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If you haven't got a blogging clue about ... your offering.

If you haven't got a blogging clue about ... your offering.

I am feeling a little bit unsure about this one because surely you don’t need me to define what you offer, do you? I think it might be worth considering for a bit.

08th September 2010 published by Martin Henley

Marketing OfferingPut very simply, and I don’t think I need a dictionary definition to support me on this, talking about your offering is simply a marketing shortcut for talking about all of the products and services that you provide. This shortcut came about because sometimes you need to talk about products and sometimes you need to talk about services and some times as a copy writer you are not sure so the easiest thing to do is lump it all together and call it 'offering.'

 

Good, no problems here then, everybody who is in business knows what they do, don’t they? Actually, no, they don’t.

 

There are two issues here because your offering has two faces, the one that customers see and the one that you see. If you are going to be effective in your marketing your offering needs to make sense both ways.

 

When you look at your offering you need to understand how it benefits you, ie. what is the most profitable thing that you offer? What is the most popular thing that you offer? What is the most reliable thing that you offer? What delivers the biggest customer benefit? What does your market most often need? What would your customers need to come back for? What is the real value of what you offer? What is the easiest thing to sell? The answers to these questions should inform how much energy you put into each of your products and services and what the return is likely to be.

 

When we are selling it is almost impossible to resist the urge to sell the customer the easiest thing to sell, rather than the thing that will really benefit them the most. The trouble with that is if they don’t feel a benefit they won’t be coming back, and they won’t be referring you. The next inevitable temptation is to undervalue your offering and sell it for what is is worth to you, rather than what is is worth to your customer. I recently visited a printer who was solving multi million pound logistical problems for the price of producing adhesive labels, and throwing out the baby with the bath water is a tough position to maintain.

 

The second issue is the way your customers understand your offering, and this is perhaps the most perplexing conundrum in marketing. Basically, if they don’t understand it they won’t buy, if they don't understand but still buy they won’t be back, and they won’t be referring you. If you are able to discern the needs of your customers and how you can meet those needs you are on your way to some really effective marketing. The challenge is that you don’t need the stuff you do, because you can do it and it’s often difficult to understand why your customers can’t do it for themselves, they of course are busy doing stuff for other people that they can’t do and hence the global economy.

 

So here is the answer to the most perplexing conundrum in marketing, ask your customers what they value, why they value it and how much they value it. Their obligation is to not tell you and keep the price down, your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to find out the answer to those three questions at all costs.

 

And of course all good salesmen know that customers value outcomes rather than processes, benefits rather than features. Remember when you sell a drill you are selling the ability to make holes, when you are selling accountancy you are selling mitigation and when you are buying a solicitor/lawyer you are buying time out of jail when your'e accountant messed up.

 

Which brings us rather neatly to customers, the most valuable asset in your business.

 

The next two posts will be about understanding customers starting next week with customer analysis.

 

So come in next week if you haven’t got a blogging clue about ... customer analysis.

 

 

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#HappyCustomers - Internet Marketing Training Sussex

#HappyCustomers - Internet Marketing Training Sussex

Delegates at one of our Internet Marketing Workshops talking about their experience of attending the course.

07th September 2010 published by Martin Henley

 

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40 inspirational speeches in two minutes.

40 inspirational speeches in two minutes.

Inspirational speeches are cheesy, over rated, right? Lets see how you get on with forty in two minutes.

06th September 2010 published by Martin Henley

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#FeelingFunkyOnFriday - Summertime and you got women on your mind.

#FeelingFunkyOnFriday - Summertime and you got women on your mind.

Come on, I couldn't leave Mungo Jerry out of this incredible summer extravaganza.

03rd September 2010 published by Martin Henley

 

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If you haven't got a blogging clue about ... market research.

If you haven't got a blogging clue about ... market research.

Nothing too difficult here, I am sure we are all familiar with market research, but why is it important and how do you do it?

01st September 2010 published by Martin Henley

Market ResearchMarket ResearchTo cover the definitions first the market that we are interested in is defined in the dictionary as:

 

“a demand for a particular commodity or service”

 

Market research is defined by Wikipedia as

 

“any organised effort to gather information about markets”

 

So, a market is a group of people that want something and market research is about making the effort to understand those people.

 

Some of the things that you need to understand about your market are;

 

  • Does your market exist?
  • Where is your market?
  • How big is your market?
  • What is your market worth?
  • What does your market want?
  • What is your market prepared to pay?
  • Who are the major customers in your market?
  • Who are the major suppliers in your market?
  • How is your market organised?
  • How does your market communicate with itself?

