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Actual for You - Making More With Existing Clients
Why Corporate Identity is a Very Powerful Communication Branding Tools ur assistance in additional areas.The world of business is a very competitive one with each executive competing with the other to get the best of sales, profits and customers for their business. This means that all businesses interested in becoming successful have to concentrate in developing their corporate image and identity to improve in their business. Corporate identity is actually the image or identity by which the business wants to be perceived by their customers or the physical manifestation of the brand.Corporate identity is very much achieved by the brand building and marketing strategies of the company. So how actually is a brand built? It is done through the help of branding tools like logo des Instead of selling clients on additional services, educate them. You'll create a perception of need and increase sales. 3. Transform Client Satisfaction into Additional Sales Do you have clients and customers that appreciate your products and services? Don’t wait until your contract is complete to tap the goodwill you’ve generated by helping them. Regularly ask them questions designed to get responses like, "I couldn’t have done it without you", "Worth every penny", etc. Just after your clients have provided positive feedback is the perfect time to ask them a couple of questions to identify needs and to mention the solutions you provide. Once you've gone to all the effort to attract a new client don't walk away from the rest of their needs just because they haven't identified or clarified them yet. Educate your prospects and clients at every step of the way about the problems you solve and they'll understand why they need more of your products and services. You'll discover pockets of opportunity to help your clients and inc Custom Packaging Have you ever put on a jacket you haven’t worn in a while and found a twenty-dollar bill in one of the pockets? You'd forgotten all about it, so discovering it is like getting a gift. If you've been in business for a year or longer, you may have gifts in forgotten pockets — sources of additional revenue waiting to be discovered and tapped.Custom packaging is a special packaging based strictly according to the product. Sometimes it is done by hand, and sometimes it is done according to a vendor's specs. The product’s fragility, perishability, volume and weight are considered in custom packaging.It contains all the relevant details about the product, like the product’s name, manufacturer’s name, and batch number. It also contains the manufacturing date, expiration date, composition of the product and the materials used in manufacturing the good.Custom packaging not only lists details about the products, but also protects the products from sensitivity to light, temperature, air, moisture, and chemical r There are four ways to increase your net profits: reduce costs, increase prices, attract more clients or sell more to existing clients. When you consider that it costs you at least 60% and as much as 600% more to sell to a new client than to an existing one, it's clear that your best prospects are existing clients. Are you selling as many of your services or products as you could to your existing client base? Could you increase your revenue by doing a better job of marketing to your existing clients? You've established your credibility and the value of at least one of your services with existing clients. They made a commitment to work with you at least once. How can you leverage this trust and client satisfaction into additional sales? Tony called me from Washington D.C. with just this problem. He is an image consultant to politicians and corporate executives and struggling to increase his revenue. His new clients are happy with his services, but the engagements rarely extend beyond the initial contracted project. He is having a tough time getting repeat business. Tony knows his existing and past clients represent additional revenue but he doesn’t know how to mine it. Once you have a client, what's the best way to sell them more of your products or services? The biggest mistake that most small business owners make is to think that after they've competed the initial sale, their marketing job is completed. The opposite is true. Once you've made your first sale to a client and secured a commitment from them with a payment, you should begin your marketing effort to get them to buy again. Of course, you don't want to constantly be "selling" to clients. That would get tedious for you and your customers and they'd be unlikely to want to maintain the relationship. Instead, continue to educate them about their areas of need and how you help clients. Use your products and services to provide value and to educate clients so they can discover what they need and want, even if they've n.ever thought about it before. For example, I've been working with a sports trainer to complete my recovery from shoulder surgery. In our first session he showed me which muscles needed to be reprogrammed with exercise to return to normal functioning. The obvious conclusion of his explanation was that I needed to work with him again to achieve my goals. Just by sharing a little knowledge he successfully extended the project. This approach isn’t clever or devious; it is based on the notion that an informed buyer — an educated consumer — is your best client. Here's how it works in practice: 1. Help Prospects Become Clients by Focusing on their Problems People buy solutions to problems or needs that they know exist. Get your prospects' attention by focusing your marketing message on the problem(s) you solve in order to get them to visit your web site or contact you. Then use your conversation or your marketing copy to help prospects further define their problems or concerns. Do this well and they'll clearly see the need for your products and services. 2. Continue to Educate Prospects and Clients Clients buy from you when they know how you can help them. That's why they initially contracted with you or bought your products and services. Once you've signed on a new client, don't assume that they understand the range of services or products you market. They may not even fully understand what they've bought. Use each contact to continue to educate your clients and help them understand the issues, problems and solutions relative to your area of expertise. For example if you’re a financial advisor and you've been hired to help a client with their investments, you might ask them a question about their estate planning, tax situation, insurance policies or retirement plan and provide them with an idea they can use. Each time you do this your client will learn how limited their own knowledge is and understand more about why they need your assistance in additional areas. Instead of selling clients on additional services, educate them. You'll create a perception of need and increase sales. 