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Digg it UP - How Sound Is Your Marketing Bridge?
Want Career Success? Embrace Change! ineffective advertising campaigns.Do any of these scenarios resonate for you?You’ve been on a great career path for several years, but you’ve hit an advancement plateau.You’ve been working in one industry since college, but you find yourself thinking about doing something else.Your company has gone through a merger, and you feel like there’s a “downsize” target on your back.Seeing yourself in any of the above situations means you’re contemplating change – on your terms, or on terms handed to you with a severance package. Current conventional wisdom is that each of us will have three to five careers AND between 10 to 12 jobs in our lifetimes, so fasten your seatbelt. Change is inevitable.Change is the only constant in our lives. Our bodies change as we grow and age, ou Your Business The business itself is the foundation, the starting point for all marketing. What innovations, differences, competitive advantages, and unique strengths do you offer that are important and attractive to your customer? What customer satisfactions-reputation, guarantees, service, policies, and practices-do you offer that will keep a customer for a lifetime? Business vitality may be your company's most important characteristic. A direct result of your leadership, it projects a vision of where your enterprise is going and what it can become. It inspires passion for serving the customer that goes beyond sales and profits. It energizes employee commitment and authentic customer service. Business vitality creates enthusiasm, enjoyment, and dedication, transforming enterprises into dynamic, personal, lively, one-of-a-kind creations. The Marketing Bridge was developed by Norton Warner, author of the highly acclaimned marketing book, David Can Still Beat Goliath, in 1968 and is still used today by businesses and media around the world. Jeff Dostal is the President of Warner Concept System. This DVD based Nine Ways to Build Your Business Without Making Cold Calls The Marketing BridgeMethod 1: Client base Saturation - When looking for new business, your current clients are always your BEST prospects! The focus of this approach is developing all client relationships to their maximum potential - helping them in every way possible and, in the process, laying a stronger foundation for their ongoing referrals.Method 2: Refined Referral Building - Stronger client relationships should naturally lead to more and better referrals - but you need to know when and how to ask for them! This method focuses on securing high-level introductions into companies with whom your existing clients have relationships.Method 3: Professional Interpersonal Networking - Every day, human development professionals cross paths with millions of dollars in opportunit Marketing is the process of attracting and keeping customers. Howard J. Morgens, chairman emeritus of Procter & Gamble, called advertising "only a part of the total selling effort." Because advertising is in the foreground, he said, "It is often thought of as an entity, separate and complete in itself. It is not. It is a combination of selling functions that provides the motive power." That combination-which attracts and keeps customers and builds the consumer franchise-I call the marketing bridge. Examine every selling function of your marketing bridge from the customer's point of view to ensure customer satisfaction. Your bridge must be attractive and inviting. The journey across must be easy, pleasant, and satisfying. Advertising Advertising, one of the selling functions that make up the marketing bridge, is usually the first communication you have with a prospective customer. Effective advertising requires that you know your customer and that your compelling messages reach this customer with frequency and consistency. While advertising is critical to the success of any enterprise, it is only part of the total marketing, or selling, effort. Personal Selling Everything done with and for customers after they enter or call your business is a personal selling activity. Besides the salespeople on the showroom floor-the delivery driver, the sacker, the cashier, and the receptionist are all in personal selling. I've seen enterprises spend millions to attract customers and then run them off with a surly dockworker or a temperamental technician. Your responsibility is to ensure that every business associate or employee who has contact with a customer understands the part he or she plays in the marketing process. Each associate is an extension of you. Each customer contact communicates your attitude toward the importance of the customer. When your advertising brings prospects to your showroom, can your sales associates convert them to long-term customers? Will your after-the-sale attention and service earn customer loyalty? One of my earliest advertising clients was an owner of a small appliance shop. On my initial sales call, I listened to the owner working with a customer. A real pro, the owner pleasantly answered every question to the customer's satisfaction and ended up with a sale. My first words to him were, "Would I love to advertise for you!" He asked why, and I told him truthfully, "Because if my advertising sends in ten prospective customers, you will sell all ten." The personal-selling element of his marketing bridge would make the cost of advertising an investment rather than an expense. An owner of a chain of retail stores once pointed out that if the number of customers is high and the average sale is low, the advertising is working but the store isn't. When the number of customers is low and the average sale is high, the store is working but the advertising isn't. The two components-effective advertising and effective personal selling-must work together for an enterprise to succeed and prosper. That's what the marketing bridge is all about. Merchandising