 

This may all sound blindingly obvious but actually the reason lots of businesses fail is because they don’t invest in understanding their market and actually the first question above is the most important and the most often overlooked. Businesses invest too much time and money in developing products and services in isolation and only discover very late in the day that actually nobody wants to buy them.

 

Market research, if you do it well, will make your sales and marketing really easy. If you want to be a successful fisherman you need to put your line where there are fish, and the same is true of sales and marketing. Smart businesses are constantly in the market identifying what is required, how it is required and what people might be prepared to pay for it.

 

In the old days, before the internet, market research was actually quite difficult and for a long time the best you could do was engage a big London advertising agency to do some blue sky thinking or a market research company to accost people in the street or on the phone.

 

In the age of the internet things have become much more transparent and using tools like Google’s Keyword Tool or Wordtracker and Social Media enables us to do market research in real time with tools like Monniter and Twitter Fall.

 

Sales and marketing is really easy if you can identify what it is that people want and that is what market research is all about, then all you need to do is develop it and give it to them.

 

I hope this has given you a better blogging clue about market research and how it is valuable.

 

Next week we will be covering your offering, so come back then if you haven’t got a clue about .... your offering.

 

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#HappyCustomers - Telemarketing & Sales Management Training

#HappyCustomers - Telemarketing & Sales Management Training

Simon Birch of Solutions Inc. talking about the Telemarketing Training & Sales Management Training that we carried out with his team

31st August 2010 published by Martin Henley

 

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If you haven't got a blogging clue about ... situational analysis.

If you haven't got a blogging clue about ... situational analysis.

It's taken six weeks but finally we have come up with something really meaty and unnecessarily complicated to get our teeth into ... situational analysis

25th August 2010 published by Martin Henley

Situational AnalysisWe have now covered marketing, sales, leads, marketing strategy and creating a marketing plan and now finally we are on our way and defining something that is nothing other than pure, unadulterated, marketing jargon.

 

So when marketing people talk about situational analysis what exactly is it that they mean? Wikipedia defines situational analysis as “a marketing term, and involves evaluating the situation and trends in a particular company's market” and that “when developing strategies, analysis of the organisation and its environment as it is at the moment and how it may develop in the future, is important.”

 

Now that makes perfect sense, if you think of your marketing as a journey that you are planning you need to know where you are starting before you can plot a course to wherever it is that you want to get to. Your statring point will not only dictate your first action it is, at this point in your planning, the thing that will most influence your end goal.

 

You are most likely creating a marketing strategy because you want to change things, and nobody plans to make things worse, so you are almost certainly planning for things to get better. You might be planning to be have better products or services, to generate more awareness of your business, to have more leads, more sales or happier customers or to increase your turnover and your profitability, maybe you are really ambitious and you are planning to increase the value of your business so that you can sell the entire thing at some point in the future. The simple point here is that you can only make things better, or increase things or make people happier or increase the value of something in relation to the way things are now, and to do that you need to analyse your current situation through situational analysis.

 

There is a danger here that this analysis could turn into navel gazing, so is it important that you focus on the things you really need to know about your situation that will really benefit you in your marketing planning?

 

For Effective Marketing the things that you really need to understand are:

 

  • your market
  • your offering
  • your customers
  • your competitors
  • your performance
  • your resources

 

And that is probably a natural order for you to understand them in so that will take care of the next six if you haven't got a blogging clue  posts.

 

So I hope that you now have a better blogging clue about what situational analysis is and how you could be doing it to benefit your marketing efforts.

 

Tune in next week if you haven’t got a blogging clue about ... market analysis.

 

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#HappyCustomers - Telemarketing Training

#HappyCustomers - Telemarketing Training

Harvey Tuck from Kyoto Commercial Kitchens talking about the benefits of the Telemarketing Training that we did with his team.

24th August 2010 published by Martin Henley

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Why does Bill Hicks hate marketing so much?

Why does Bill Hicks hate marketing so much?

Bill Hicks is a huge, late giant of comedy, he clearly didn't like marketing.

23rd August 2010 published by Martin Henley

I can only imagine his indignation if he knew that he was featuring on this marketing website, but actually Bill Hicks did indignation better than anyone else in the world ever. Is there something to learn here? If there is I haven't worked it out. In case you don't know Bill Hicks swears and offends a lot, don't push the play button if you are easily offended.

