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Actual for You - How Well Do Your Customers Know You?
Demystify Database Marketing: Is It Gobbledygook or a Goldmine? is free and easy, and also a great way to let your customers know what’s going on in your life. And the best part about it is: they can post their comments too! Talk about self-disclosure!Let’s forget the technical jargon and take a look at what database marketing really is and how you can use it, in plain, understandable English. Database marketing is a marketing and sales system that gathers, refines, and utilizes information so that you can make informed decisions regarding marketing and sales communications and programs.Successful companies use database marketing for targeted prospect identification and developing a sales call strategy. You can also use it to design effective direct mail pieces and write appropriate advertising campaigns. The results of effective database marketing in Recommend Resources My friend Ed who works for Cornerstone Financial does this all the time. He spends a few hundred dollars a year buying copies of his favorite books for his customers. He tells them how the books improved his life in the hopes that his customers will reciprocate their similar experiences – which they do. Your ability to educate yo Time Clocks Know your customer, know your customer, know your customer. Three very important rules of business. But let me ask you this: How well do your customers know YOU?Ever since the Industrial Revolution, employee time has been monitored, controlled and managed to preserve the interests of the enterprise. It has also been used in motivational programs as negative and positive reinforcements. In today’s modern setting, the concept of employee time is challenged by principles such as in time (or JIT) and flexi-time. Nevertheless, the need to keep track of employee performance is keeping time clocks alive in factories, offices, and other work areas.Modern Time ClocksTo keep pace with the fast moving economic and industrial environment, traditional bundy clocks hav Sam Walton, founder of Wal-Mart, asked himself this important question several decades ago. His answer: employee nametags. So, he rolled out an initiative that required all of his employees to wear badges, the purpose of which was to “help the customers get to know the people they bought from.” But helping customers “get to know you” isn’t just about names, it’s about information. In other words, it’s about self-disclosure, which is the process of revealing your personal information to another. This process starts with a small piece of information, i.e., your name. Then, as the relationship develops, it progresses into more intimate territory with the sharing of opinions, preferences and experiences. What’s more, because of its reciprocal nature, self-disclosure has incredible power. It creates comfort, establishes rapport, helps discover the CPI (Common Point of Interest) and builds trust between you and your customers. I once worked at a mom-and-pop furniture store in Portland, Oregon. More so than any business I’ve ever walked into, the owners of City Liquidators leveraged self-disclosure to its fullest extent. You couldn’t step five feet into their store without seeing pictures of their family. The walls donned clippings from nostalgic newspaper articles and various personal memorabilia that brought the store to life! As a result, shoppers who walked in the door felt like they personally knew the owners. Engaging conversations about children, families and growing up in Portland were frequent among the customers. And, the emotional connection sparked by these interactions helped the customers feel more comfortable while shopping – which ultimately secured their loyalty. Not to mention, self-disclosure actually helps YOU get to know your customers better as well! Here’s another example. My friend Dennis is a doorman at the Ritz Carlton. He is a master of using self-disclosure to establish relationships with guests. If a family with young children pulls into the front drive, Dennis always gets excited. (He has a young daughter himself.) And as soon as he extends his warm welcome to the arriving guests, he doesn’t hesitate to share information about his own family. Sometimes he’ll even show guests a picture! But Dennis knows that an effective way to learn about his customers is to educate them about himself first. How well do your customers know you? Here are some ways you can use self-disclosure to create comfort and build rapport with buyers: What’s Your Story? Write it out. Practice saying it aloud. Make it funny. And tell it to everybody. Publish it on your marketing materials, and especially your website. Create a special page on your website called “Our Story,” or “My Philosophy” that shares this personal anecdote. Start Blogging Recommend Resources My friend Ed who works for Cornerstone Financial does this all the time. He spends a few hundred dollars a year buying copies of his favorite books for his customers. He tells them how the books improved his life in the hopes that his customers will reciprocate their similar experiences – which they do. Your ability to educate yo Hints and Tips on Getting Publicity for Events f its reciprocal nature, self-disclosure has incredible power. It creates comfort, establishes rapport, helps discover the CPI (Common Point of Interest) and builds trust between you and your customers.A) BackgroundUnfortunately local newspapers - relied on for so long as the mainstay of event publicity - are beset by falling circulations and deteriorating editorial quality. The old discussions about paid papers versus free papers seem very dated - now it is more a question of trying new ways of attracting visitors to events.B) Today’s Publicity PlanWhat you do will of course depend on your budget and who you want to attract. If you are serious about publicity you will at least consider carefully the following elements:Posters:Can be displayed in shop wi I once worked at a mom-and-pop furniture store in Portland, Oregon. More so than any business I’ve ever walked into, the owners of City Liquidators leveraged self-disclosure to its fullest extent. You couldn’t step five feet into their store without seeing pictures of their family. The walls donned clippings from nostalgic newspaper articles and various personal memorabilia that brought the store to life! As a result, shoppers who walked in the door felt like they personally knew the owners. Engaging conversations about children, families and growing up in Portland were frequent among the customers. And, the emotional connection sparked by these interactions helped the customers feel