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Archive for unique selling proposition

Marketing Misconceptions

By Stand Out Results · Comments (0)
Friday, March 22nd, 2013

Marketing coStand Out Results Marketing Misconceptionsmes in many shapes and sizes; websites, advertisements, commercials, networking, presentations, branding, etc. and it can become confusing which tactics would work best for your business without a strategy.  Understanding common marketing misconception will help you learn how to market more effectively for your business success.

Misconception 1:  Your logo is your brand

Not exactly, your logo is a small visual representation of the foundation your brand created.  Your brand consists of your company’s essence and personality, core values and value statements, target market and insight, advertising tagline and unique selling proposition.  Without all these identified pillars, your brand isn’t complete, often unauthentic and can’t stand the test of time.

Misconception 2:  Your marketing budget should be a set formula spent on print advertising, website and collateral pieces.

If your target market finds their trusted information on a LinkedIn Group and nowhere else, why would you invest in print advertising?  If your business is focused on online sales with a shopping cart, wouldn’t you spend more money on your website and Google Pay Per Click campaigns rather than collateral pieces?  Spend your marketing dollars where your clients find valuable information and you can clearly express your core differentiation.

Misconception 3:  All marketers are the same and one person can create strategy along with all the tactical projects included in the plan

Would you have your family physician perform your facial plastic surgery?  Of course not!  The same philosophy applies to marketing, which encompasses so many different aspects of communicating with prospects and clients that it is inconceivable that one person could actually perform all the marketing functions a successful marketing plan requires.  A marketing strategist isn’t a graphic artist, a web designer isn’t a PR maven, and a package designer isn’t a SEO guru.  Hire experts within each area.

Have you run across marketing misconceptions?  Share them!  We want to hear from you.

Want to learn more on how to market effectively for your business?  Download Stand Out Results’ John Jantsch authored Duct Tape Marketing FREE eBook, 7 Steps to Marketing Strategy Success.

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About Vicki James

Stand Out Results collaborates with their clients in the small to medium size professional industries to stand out from their competition by creating strategic, systemize marketing processes for more qualified lead generation resulting in higher sales and profits. Vicki M James, Growth and Accountability Partner at Stand Out Results, is an expert in internal and external branding, strategic marketing and customer experience. Working for local and national companies ranging from family owned to corporations for over twenty years she has developed an unique collaborative consulting style guiding her clients through a cohesive marketing system that results in clear messages and higher sales. When she's not sharing her knowledge about marketing, Vicki is sharing her passion of being socially conscious serving on the YWCA Empowering Women Luncheon Committee and the Rochester Women's Network (RWN) Executive Board where she represents the Marketing Committee as the VP and Chair.

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Categories : Marketing Strategy
Tags : 7 steps to marketing strategy success, advertisement, Advertising, advertising tagline, brand, Branding, budget, business, campaign, clients, collateral, commercial, communication, company, complete, core differentiation, core value, designer, duct tape marketing, ebook, effectively, essence, foundation, Google+, graphic artist, john jantsch, LinkedIn, logo, market, marketers, Marketing, marketing budget, marketing insight, marketing misconceptions, marketing plan, marketing strategist, misconception, misconceptions, money, networking, online, online sales, package designer, Pay Per Click, personality, philosophy, physician, plan, PPC, PR, presentation, print, print advertising, projects, prospects, seo, shopping cart, Stand Out Results, strategy, success, surgery, tactic, tagline, target market, unauthentic, unique selling proposition, USP, value statement, Vicki James, Vicki M James, vickie james, vicky james, visual, web designer, website

Trouble Finding Investors or Prospects? Maybe It’s Your Marketing Strategy Message

By Stand Out Results · Comments (0)
Friday, January 11th, 2013

Trust is the number one motivator in getting prospects and investors to take action with your business.  However, how do you build that trust?  And once you have the trust, how do you retain it?  The subject of trust really resonated with me this past week through two separate instances.  The first was at a networking event where I met for the first time, a software developer of a six year start-up company.  While he rambled on about how his business was different from the other companies that I had heard of doing the same thing, he couldn’t complete in a short ten word statement what his benefit was and the core differentiators.  Since software is by far my strong suit, I grasped at the few phrases that made sense in my world and then tried to make it fit to the information I already knew.  All the while, missing important key information because we weren’t talking the same language.  Now, you are probably wondering why the title of this post isn’t about networking, branding, unique selling proposition or core differentiation.  And those all are at the root problem of the message from the person I was connecting with but, the bigger issue was that he shared they were having trouble securing investors.  ”OOOHHH”, I thought, “I completely understand why.”  Investors were having the same trouble I was, we couldn’t understand the key factor of what they were doing that made them unique.  This is a trust issue.  When the message of your differentiation isn’t clear, concise and valuable in the eyes of your ideal client; you’ve lost the sale and become white noise among all the other businesses marketing to the masses.