 

 

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#FellingFunkyOnFriday If this doesn't brighten your day I honestly don't know what will.

#FellingFunkyOnFriday If this doesn't brighten your day I honestly don't know what will.

it's summer time and if you aren't on holiday give yourself five minutes of sheer, unadulterated brightness.

20th August 2010 published by Martin Henley

 

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Why is it that for some people marketing just doesn't work?

Why is it that for some people marketing just doesn't work?

Wow this is a big question and the person that can answer it will probably make a lot of money, watch my back I am going in!

19th August 2010 published by Martin Henley

Marketing FailureI realised quite early on that I was putting myself under pressure calling my business The Effective Marketing Company. That there would never be an excuse and I couldn’t be seen to be struggling for customers, ever. The onset of the worst recession in recent history wouldn’t be a good enough reason to fail, not once I called my business The Effective Marketing Company.

 

The only thing that could have possibly made this crazy endeavour more challenging is if I had started my marketing consultancy with no experience of having worked in a marketing consultancy, or even a marketing department - and I didn’t have that experience.

 

Mercifully, almost five years later The Effective Marketing Company is still here and actually has done rather well, attracting almost 500 customers who are all pretty happy with the service that we have provided to them. At this point I should point out that this post isn’t supposed to be an exhibition of own trumpet blowing because I don’t believe in that and I am not particularly good at it.

 

You see I know the reason that I am still here and that is purely because I have given myself entirely to marketing and it has worked for me. I have had to duck and dive, I have had to bend to the will of the global economy, who hasn’t? I have had to get close to my market and deliver what it was that they wanted and do a lot of marketing. And that is what has worked for me, marketing.

 

So I may have been lucky, but it’s funny that the more marketing I do, the luckier I get.

 

There are a whole raft of people that marketing doesn’t work for and I meet them all the time. Internet marketing doesn’t work; telemarketing doesn’t work; email marketing doesn’t work; social media doesn’t work in fact you can insert ‘here’ any form of marketing because for some people it doesn’t matter what it is, it doesn’t work.

 

So here is the secret, all marketing works. There is no trick, ias long as you understand that marketing is 30% attitude, 30% action, 30% commitment, 1% aptitude and 9% measurement. Next time you launch into some marketing invest in it and give it a reasonable period of time and you might be surprised at the results.

 

Marketing works for everybody, go on do some.

 

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If you haven't got a blogging clue about .... creating a marketing plan.

If you haven't got a blogging clue about .... creating a marketing plan.

There are some fantastic stats that demonstrate that having a marketing plan is inextricably linked to business success. So why don't we all have one?

18th August 2010 published by Martin Henley

Cunning Marketing PlanLet's get the definition out of the way right at the beginning because that clearly isn't the challenge here, so thanks to Wikipedia we know that a marketing plan is simply "a written document that details the necessary actions to achieve one or more marketing objectives."

 

As simple as that, a marketing plan is  the marketing strategy in a documented form, and we know all about marketing strategy from last week. So there is absolutely no difficulty there then, only it rather begs the question why don't we all have a marketing plan?

 

And that is only the first of several questions including:

 

Why is it necessary to document your marketing strategy in a marketing plan?

 

What should you include in your marketing plan?

 

How do you go about creating a marketing plan in an efficient and effective way?

 

So to answer question number two first; why is it necessary to document your marketing strategy in a marketing plan? There are two really good reasons to document your marketing strategy.

 

Firstly, enlisting the support of others. You are likely to need some help to achieve your marketing objectives so whether it's the bank manager, your team or your boss,  having a document is a good way of convincing people of, and directing them in how, they can be helping  you.

 

Secondly, staying on track and marking progress. When you are creating a marketing plan there is always  a danger that you could get dragged off course and a documented point of reference is always useful in case you are  off course or just rather sensibly marking your progress.

 

Question three, what should you include in your marketing plan?

 

Your marketing plan  should include some information about where you are currently, an idea of what it is that you hope to achieve, how you are looking to position yourself in the marketplace, which proactive marketing initiatives you intend to implement, how you are going to get the very best value out of the leads that you generate and how you are going to measure the effectiveness of your marketing activity. Ideally you want to do all of that on a single page of A4 because anything more than that will take an age to produce and will never be read by anyone.