The way you present your product and your establishment is a vital selling function. Merchandising includes product displays, decorating, lighting, indoor and outdoor signs, and other promotional elements that create a positive impression on customers at your place of business. If one of your employees wears a clown suit, stands at the curb, and gestures for cars to turn into your parking lot-that's merchandising too. Some businesses fail to differentiate between merchandising and advertising. "Why aren't you advertising?" one storeowner was asked. "I am advertising!" he replied. "That electronic sign out front costs me $1,500 a month. I pay for it out of my advertising budget." The electronic sign is merchandising, not advertising. Many a business has failed after slashing its advertising budget in favor of costly on-premise merchandising. Price and Value The price and value of a product or service are obvious selling functions. The cost of an item or service is its price; but value also includes its worth to the purchaser. This distinction is important in marketing. If you sell a commodity-a product or service with no perceived difference from the competition's-customers follow the lowest price. But if your product or service is proprietary-unusual or unique to your enterprise-you may charge more to the extent that the customer perceives greater value. Many proprietary enterprises believe that price is the only compelling factor among purchasers. This misunderstanding of the difference between price and value generally produces wasteful, ineffective advertising campaigns. Your Business The business itself is the foundation, the starting point for all marketing. What innovations, differences, competitive advantages, and unique strengths do you offer that are important and attractive to your customer? What customer satisfactions-reputation, guarantees, service, policies, and practices-do you offer that will keep a customer for a lifetime? Business vitality may be your company's most important characteristic. A direct result of your leadership, it projects a vision of where your enterprise is going and what it can become. It inspires passion for serving the customer that goes beyond sales and profits. It energizes employee commitment and authentic customer service. Business vitality creates enthusiasm, enjoyment, and dedication, transforming enterprises into dynamic, personal, lively, one-of-a-kind creations. The Marketing Bridge was developed by Norton Warner, author of the highly acclaimned marketing book, David Can Still Beat Goliath, in 1968 and is still used today by businesses and media around the world. Jeff Dostal is the President of Warner Concept System. This DVD based CVs And Resumes Sometimes Just Get In The Way , effort.As a head-hunter and Career Coach I see so many CVs and resumes that look as though they are designed to get in the way of what I (or any other recruiter) might need to know about you the candidate. They vary from pure meaningless waffle without any identifiable facts to lengthy tomes with so much detail they send me to sleep. And I persevere where many others wouldn't bother.My least favourite CV of recent times was seventeen pages long. The first page had only the candidate's name on it (you know who you are don't you?) and the second page was devoted to a full page head and shoulders photograph. The other 15 were packed full of so much information that I felt I knew his life history.Most professionals I know would not take the trouble to even read this Personal Selling Everything done with and for customers after they enter or call your business is a personal selling activity. Besides the salespeople on the showroom floor-the delivery driver, the sacker, the cashier, and the receptionist are all in personal selling. I've seen enterprises spend millions to attract customers and then run them off with a surly dockworker or a temperamental technician. Your responsibility is to ensure that every business associate or employee who has contact with a customer understands the part he or she plays in the marketing process. Each associate is an extension of you. Each customer contact communicates your attitude toward the importance of the customer. When your advertising brings prospects to your showroom, can your sales associates convert them to long-term customers? Will your after-the-sale attention and service earn customer loyalty? One of my earliest advertising clients was an owner of a small appliance shop. On my initial sales call, I listened to the owner working with a customer. A real pro, the owner pleasantly answered every question to the customer's satisfaction and ended up with a sale. My first words to him were, "Would I love to advertise for you!" He asked why, and I told him truthfully, "Because if my advertising sends in ten prospective customers, you will sell all ten." The personal-selling element of his marketing bridge would make the cost of advertising an investment rather than an expense. An owner of a chain of retail stores once pointed out that if the number of customers is high and the average sale is low, the advertising is working but the store isn't. When the number of customers is low and the average sale is high, the store is working but the advertising isn't. The two components-effective advertising and effective personal selling-must work together for an enterprise to succeed and prosper. That's what the marketing bridge is all about. Merchandising The way you present your product and your establishment is a vital selling function. Merchandising includes product displays, decorating, lighting, indoor and outdoor signs, and other promotional elements that create a positive impression on customers at your place of business. If one of your employees wears a clown suit, stands at the curb, and gestures for cars to turn into your parking lot-that's merchandising too. Some businesses fail to differentiate between merchandising and advertising. "Why