3. Transform Client Satisfaction into Additional Sales Do you have clients and customers that appreciate your products and services? Don’t wait until your contract is complete to tap the goodwill you’ve generated by helping them. Regularly ask them questions designed to get responses like, "I couldn’t have done it without you", "Worth every penny", etc. Just after your clients have provided positive feedback is the perfect time to ask them a couple of questions to identify needs and to mention the solutions you provide. Once you've gone to all the effort to attract a new client don't walk away from the rest of their needs just because they haven't identified or clarified them yet. Educate your prospects and clients at every step of the way about the problems you solve and they'll understand why they need more of your products and services. You'll discover pockets of opportunity to help your clients and incr 5 Powerful Rules for Writing Advertising that Sells! sales?As you begin to write your sales copy for your advertisement keep one thing in your mind…Everything you put into the must point out a specific benefit to your prospect.Ask yourself as you write, “How will this help to get my prospect to act now?”Always focus on the prospect, no matter what everyone else says or thinks. Tell them you’ve got a solution to their wants, needs desires, RIGHT NOW! The purpose is to get them to act.1. Identify the prospect pain. (Research your target prospect to understand this)2. Make them really feel it (they will do more to avoid pain than they will to gain pleasure…so really hit them between the eyes)3. Let them kn Tony called me from Washington D.C. with just this problem. He is an image consultant to politicians and corporate executives and struggling to increase his revenue. His new clients are happy with his services, but the engagements rarely extend beyond the initial contracted project. He is having a tough time getting repeat business. Tony knows his existing and past clients represent additional revenue but he doesn’t know how to mine it. Once you have a client, what's the best way to sell them more of your products or services? The biggest mistake that most small business owners make is to think that after they've competed the initial sale, their marketing job is completed. The opposite is true. Once you've made your first sale to a client and secured a commitment from them with a payment, you should begin your marketing effort to get them to buy again. Of course, you don't want to constantly be "selling" to clients. That would get tedious for you and your customers and they'd be unlikely to want to maintain the relationship. Instead, continue to educate them about their areas of need and how you help clients. Use your products and services to provide value and to educate clients so they can discover what they need and want, even if they've n.ever thought about it before. For example, I've been working with a sports trainer to complete my recovery from shoulder surgery. In our first session he showed me which muscles needed to be reprogrammed with exercise to return to normal functioning. The obvious conclusion of his explanation was that I needed to work with him again to achieve my goals. Just by sharing a little knowledge he successfully extended the project. This approach isn’t clever or devious; it is based on the notion that an informed buyer — an educated consumer — is your best client. Here's how it works in practice: 1. Help Prospects Become Clients by Focusing on their Problems People buy solutions to problems or needs that they know exist. Get your prospects' attention by focusing your marketing message on the problem(s) you solve in order to get them to visit your web site or contact you. Then use your conversation or your marketing copy to help prospects further define their problems or concerns. Do this well and they'll clearly see the need for your products and services. 2. Continue to Educate Prospects and Clients Clients buy from you when they know how you can help them. That's why they initially contracted with you or bought your products and services. Once you've signed on a new client, don't assume that they understand the range of services or products you market. They may not even fully understand what they've bought. Use each contact to continue to educate your clients and help them understand the issues, problems and solutions relative to your area of expertise. For example if you’re a financial advisor and you've been hired to help a client with their investments, you might ask them a question about their estate planning, tax situation, insurance policies or retirement plan and provide them with an idea they can use. Each time you do this your client will learn how limited their own knowledge is and understand more about why they need your assistance in additional areas. Instead of selling clients on additional services, educate them. You'll create a perception of need and increase sales. 3. Transform Client Satisfaction into Additional Sales Do you have clients and customers that appreciate your products and services? Don’t wait until your contract is complete to tap the goodwill you’ve generated by helping them. Regularly ask them questions designed to get responses like, "I couldn’t have done it without you", "Worth every penny", etc. Just after your clients have provided positive feedback is the perfect time to ask them a couple of questions to identify needs and to mention the solutions you provide. Once you've gone to all the effort to attract a new client don't walk away from the rest of their needs just because they haven't identified or clarified them yet. Educate your prospects and clients at every step of the way about the problems you solve and they'll understand why they need more of your products and services. You'll discover pockets of opportunity to help your clients and inc Human Resource Department: How Do I Set Up? ucate them about their areas of need and how you help clients. Use your products and services to provide value and to educate clients so they can discover what they need and want, even if they've n.ever thought about it before.If you were given the task of setting up a new Human Resource Department in a small company where would you begin? Such a task would be extremely daunting, but not impossible, if you follow a few tips. To begin, you need to answer some basic questions:Why do you want to set one up? What’s changed to make you or the organization believe that an HR department is needed now? What do you want the HR department to do? How will this function contribute to the success and bottom-line of the organization? Will it add value?In other words, before you begin the task, you need to have a clear definition of the mission and goals of the department and secondly, what role you wil For example, I've been working with a sports trainer to complete my recovery from shoulder surgery. In our first session he showed me which muscles needed to be reprogrammed with exercise to return to normal functioning. The obvious conclusion of his explanation was that I needed to work with him again to achieve my goals. Just by sharing a little knowledge he successfully extended the project. This approach isn’t clever or devious; it is based on the notion that an informed buyer — an educated consumer — is your best client. Here's how it works in practice: 1. Help Prospects Become Clients by Focusing on their Problems People buy solutions to problems or needs that they know exist. Get your prospects' attention by focusing your marketing message on the problem(s) you solve in order to get them to visit your web site or contact you. Then use your conversation or your marketing copy to help prospects further define their problems or concerns. Do this well and they'll clearly see the need for your products and services. 