 

And that answers question number four. Developing a marketing plan is a bit like taking the lid of the spaghetti jar, or letting go of the kite strings on a particularly windy day, it can get messy. So if you want a plan that see's the light of day and gets implemented it is important not to get too carried away, keep it simple and don't try and document everything. If there is demand I will put together a template of a one page marketing plan.

 

OK, so the only question that we haven't answered is question number one, why don't we all have a marketing plan?

 

The answer is probably that we donít really understand why it is necessary, what it should include or how to do it. Hopefully this post will have helped you with those questions in some way, but keep coming back because we will have more for you.

As stated above the first thing you need to understand when creating your marketing plain is where you are currently, what marketing people very grandly call "situational analysis." That will be the topic of next week's post so come back next Wednesday of you haven't got a blogging clue about .... situational analysis.

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#Happy Customers - Sales Recruitment & Management

#Happy Customers - Sales Recruitment & Management

Here is the fantastic Mr Wilf Charles talking about the sales & marketing recruitment that we did for him and the ongoing sales management service we are providing.

17th August 2010 published by Martin Henley

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If it's about getting attention this ad might be the best ever.

If it's about getting attention this ad might be the best ever.

I absolutely love this which is surprising because it's not really my thing, I am not big on advertising but this ad definitely does the job.

16th August 2010 published by Martin Henley

 

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#FeelingFunkyOnFriday - I got something on my mind.

#FeelingFunkyOnFriday - I got something on my mind.

This is too funky to be current, isn't it?

13th August 2010 published by Martin Henley

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Thank you Seth Godin.

Thank you Seth Godin.

Somebody recently put a book in my hand and said to me, "well done, you have just discovered your new favourite author."

12th August 2010 published by Martin Henley

Seth GodinNow that may seem a little bit presumptuous, maybe even arrogant, but this guy is a Liverpool fan and isn’t backward in coming forward, so I wasn’t surprised. What  surprised me was the book and the author, the book was Purple Cow, and the author is Seth Godin.

 

I have since bought all of Seth’s books and have been inspired by them all. Seth is an incredible leader with an abundance of generosity, insight, vision, conviction and energy - and that is exactly what I aspire to be to be and thanks to Seth’s incredible thinking I now understand that is the opportunity that is available to us all.

 

Thank you Mr Godin for setting the example.

 

If you are wondering what all of the fuss is about, here are links to all of Seth Godins’ books so that you can discover Seth Godin for yourself.

 

 

I hope you take as much inspiration and enjoyment from Seth's books as I have.

 

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#HappyCustomers - Inhouse Social Media Training

#HappyCustomers - Inhouse Social Media Training

Here is Lee Gold of Peewee's talking about the Social Media Seminar that he attended and the subsequent in-house training that we carried out with his team.

10th August 2010 published by Martin Henley

 

 

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If sales is a performance sales managers are the lead.

If sales is a performance sales managers are the lead.

Here is a great example of how you own a sales team. I am not advocating you treat your sales team quite like this, HR may object, but this is a great performance. Includes offensive language.

09th August 2010 published by Martin Henley

 

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If you haven't got a blogging clue about ... leads.

If you haven't got a blogging clue about ... leads.

Sometimes you just can't buy a lead, or convert a lead, sometimes the leads are good, sometimes they are bad but actually, what the hell is a lead?

04th August 2010 published by Martin Henley

What is a lead.If you have been following this thread you will now know that marketing is about generating leads and that sales is about making the very best of leads, which will lead you to wonder what constitutes a lead.

 

And of course there is varying opinion about what constitutes a lead. Clearly marketing who are producing the leads will think that they are fantastic and sales, if they are failing to convert the leads they will think that they are terrible.


For the record here is a definition courtesy of Wikipedia:

 

"A sales lead is the identity of a human or entity potentially interested in purchasing a product or service, and represents the first stage of a sales process."

 

And whilst I am not sure why they want to distinguish between humans and "entitys",  surely there is a human behind all expressions of interest, I think that this is a good definition of a lead and certainly concur that a lead is the first step in a sales process. 

 

So is it really as simple as that? The answer is yes and if you think a sales lead is anything less than an expression of interest you are wrong. For example when we source data for people there typically comes a point when they stop talking about data or lists and start talking about leads. No I am not able to source lists of 15,000 people who have expressed an interest in you, your products or your services, if 15,000 people were interested in buying from you you probably wouldn't need the list, or me.