aren't you advertising?" one storeowner was asked. "I am advertising!" he replied. "That electronic sign out front costs me $1,500 a month. I pay for it out of my advertising budget." The electronic sign is merchandising, not advertising. Many a business has failed after slashing its advertising budget in favor of costly on-premise merchandising. Price and Value The price and value of a product or service are obvious selling functions. The cost of an item or service is its price; but value also includes its worth to the purchaser. This distinction is important in marketing. If you sell a commodity-a product or service with no perceived difference from the competition's-customers follow the lowest price. But if your product or service is proprietary-unusual or unique to your enterprise-you may charge more to the extent that the customer perceives greater value. Many proprietary enterprises believe that price is the only compelling factor among purchasers. This misunderstanding of the difference between price and value generally produces wasteful, ineffective advertising campaigns. Your Business The business itself is the foundation, the starting point for all marketing. What innovations, differences, competitive advantages, and unique strengths do you offer that are important and attractive to your customer? What customer satisfactions-reputation, guarantees, service, policies, and practices-do you offer that will keep a customer for a lifetime? Business vitality may be your company's most important characteristic. A direct result of your leadership, it projects a vision of where your enterprise is going and what it can become. It inspires passion for serving the customer that goes beyond sales and profits. It energizes employee commitment and authentic customer service. Business vitality creates enthusiasm, enjoyment, and dedication, transforming enterprises into dynamic, personal, lively, one-of-a-kind creations. The Marketing Bridge was developed by Norton Warner, author of the highly acclaimned marketing book, David Can Still Beat Goliath, in 1968 and is still used today by businesses and media around the world. Jeff Dostal is the President of Warner Concept System. This DVD based 4 Keys To Managing Six Sigma Effectively rst words to him were, "Would I love to advertise for you!" He asked why, and I told him truthfully, "Because if my advertising sends in ten prospective customers, you will sell all ten." The personal-selling element of his marketing bridge would make the cost of advertising an investment rather than an expense. An owner of a chain of retail stores once pointed out that if the number of customers is high and the average sale is low, the advertising is working but the store isn't. When the number of customers is low and the average sale is high, the store is working but the advertising isn't. The two components-effective advertising and effective personal selling-must work together for an enterprise to succeed and prosper. That's what the marketing bridge is all about.Managing Six Sigma calls for a multidirectional approach as guided by industry specifics, projects on hand, expertise level and commitment of upper management as well as the goals envisioned by management.Managing effectiveness in Six Sigma can be defined as well directed efforts to successful deployment of the methodology to the project which is chosen to give you the best results. This helps to improve the company’s bottom line.Managing Six Sigma EffectivenessExperience and research over the years have time and again proven that grooming leaders results in maintaining the competitiveness that corporations need. Consequently, the end result of this is seen as improvement to profitability and sustainable and predictable constant improvements.Ef Merchandising The way you present your product and your establishment is a vital selling function. Merchandising includes product displays, decorating, lighting, indoor and outdoor signs, and other promotional elements that create a positive impression on customers at your place of business. If one of your employees wears a clown suit, stands at the curb, and gestures for cars to turn into your parking lot-that's merchandising too. Some businesses fail to differentiate between merchandising and advertising. "Why aren't you advertising?" one storeowner was asked. "I am advertising!" he replied. "That electronic sign out front costs me $1,500 a month. I pay for it out of my advertising budget." The electronic sign is merchandising, not advertising. Many a business has failed after slashing its advertising budget in favor of costly on-premise merchandising. Price and Value The price and value of a product or service are obvious selling functions. The cost of an item or service is its price; but value also includes its worth to the purchaser. This distinction is important in marketing. If you sell a commodity-a product or service with no perceived difference from the competition's-customers follow the lowest price. But if your product or service is proprietary-unusual or unique to your enterprise-you may charge more to the extent that the customer perceives greater value. Many proprietary enterprises believe that price is the only compelling factor among purchasers. This misunderstanding of the difference between price and value generally produces wasteful, ineffective advertising campaigns. Your Business The business itself is the foundation, the starting point for all marketing. What innovations, differences, competitive advantages, and unique strengths do you offer that are important and attractive to your customer? What customer satisfactions-reputation, guarantees, service, policies, and practices-do you offer that will keep a customer for a lifetime? Business vitality may be your company's most important characteristic. A direct result of your leadership, it projects a vision of where your enterprise is going and what it can become. It inspires passion for