15 Haziran 2010 Salı
Best 100 Marketing ideas
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Best 60 Marketing ideas
51. Practice, practice, practice. After years in this business, it is easy to become complacent. Prepare your presentation, prepare your close and prepare your follow-up.
52. Review your sales call ... both good and bad. Too many times we play the "ones that got away" over and over in our minds. But what about the sales calls that go right? We can learn as much from them as from those unsuccessful calls.
53. Stay current on the issues affecting your clients. Follow trends in the industry by faithfully reading leading industry publications and learn what others are doing in the market.
54. Be creative! Your senior clients will remember the little things that you do if they are original and creative. For example, a monthly calendar of local events is a good way to stay in touch. It can be mailed or emailed, depending upon the client.
55. Solidify the sale. Don't just deliver the policy you wrote. Reinforce the reasons your client trusted you enough to part with their money and choose you over the other advisors who have tried before you.
- Kevin Wedmore, president, A2Z Annuity Marketing, Inc.
56. Maintain a database of the people attending your seminars. This information can be very useful in determining whether a registrant needs to be removed from your mailing list.
57. Use queries in your database to determine which locations are providing you with the greatest or lowest returns on your marketing investments and then increase or decrease expenditures accordingly.
58. Have a client appreciation dinner for the purpose of building rapport with your clients.
59. Use client referral dinners to provide opportunities for clients to send referrals.
- Richard Berry, Berry Financial Group, Inc.
A committee approach
60. For years, we have utilized a group of independent, financial professionals to serve all of the needs of our clients. In effect, this is wealth management by committee, with one professional serving as the captain of the team and as the go-between with the other professionals. This has allowed us to successfully compete with large financial brokerages and the "jack of all trades" financial planner.
The key is finding the right professionals to team up with: You need an attorney, an accountant, an insurance professional and a financial advisor to start. We now have four attorneys, three accountants, one asset manager, three financial advisors, an IRA specialist, two long term care agents, three annuity specialists and various other professionals.
- Steven G. Johnson, director, Retirement Solutions Group, Inc.
Best 50 Marketing ideas
Berry' best
41. Set appointments at your seminars. Sign up people while the information and desire is fresh; a cooling-off period will leave you with fewer appointments set and kept.
42. Change is good. We are always willing to try new things. For example, an invitation that worked well for you over the past three years may not work well for you in the fourth.
43. Although change is good, make sure your changes are tested and that there is a review process to determine if the change was beneficial.
44. Make your own confirmation calls for seminars. Although most direct mail marketing firms provide a confirmation call service, you may want to make them yourself.
45. Tax check Just ask each client to review their form 1040 with you to uncover who's needlessly paying taxes on money they aren't using. An annuity may be an ideal solution for these clients.
- Michael Harrison, VP, annuity sales and marketing, AIG American General
The Wedmore way
46. Stop prospecting for clients! Spend your time prospecting with people who associate with the type of client you are looking for. For example, if you are looking for clients who are transitioning into long term health care environments, network with people in that field. They are dealing with hundreds of your ideal prospects every year.
47. Use what you know best to become the local expert on that subject. Use that knowledge to write a column in at least one local senior publication. Many of the free senior newspapers that are available outside discount and grocery stores will let you write an article if you purchase a small ad.
48. Plan to prospect. Pick a time each week where you schedule appointments, don't accept incoming phone calls and can't be interrupted.
49. Learn to use the computer. I know it sounds trite, but using the technology available to you is important. Research and communication are the two primary areas to focus on, but being computer-savvy may just save you a case or two because of your ability to quickly get the information the client needs.
50. Find a niche and position yourself within it. If you know a lot about one thing compared to a little about a lot of things, you will be more focused and most likely, more successful.
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1. Pick up the phone. I have yet to find a better way of "marketing oneself" then speaking with a prospect on the phone -- it's way better than direct mailings and cheaper too. Looking for folks to call? Try whitepages.com or do a search on neighborhoods -- it's free.
- Allen E. Shea, independent advisor
2. Referrals. My best marketing plan is this: Friends telling friends of my services and products.
- Sam Hacek, Sr. Affordable Insurance Concepts
3. Identify your target customers. Create a three-tier or dartboard approach to profiling sales prospects. The top tier or bull's-eye of the dartboard represents the prime target audience. Spend the most time with the tier in the bull's-eye and the least amount of time with the third tier. The marketing strategy should focus on a message to address the needs of each group.
4. Establish and understand your primary geographical market area. Identify your geographic area by zip code, county, neighborhood or other parameter and understand the prospects who live there. Then develop marketing campaigns to promote relevant product offerings based on life triggers and other events that may be happening in your community, including new homebuyers, births, marriages within this area and target products and services to the event.
5. Develop a "drip" list. Create a list of your best prospects that you contact on a monthly (even weekly) basis with key information. Keep your name out in front of your target audience.
6. Sponsor or organize high-profile events. Invite your first and second tier prospects to speaking engagements, which highlight industry leaders. Often organizations sponsor quarterly or bi-annual speaking engagements with industry leaders from your organization. By inviting your best prospects, you establish credibility and show them that you appreciate them.
7. Use newsletters. Newsletters create credibility and stimulate interest in your products/services.
8. Create a bio sheet. Use a professional photo and share both your professional resume as well as personal information on what makes you unique within the industry and why prospects should work with you.
9. Develop an integrated marketing strategy. Contact your prospects through a number of marketing channels including direct marketing, Web site information, email, telemarketing and, of course, personal meetings. For example, you can use direct mail to drive traffic online to your Web site for product information, rate calculators and financial goals worksheets. Promote your online resources with direct mail and in other print media.
10. Have a true marketing plan. Develop a contact strategy consisting of direct mail, telemarketing, newsletters and special events such as seminars and other educational formats that is designed to build a relationship with their prospects over time.