 

The only way this can be confused is when you start to think about what constitutes a good or bad lead. There is the enigma that salespeople don't seem to respect a lead, and invest enough in converting a lead unless they have generated it for themselves. When you consider that the only lead generation available to most sales people is cold calling or knocking on doors that makes lead generation incredibly arduous and expensive.  I would argue that there is no such thing as a bad lead as long as they have expressed an interest, they may not have the money, or the right specification or the urgency to buy something as quickly as you might like, but having expressed an interest it should be the sales persons responsibility to satisfy that prospective customers interest.

 

So if you are sharp you will probably be ready with the next question which is where do leads come from? The answer is that leads come from marketing: marketing research, product development, branding, messaging, internet marketing, telemarketing, email marketing, social media, advertising, direct mail, pr - in fact leads come from all of the stuff that marketing does.

 

To understand the opportunity for each of these activities, to prioritise them and action them you will need a marketing strategy, and that is the subject of next week's if you haven't got a blogging clue.

 

Next week, if you haven't got a blogging clue about .... marketing strategy.

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#HappyCustomers - Social Media Training

#HappyCustomers - Social Media Training

Some more happy Effective Marketing Customers talking about their experience at one of our Social Media Workshops.

03rd August 2010 published by Martin Henley

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What is it about American Football & Inspiration?

What is it about American Football & Inspiration?

Here is a great example of what can be achieved if you can forget what's going on around you and really do your best.

02nd August 2010 published by Martin Henley

 

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#FeelingFunkyOnFriday - No Matter Where You Roam

#FeelingFunkyOnFriday - No Matter Where You Roam

Not exactly a blast from the past, more a gentle breeze.

30th July 2010 published by Martin Henley

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#HappyCustomers - How effective is Effective Marketing?

#HappyCustomers - How effective is Effective Marketing?

Have you ever wondered exactly how effective Effective Marketing actually are? Well wonder no more because the answer is right here.

27th July 2010 published by Martin Henley

 

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What do a 15 year old and salesmen have in common?

What do a 15 year old and salesmen have in common?

Here is a great example of what could happen if Dale Carnegie dynamite gets into the wrong hands.

26th July 2010 published by Martin Henley

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Sticking your head above the parapet.

Sticking your head above the parapet.

The markets haven't been kind for the last two or three years but actually that may not be too bad a thing.

22nd July 2010 published by Martin Henley

Effective Marketing works with lost and lts and lots of small businesses and is for that reason that the recession landed on us a good while before it became the international phenomenon that we are very aware of now. because economies are confidence games, quite simply when it works we all have confidence and when we are told it's not working we pack up our toys and sit it out, or do we?

 

A couple of weeks ago I took a day out from the daily work of looking for and winning customers to spend a day at the Marketing Week exhibition. And I have to say I was surprised at what I found because like most businesses I seem to spend a lot of my time and energy fire fighting and managing cash flow and all of the stuff you don't imagine yourself doing when you start your own business. My expectation was that  the whole world was doing the same thing but what the show demonstrated is that while we all face the same challenges some businesses are busy innovating and evolving. It put me in mind of the famous Orson Wells quote:

 

"in Italy for 30 years under the Borgias they had warfare, terror, murder, and bloodshed, but they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, and the Renaissance. In Switzerland they had brotherly love - they had 500 years of democracy and peace, and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock."

 

Which is a reminder that it is in the face of adversity  that humanity thrives and it is in recession that businesses evolve quickest and as we know there were more millionaires created in the last recession than in any time in history.

 

For me economic cycles are like off road bicycle competitions with the recessions being the hills that seem to take up most of the time and energy, slow everybody down and cause some to stop altogether. It is the people with their eye on the bigger picture that win through, perhaps I will see you at the top of this one.  

Three lessons learnt for me: no businesses are hanging around hoping things are going to get better, it's absolutely necessary to take a day out from the grind occasionally to see what else is going on and marketing is still about doing cool things in your business to make it attractive and successful.

 

Here are some of the cool things I took pictures of with my new iPhone.

 

Marketing Week Pictures

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#HappyCustomers - Internet Marketing Training

#HappyCustomers - Internet Marketing Training

Here are some more happy Effective Marketing customers talking about their experience of one of our Internet Marketing Workshops.

20th July 2010 published by Martin Henley

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Telesales in full effect from the amazing Fonejacker

Telesales in full effect from the amazing Fonejacker

Here is an amazing example of how telemarketing works, if you have a great offer, you get their attention and you use open questions.