2. Continue to Educate Prospects and Clients Clients buy from you when they know how you can help them. That's why they initially contracted with you or bought your products and services. Once you've signed on a new client, don't assume that they understand the range of services or products you market. They may not even fully understand what they've bought. Use each contact to continue to educate your clients and help them understand the issues, problems and solutions relative to your area of expertise. For example if you’re a financial advisor and you've been hired to help a client with their investments, you might ask them a question about their estate planning, tax situation, insurance policies or retirement plan and provide them with an idea they can use. Each time you do this your client will learn how limited their own knowledge is and understand more about why they need your assistance in additional areas. Instead of selling clients on additional services, educate them. You'll create a perception of need and increase sales. 3. Transform Client Satisfaction into Additional Sales Do you have clients and customers that appreciate your products and services? Don’t wait until your contract is complete to tap the goodwill you’ve generated by helping them. Regularly ask them questions designed to get responses like, "I couldn’t have done it without you", "Worth every penny", etc. Just after your clients have provided positive feedback is the perfect time to ask them a couple of questions to identify needs and to mention the solutions you provide. Once you've gone to all the effort to attract a new client don't walk away from the rest of their needs just because they haven't identified or clarified them yet. Educate your prospects and clients at every step of the way about the problems you solve and they'll understand why they need more of your products and services. You'll discover pockets of opportunity to help your clients and inc Guide to Choosing and Working with an Executive Search Firm en use your conversation or your marketing copy to help prospects further define their problems or concerns. Do this well and they'll clearly see the need for your products and services.For companies finding the right search partner is the first and probably the most crucial step in making sure their recruitment strategy pays off. When a company needs to fill a critical position its time to look for a specialist executive search firm which can work as a partner and not just a vendor. The search firm needs to totally understand the company’s business philosophy, work culture and management style to find not only the rightly qualified candidate but also the candidate who will ‘fit in’ the best within the company. Picking the wrong search firm can be disastrous as it can result in delayed or no recruitment or worse recruiting an ‘anti fit’ candidate which can reall 2. Continue to Educate Prospects and Clients Clients buy from you when they know how you can help them. That's why they initially contracted with you or bought your products and services. Once you've signed on a new client, don't assume that they understand the range of services or products you market. They may not even fully understand what they've bought. Use each contact to continue to educate your clients and help them understand the issues, problems and solutions relative to your area of expertise. For example if you’re a financial advisor and you've been hired to help a client with their investments, you might ask them a question about their estate planning, tax situation, insurance policies or retirement plan and provide them with an idea they can use. Each time you do this your client will learn how limited their own knowledge is and understand more about why they need your assistance in additional areas. Instead of selling clients on additional services, educate them. You'll create a perception of need and increase sales. 3. Transform Client Satisfaction into Additional Sales Do you have clients and customers that appreciate your products and services? Don’t wait until your contract is complete to tap the goodwill you’ve generated by helping them. Regularly ask them questions designed to get responses like, "I couldn’t have done it without you", "Worth every penny", etc. Just after your clients have provided positive feedback is the perfect time to ask them a couple of questions to identify needs and to mention the solutions you provide. Once you've gone to all the effort to attract a new client don't walk away from the rest of their needs just because they haven't identified or clarified them yet. Educate your prospects and clients at every step of the way about the problems you solve and they'll understand why they need more of your products and services. You'll discover pockets of opportunity to help your clients and inc Types of Staffing Services Explained ur assistance in additional areas.Staffing companies help organizations with their manpower requirements. There are primarily three different types of staffing services offered by staffing firms:Temporary Staffing ServiceAs the name suggests, temporary staffing meets the short-term needs of employing organizations. Temporary staffing helps companies fill in for positions made vacant by their absent employees or helps in supplementing the existing staff during times of high workload. Temporary staffing enables organizations to meet their working challenges with minimum human resource overheads and avoiding lengthy recruiting and assessment processes. The huge cost savings involved make tempora Instead of selling clients on additional services, educate them. You'll create a perception of need and increase sales. 3. Transform Client Satisfaction into Additional Sales Do you have clients and customers that appreciate your products and services? Don’t wait until your contract is complete to tap the goodwill you’ve generated by helping them. Regularly ask them questions designed to get responses like, "I couldn’t have done it without you", "Worth every penny", etc. Just after your clients have provided positive feedback is the perfect time to ask them a couple of questions to identify needs and to mention the solutions you provide. Once you've gone to all the effort to attract a new client don't walk away from the rest of their needs just because they haven't identified or clarified them yet. Educate your prospects and clients at every step of the way about the problems you solve and they'll understand why they need more of your products and services. You'll discover pockets of opportunity to help your clients and increase your revenue.
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