Stand Out Results helps you grow your business through marketing strategy and brand awareness

So, as a “give to gain” philosopher, I asked this connection if they had a marketing person on staff or working with strategic marketing partner.  His reply was that the CEO did all the marketing and could present the product much better.  However, that’s the crutch with the situation and reason for this blog post!  This connection was the one out and about networking, talking to the public about the company and handing out cards.  It is just as imperative that he was able to explain in a short, ten word statement what his benefits are as it is from the marketing CEO or brochures that they had created.  EVERYONE in your business must be able to clearly and concisely communicate your unique selling proposition.  When they can’t, the trust factor erodes immediately.  So, if a client accidentally dials the wrong extension and receives the staff accountant on the line and said accountant isn’t living and breathing the brand identity created by the marketing, advertising and sales professionals, the experience quickly

resembles a rouse with the “man behind the curtain”.  Clients start to wonder which experience is the true one.  And allowing them to doubt for one minute that your marketing strategy wasn’t sincere, costs you residual sales and additional clients, ultimately resulting in a significant revenue loss.What happens when the entire company is living and breathing the brand identity, expressing the core differentiation in the same language as the people listening and utilizing the marketing strategy?  Trust occurs.  And when trust happens, money flows and referrals are recommended.  Why?  Well, because when an investor or prospect trusts what your business is offering, they don’t question the price it’s offered at and you can even afford to offer it at a premium.  In addition, you also stop competing on price with your competitors because now you stand out among the crowded marketplace.  Lastly, clients and investors want to spend money with people they know, like and trust and when they have found that, it’s almost an innate need to share the information with others that they are centers of influence (COI) with.  And here lies the second instant where trust became a factor for me last week.  My computer had a virus, come to find out several nasty viruses.  I needed an expert to quickly and

completely eradicate these viruses.  I contacted a trusted center of influence and asked if they knew of anyone that I should call.  Low and behold, they still do this type of work .  Yippee!  Now I have someone to take care of my frustration that I know, like and trusted.  In addition, whatever they were going to charge me was going to be okay because I knew them, trusted them and felt that they would take care of me and my problem with minimal incident at the maximum efficiency.  This expectation is the epitome of trust.In closing, if you notice that you aren’t closing any proposals or landing any investors, review your message to ensure you are communicating in a way that builds trust at every level of your business.  Once you have this solidified, the sales and money will follow.

Stand Out Results blog posts are written by:  Vicki M James, Growth and Accountability Marketing Strategy Partner and Duct Tape Marketing Consultant

Stand Out Results

About Vicki James

Stand Out Results collaborates with their clients in the small to medium size professional industries to stand out from their competition by creating strategic, systemize marketing processes for more qualified lead generation resulting in higher sales and profits. Vicki M James, Growth and Accountability Partner at Stand Out Results, is an expert in internal and external branding, strategic marketing and customer experience. Working for local and national companies ranging from family owned to corporations for over twenty years she has developed an unique collaborative consulting style guiding her clients through a cohesive marketing system that results in clear messages and higher sales. When she's not sharing her knowledge about marketing, Vicki is sharing her passion of being socially conscious serving on the YWCA Empowering Women Luncheon Committee and the Rochester Women's Network (RWN) Executive Board where she represents the Marketing Committee as the VP and Chair.

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Categories : Lead Conversion, Lead Generation, Sales
Tags : accountability, accountant, benefit, brand, brand identity, Branding, brouchure, business, call to action, center of influence, ceo, coi, communicate, communication, company, competitors, connection, consultant, core differentiation, core differentiator, crowded marketplace, different, differentiation, duct tape marketing, efficient, expectation, expert, frustration, give to gain, growth, ideal client, investor, key factor, key information, know, like, Marketing, Marketing Hourglass, marketing strategy, message, money, motivator, networking, partner, price, prospect, recommendation, referral, results, retain, sale, stand out, Stand Out Results, start-up, stop competing on price, strategic, strategy, take action, target market, trust, unique, unique selling proposition, USP, valuable, Vicki James, Vicki M James, white noise

Is Your Differentiation Really Different or Just an Expectation?