19th July 2010 published by Martin Henley

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#FeelingFunkyOnFriday - Walk on with Hope...

#FeelingFunkyOnFriday - Walk on with Hope...

You'll Never Walk Alone if you are walking with Elvis Presley.

16th July 2010 published by Martin Henley

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What if Al Pacino were to take your sales meetings?

What if Al Pacino were to take your sales meetings?

Is it pushing the point too far to compare sales with American Football? For Effective Marketing it's the same, two silly games that mean nothing unless you take it really seriously. Check out Al Pacino and take a lesson in motivation.

12th July 2010 published by Martin Henley

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#FeelingFunkyOnFriday You will be, push the button.

#FeelingFunkyOnFriday You will be, push the button.

Here's a little bit of Al green to put you in the mood on this beautiful Friday.

09th July 2010 published by Martin Henley


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A great example of great closing from Mr. Diesel

A great example of great closing from Mr. Diesel

Closing is often considered to be the most difficult, and therefore, the most respected skill amongst sales people.

08th July 2010 published by Martin Henley

With the deal at stake its takes cojones of steel to move things on. Here is perhaps the best example ever from Vin Diesel, another potentially great salesman lost to Hollywood. 

 

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Back to School with Young Enterprise

Back to School with Young Enterprise

Of all the things that Effective Marketing have been involved in Young Enterprise has to be the most rewarding and the most beneficial.

02nd July 2010 published by Martin Henley

Learning to Invest with Young Enterprise

 

Young Enterprise is a fantastic organisation that takes business volunteers into schools to run programmes including Personal Economics, Learn to Earn, Project Business & Sell for Success which have benefited me enormously.

 

The programmes are practical learning opportunities for school children to learn through engaging games, discussions and exercises  that give pupils the opportunity to learn by doing whilst giving them an insight into a whole host of issues and challenges that they are going to face in their personal lives and in their careers.

 

I have completed five of these programmes and have volunteered around 10 days in the last four years.

 

When I started volunteering I was really excited about spending time with the kids and having a huge positive impact on their lives with these amazing programmes. What I have learnt since then is that it is incredibly hard work winning the attention of a classroom full of kids and actually if you get some of this stuff through to them and make it stick then you have done incredibly well.

 

Which has got me thinking about why I do it and I have come to the conclusion that my motives aren't entirely selfless. There is absolutely no question that these programmes have improved my presentation skills, my confidence and my ability to engage a room full of people; that they have filled holes in my education, there was certainly nothing like these programmes available when I was at school; and that they have put me in touch with some great local business people who recognise the valuing of investing in themselves and the following generations,  the networking is phenomenal; the programmes have also given me a healthy respect for teachers and the young people that I may well be employing in the future.

 

Of course, you can also use use these programmes to collect development points for whichever professional organisations you may be a member of like the CIPD or CIM.

 

Whilst I was very pleased when I read the classes feedback yesterday and recognised the maturity of the students and how much of the programme they had taken in, I have also realised that the benefits to me are huge and that there simply isn't anywhere else to get personal development quite like this.

 

Young Enterprise are always looking for volunteers so if you think you or your staff could benefit, I promise that you will, you should get in touch with Georgina Angele, or check out their Website.
 


 

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That Mail Chimp just gets cheekier and cheekier!

That Mail Chimp just gets cheekier and cheekier!

It’s actually quite hard to explain how fond effective marketing have become of that cheeky little Mail Chimp.

25th May 2010 published by Martin Henley

It sounds weird and it is actually weird when I hear myself telling people that Mail Chimp is the daddy when it comes to email marketing and that Mail Chimp makes email marketing fun.

This isn’t language that you would normally associate with an activity as mundane as email marketing.

However, what I am saying is absolutely true. Mail Chimp is so intuitive it makes it easy to design your own email template, which will save you hundreds of pounds; it makes it easy to schedule your email campaigns, which will save you hours; it makes it easy to monitor the effectiveness of your campaigns with their Google Analytics linked reporting, which will keep you motivated; and it makes it very easy to set up targeted campaigns with their list segmenting, response based targeting and auto-responders, which is the key to successful email marketing; in short Mail Chimp makes email marketing work.

Now to top all of that Mail Chimp have released their own iPhone App so now you can monitor and manage your email marketing on the move.

So if you are an iPhone fan, you should be, and if you are an email marketer, you definitely should be, then it really is time you took the time to check out the cheeky, cheeky Mail Chimp.