more comfortable while shopping – which ultimately secured their loyalty. Not to mention, self-disclosure actually helps YOU get to know your customers better as well! Here’s another example. My friend Dennis is a doorman at the Ritz Carlton. He is a master of using self-disclosure to establish relationships with guests. If a family with young children pulls into the front drive, Dennis always gets excited. (He has a young daughter himself.) And as soon as he extends his warm welcome to the arriving guests, he doesn’t hesitate to share information about his own family. Sometimes he’ll even show guests a picture! But Dennis knows that an effective way to learn about his customers is to educate them about himself first. How well do your customers know you? Here are some ways you can use self-disclosure to create comfort and build rapport with buyers: What’s Your Story? Write it out. Practice saying it aloud. Make it funny. And tell it to everybody. Publish it on your marketing materials, and especially your website. Create a special page on your website called “Our Story,” or “My Philosophy” that shares this personal anecdote. Start Blogging Recommend Resources My friend Ed who works for Cornerstone Financial does this all the time. He spends a few hundred dollars a year buying copies of his favorite books for his customers. He tells them how the books improved his life in the hopes that his customers will reciprocate their similar experiences – which they do. Your ability to educate yo The Grit in Integrity comfortable while shopping – which ultimately secured their loyalty.Igniting your workplace with a sense of integrity and joy- sounds lofty, huh? Truth be told the joy naturally follows from the integrity. Ever worked in a place that lacked integrity? I'm betting you didn't have much joy there did you? What is it that makes a place be filled with integrity?Webster's defines integrity as an unwavering commitment to a firm moral code. In my experience it is much simpler. It is doing the right thing no matter who is- or isn't- watching.Take the grocery cart back. Don't detour to go to Walmart after your sales call & submit that on your mileage report. Show Not to mention, self-disclosure actually helps YOU get to know your customers better as well! Here’s another example. My friend Dennis is a doorman at the Ritz Carlton. He is a master of using self-disclosure to establish relationships with guests. If a family with young children pulls into the front drive, Dennis always gets excited. (He has a young daughter himself.) And as soon as he extends his warm welcome to the arriving guests, he doesn’t hesitate to share information about his own family. Sometimes he’ll even show guests a picture! But Dennis knows that an effective way to learn about his customers is to educate them about himself first. How well do your customers know you? Here are some ways you can use self-disclosure to create comfort and build rapport with buyers: What’s Your Story? Write it out. Practice saying it aloud. Make it funny. And tell it to everybody. Publish it on your marketing materials, and especially your website. Create a special page on your website called “Our Story,” or “My Philosophy” that shares this personal anecdote. Start Blogging Recommend Resources My friend Ed who works for Cornerstone Financial does this all the time. He spends a few hundred dollars a year buying copies of his favorite books for his customers. He tells them how the books improved his life in the hopes that his customers will reciprocate their similar experiences – which they do. Your ability to educate yo Stepping Stone Jobs
How did you get your start in business? Did you “fall” into your line of work? Perhaps there’s an interesting anecdote or event that caused the birth of your business. If so, this is called “Your Story,” and it’s a fundamental tool for helping your customers get to know you.What we name something matters.It sets a tone that alters our attitude.Give something a new name and the difference may seem insignificant or even trivial.However, if it changes our attitude, it can amount to a very big change.Recently, I heard the term “survival job.”I understood this to mean a job that is often part-time and unrelated to one’s primary career focus. One takes such a job because one’s previous position has been eliminated, out-sourced, down-sized, off-shored, or otherwise zapped.I heard this term a few times and thought, “Why does the phrase ‘hunker-dow Write it out. Practice saying it aloud. Make it funny. And tell it to everybody. Publish it on your marketing materials, and especially your website. Create a special page on your website called “Our Story,” or “My Philosophy” that shares this personal anecdote. Start Blogging Recommend Resources My friend Ed who works for Cornerstone Financial does this all the time. He spends a few hundred dollars a year buying copies of his favorite books for his customers. He tells them how the books improved his life in the hopes that his customers will reciprocate their similar experiences – which they do. Your ability to educate yo How To Get Larry King To Invite You To Lunch And Other Networking Secrets is free and easy, and also a great way to let your customers know what’s going on in your life. And the best part about it is: they can post their comments too! Talk about self-disclosure!In the interest of full disclosure, that actually happened to me. Larry King invited me to lunch!How it happened is very funny. Could it happen to someone else? It’s so far out, who knows? But, it’s a great example of the power of networking, which is my subject today. More on that in a moment.In seminars and writings, I talk a lot about networking. The most spectacular example, for me, had to do with Larry King, whom I’ve long admired. Here’s the very short version and then some practical tips for personal and digital networking:After finishing a speech, I had lunch with several at Recommend Resources My friend Ed who works for Cornerstone Financial does this all the time. He spends a few hundred dollars a year buying copies of his favorite books for his customers. He tells them how the books improved his life in the hopes that his customers will reciprocate their similar experiences – which they do. Your ability to educate your customers not only about your products and services, but about yourself, is critical to your success. If you follow these principles of self-disclosure and reciprocation, your customers will get to know you better than ever before! So, remember what my friend Jeffrey Gitomer says: it’s not what you know; it’s not WHO you know – it’s who knows YOU.
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