parts of your Marketing
Train...
1. LOCOMOTIVE

If you didn't have an engine your train would be dead on
the tracks...right? This is also true for your Marketing Train.
As the engine pulls all the rest of the cars, your
marketing engine pulls the rest of your marketing activities. The engine is the
main strategy that drives your business forward. Here are some examples of what
can be fueling your engine: speaking to groups, conducting workshops or
teleclasses, forming strategic alliances or partnerships, networking (could be
done in many forms), direct mail pieces, writing articles for your web site or
in print, doing radio interviews, being a guest speaker in other formats,
sending out a grassroots marketing letter.
Let's call the engine your active marketing strategy. Its
movement allows others to experience you in relation to all the rest.
For a smooth ride, you want to choose no more than three
active engine activities to focus on and continually repeat those. Consistency
and repetition are crucial! If you spread yourself too thin, never go deep
enough, or stay with it long enough, your strategy will not be effective.
For service professionals focusing on filling their
practice, 60 to 90 percent of your marketing focus and effort needs to be on the
active engine activities you choose. Usually the number of clients/sales
directly related to your focused effort on these three activities. Your revenue
is a telltale sign of your effort and how fast your train is going. Your speed
also relates to the size of your engine.
In summary, choose three or less active marketing
strategies to focus on. Do them consistently, do them well, and let them drive
your business forward. Just like an engine would.
2. THE RAILROAD CARS
The number of railroad cars depends on the power of your
engine. If you have too many cars and not enough "ump" in the engine,
then the train creeps along. And so do the results.
This also occurs if you have any passive marketing
activities. They are important except not mandatory. Just like railroad cars,
they do little on their own. Usually, this is where I always find my marketing
clients. Why? Because its the most enjoyable and comfortable place to be. Even I
need to catch myself from staying here.
It is so easy to stay there too. The cars are comfortable.
They contain food, great views, and sleeping arrangements. It is easier and
seems safer. All you need to do is sit back, relax, and enjoy the view. Almost
like your coasting along because you are leaving the driving up to someone else.
Railroad car activities include: designing a logo, placing
unnecessary items on your web site, creating a brochure, creating clever
business cards, or anything else that isn’t directly attracting business. This
does not mean that you don't do them. When you do, exclude them from the 60/90
percent time for fueling your engine.
Yes, I know you are mumbling how I added the web site to
this list. Let me explain. A web site requires you to drive people to the
site...right? This makes the web site submissive until they visit. The active
part is getting them there. That would be one of your three engine strategies.
3. THE CABOOSE
Ah...the tail end of the marketing train. Caboose
activities, besides housing the conductor, support the passengers.
I like to refer to the caboose as the "stay in
touch" activities. This can be your relationship marketing,
ezine/newsletters, or your contact management system. I like to categorize these
into what I call "follow-up" activities.
Three years ago, people needed 5-7 times follow-ups before
they purchased. Now, because of the increased skepticism in response to the
communication "junk" that floods their day, and they lack the quality
time it takes to continually focus on what they are received, this number has
increased 12 times.
Having an electronic newsletter (also called an ezine) can
be a great caboose strategy if consistent and contains valuable information for
its passengers. By itself, it is never a complete follow-up strategy. Always
maintain the 80/20 rule with your ezine (80% value to 20% promotion).
The strategy of your marketing train is to fuel the train
with the best juice possible (great clients that can afford you). Placing less
than the best fuel in your engine will slow down the train, make it spit and
sputter, or even stop the train altogether. The train usually needs more effort
and chugs along. Not knowing your fuel mixture will leave you stranded on a
hill.
An ezine is a great caboose activity. Like a caboose, it
does not require fuel. The size of your mailing list usually reflects the size
of your practice and bottom income line. People who are not passengers will get
off quickly. So, if you have chosen an ezine as a caboose activity, then one of
the three engine strategies MUST be in direct line for them to connect.
Oops, at the beginning I said there was one solution.
Nope, I gave you more than one. Okay, you can have them as a bonus.
Building Your Marketing Train
Redraw your train now. Label the locomotive (engine), the
cars and the caboose. Now create a list below each one and write in your
marketing activities. If you begin in the cars, follow it forward to the engine;
what strategy is pulling it forward? Now look at your caboose list. What is on
your follow-up activity that supports it?
It does not matter where you start on the train. Just
remember to align it throughout your marketing train. You can go around curves
and through many countrysides, however, it does not do curves. So, you will not
want to throw it any curve balls.
Thank you riding in my caboose today!
I know you loved this metaphor. Whenever I share it with
my clients, they have found its simple visual effect stays with them all day
long.
In summary, if you are focusing on increasing your client
base, focus on your engine, its fuel, fuel mixture, and there is efficient
effort to pull the rest of the train. Repetition and consistency is the key to
deliberately create your results.
Copyright, Catherine Franz. All rights reserved.
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