serving the customer that goes beyond sales and profits. It energizes employee commitment and authentic customer service. Business vitality creates enthusiasm, enjoyment, and dedication, transforming enterprises into dynamic, personal, lively, one-of-a-kind creations. The Marketing Bridge was developed by Norton Warner, author of the highly acclaimned marketing book, David Can Still Beat Goliath, in 1968 and is still used today by businesses and media around the world. Jeff Dostal is the President of Warner Concept System. This DVD based The Most Important Role Of The Manager rking lot-that's merchandising too. Some businesses fail to differentiate between merchandising and advertising. "Why aren't you advertising?" one storeowner was asked. "I am advertising!" he replied. "That electronic sign out front costs me $1,500 a month. I pay for it out of my advertising budget." The electronic sign is merchandising, not advertising. Many a business has failed after slashing its advertising budget in favor of costly on-premise merchandising.How often have you heard a manager complain that communication is not effective because no one seems to be taking any notice of the memos or directives? Well, we are always tempted to believe that there is ineffective communication within some organisations but replace one of the usual memos with one saying that each person has won a million dollars and then sit back and look at just how effective that communication is!The usual manner of communicating is not as effective as it could be because many managers have the wrong priorities to make their communication effective so staff gradually become selective in what they react to. The highest priorities for a leader of others should be the following, and in the order stated:* To give a sense of purpose and Price and Value The price and value of a product or service are obvious selling functions. The cost of an item or service is its price; but value also includes its worth to the purchaser. This distinction is important in marketing. If you sell a commodity-a product or service with no perceived difference from the competition's-customers follow the lowest price. But if your product or service is proprietary-unusual or unique to your enterprise-you may charge more to the extent that the customer perceives greater value. Many proprietary enterprises believe that price is the only compelling factor among purchasers. This misunderstanding of the difference between price and value generally produces wasteful, ineffective advertising campaigns. Your Business The business itself is the foundation, the starting point for all marketing. What innovations, differences, competitive advantages, and unique strengths do you offer that are important and attractive to your customer? What customer satisfactions-reputation, guarantees, service, policies, and practices-do you offer that will keep a customer for a lifetime? Business vitality may be your company's most important characteristic. A direct result of your leadership, it projects a vision of where your enterprise is going and what it can become. It inspires passion for serving the customer that goes beyond sales and profits. It energizes employee commitment and authentic customer service. Business vitality creates enthusiasm, enjoyment, and dedication, transforming enterprises into dynamic, personal, lively, one-of-a-kind creations. The Marketing Bridge was developed by Norton Warner, author of the highly acclaimned marketing book, David Can Still Beat Goliath, in 1968 and is still used today by businesses and media around the world. Jeff Dostal is the President of Warner Concept System. This DVD based Making the Menu Drive Sales and Speed ineffective advertising campaigns.As we all wrestle with getting our employees to recommend and suggest items to customers, perhaps you should consider a different approach. Design the menu to sell for you and, in the process, speed up service times, especially if you have a drive-thru. After I went through another lengthy service experience due to indecisive customers ahead of me in line, it was apparent that until I can place my order online or at a self-service kiosk, something must be done by operators to make ordering easier for customers. So look up at the menu board.Many companies are heading in the right direction, but look at your board with a critical eye, the eye of an indecisive or new customer. Do they know what all these items are? Is it helping them make a decision or to try Your Business The business itself is the foundation, the starting point for all marketing. What innovations, differences, competitive advantages, and unique strengths do you offer that are important and attractive to your customer? What customer satisfactions-reputation, guarantees, service, policies, and practices-do you offer that will keep a customer for a lifetime? Business vitality may be your company's most important characteristic. A direct result of your leadership, it projects a vision of where your enterprise is going and what it can become. It inspires passion for serving the customer that goes beyond sales and profits. It energizes employee commitment and authentic customer service. Business vitality creates enthusiasm, enjoyment, and dedication, transforming enterprises into dynamic, personal, lively, one-of-a-kind creations. The Marketing Bridge was developed by Norton Warner, author of the highly acclaimned marketing book, David Can Still Beat Goliath, in 1968 and is still used today by businesses and media around the world. Jeff Dostal is the President of Warner Concept System. This DVD based system provides a step by step guide for the development and implementation of an effective marketing and advertising program that works for the small business owner. You can contact Warner Concept System by logging on to www.warnerconceptsystem.com or by emailing Jeff at jeff@warnerconceptsystem.com
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