 

 

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Motivation, that's what you need.

Motivation, that's what you need.

You will love this incredibly creative and engaging presentation of some really important research into what motivates.

19th May 2010 published by Martin Henley

If you are hoping to manage people effectively and have them invest themselves in your business in constantly changing workplaces this video is a must see.

If you are looking to motivate your prospects and customers this has to be even more important.
 

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You absolutely have to love Basecamp and 37 Signals

You absolutely have to love Basecamp and 37 Signals

Not only have 37 Signals developed a fantastic tool for managing collaborative projects which is massively intuitive and simple to use, they also set the standard in how to do internet business.

23rd March 2010 published by Martin Henley

Most of these online services rely on the gym membership principle to make money. That is, sign up and share your credit card details while it is all very exciting, get bored quite quickly because its a second rate solution but continue to take money from your account until you run out of money or die. 37 Signals however, write to remind you before they even start taking the money and make it easy for you to cancel if you haven’t managed to use it or find it useful, see below.

You might argue that by being so generous in their dealings with potential customers that 37 Signals are missing out on customers and revenue and that is undoubtedly the case. and doesn't sound like particularly effectivemarketing. What they have achieved in my case however, is a raving fan who has taken the trouble to market their products for them, and I am sure there are plenty of us.

If you are involved in projects that involve other people you may also fall in love with Basecamp, why not check it out here.
 

Basecamp Collaborative Projects
 

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Effective Marketing loves an award winning customer

Effective Marketing loves an award winning customer

We absolutely love it when people who win awards decide that they want to be working with Effective Marketing. This award is particularly rewarding for Jackie Keddy as the selection and voting was carried out by her peers, other coaches who are doing the job right now.

02nd February 2010 published by Martin Henley

Coaching at WorkJackie Keddy has won Coaching at Work Coaching/Mentoring Person of the Year 2009 Award.

Comments from those nominating Keddy included: “she has developed real and compassionate tools which make it simple for line mangers to get coaching and use it.”; “she brings passion and a genuine desire to see both coaches and coachees develop”; “she is both a thinker and a real ‘doer’ rather than an academic or theorist, and isn’t tied to the belief that only coaching which is practiced along ‘pure’ lines can add value in organizations.  Her pragmatic approach, a common sense attitude to life, and her zest for helping individuals and teams to recognise their true potential has won her many friends and plaudits in the coaching world. She’s regularly approached by leaders of coaching programmes in other organisations for advice and inspiration, which she often gives freely.”

Keddy, managing director and lead consultant of Keddy Consultants, was formerly lead consultant of the Metropolitan Police Service’s Leadership Academy where she was instrumental in introducing coaching to the Met.  The annual accolade goes to the person who receives the most nominations from Coaching at Work readers who are asked to submit their nominations at the end of the year as part of the annual Readers Survey. The award was announced in Coaching at Work Volume 5, Issue 1 in December 2009. An awards ceremony is planned for spring 2010.

Other nominees included Sir John Whitmore, Michael Carroll, Tatiana Bachkirova, Clare Hack, Colin McIntyre, Myles Downey, Katherine St-John Brooks, Paul Brown, Nancy Kline, Lou Stern, Carol Kauffman, Jasbinder Singh and Eric Parsloe.

Coaching at Work magazine is published six times a year. Subscribers also receive a monthly digital newsletter and have access to additional editorial material published regularly on the website, which includes a coach listing.

For more information, visit www.coaching-at-work.com.

For information on Keddy’s coaching work at the Met, see “Inside Job”, Coaching at Work, Volume 2, Issue 6

To subscribe to Coaching at Work, call 0844 322 1274

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Is it any wonder The All Blacks win Rugby matches?

Is it any wonder The All Blacks win Rugby matches?

If you have spent anytime with Effective Marketing you will know that we are big on getting in the mood, perhaps not quite on the scale of The All Blacks but you get the gist.

28th November 2009 published by Martin Henley

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Not sure about Social Media?

Not sure about Social Media?

Still not sure about Social Media, you had better make your mind up because it isn't waiting for you.

25th November 2009 published by Martin Henley

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If you haven't got a blogging clue about ... your offering.

I am feeling a little bit unsure about this one because surely you don’t need me to define what you offer, do you? I think it might be worth considering for a bit.

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#HappyCustomers - Internet Marketing Training Sussex

Delegates at one of our Internet Marketing Workshops talking about their experience of attending the course.

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