By Stand Out Results · Comments (0)
Friday, December 14th, 2012

While supporting Small Business Saturday this weekend, I asked the main street shops what made them different – what was going to compel consumers to shop at their stores rather than the big box ones?  Some had really good differentiation, they catered to special needs children and educational-based toys, others didn’t know and were like everyone else; an orange among many oranges.

Stand Out Results helps their clients stand out from their competition

Since you aren’t truly setting yourself apart from your competition, you are perceived as the same.  Once perceived as the same from your competition, the prospect and customer immediately finds ways to differentiate you on their own and usually price is top on the list.  If you want to be viewed and regarded as the professional industry expert it is imperative that you find a valuable and compelling reason that you are different from everyone else in the marketplace who is doing the exact same thing as your business.  I like to call this the “Janet Jackson Factor”.  As in, “What have you done for me?”.  When looking to find your differentiator within marketing your business you need to look at your business through your client’s eyes and often getting your current clients involved is the best way to move from expectation to true unique core difference.

By interviewing your current “A” ranked clients; those that you enjoy working with, value your services, pays on time and refers you, on why they started to work with you in the first place you gain immeasurable insight to what makes your business different.  Ask them what you do better than anyone else like you and what they say to friends and colleagues when they refer you.  Once completed, you’ll quickly notice the commonality of the responses and understand who you are to them and how your business helps their core frustrations.  You can now, create your true core differentiation and unique selling proposition (USP), positioning your company brand to stand out among your competition and allowing you to charge a premium for you services and products.   Let me warn you however, what you find out may not sound unique or sexy.  Often, it’s a company’s way of delivering an experience; the people, guarantees offered, packaging , brand promotion or special touches.  It’s how the company positions its business to solve a problem that everybody in the industry is having that motivates people to buy.   A good friend of mine, on the first time we met, told me about her commercial janitorial company.  The unique differentiator that stuck in my mind was their philosophy of cleaning the bathroom; if you had to get sick at work, you wouldn’t mind laying on the tiles.  Now THAT is commitment to extreme cleaning and a true testament to what they stand for and the quality of work they provide beyond what all the other commercial janitorial companies are offering.

In conclusion, my challenge to you is to really look at your business with a critical eye and determine if you core differentiation is truly something that is unique or simply an expectation.  Decide if your unique selling proposition is the apple among the oranges to stand out within your crowded market place.  Ask you clients, power partners and employees what you do best.  Remember, as John Jantsch, Duct Tape Marketing small business marketing guru best put it, “while it’s very logical to try to find your point of differentiation from a product, package or price feature, some of the greatest marketing strategies reside in tapping the underlying culture of the organization itself.”

Stand Out Results

About Vicki James

Stand Out Results collaborates with their clients in the small to medium size professional industries to stand out from their competition by creating strategic, systemize marketing processes for more qualified lead generation resulting in higher sales and profits. Vicki M James, Growth and Accountability Partner at Stand Out Results, is an expert in internal and external branding, strategic marketing and customer experience. Working for local and national companies ranging from family owned to corporations for over twenty years she has developed an unique collaborative consulting style guiding her clients through a cohesive marketing system that results in clear messages and higher sales. When she's not sharing her knowledge about marketing, Vicki is sharing her passion of being socially conscious serving on the YWCA Empowering Women Luncheon Committee and the Rochester Women's Network (RWN) Executive Board where she represents the Marketing Committee as the VP and Chair.

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Categories : Lead Generation, Marketing Strategy, Sales
Tags : big box, brand, business, challenge, client, company, competition, consumer, core, customer, different, differentiate, differentiation, differentiator, duct tape, duct tape marketing, employees, expectation, experience, expert, feature, frustration, guarantee, guru, industry, john jantsch, main street, Marketing, marketplace, motivate, packaging, people, philosophy, position, power partners, price, problem, professional, promotion, prospect, refer, saturday, service, shop, small, solve, special touch, staff, stand out, Stand Out Results, store, strategic partners, strategy, survey, unique, unique selling proposition, USP, value, Vicki James, Vicki M James

Can You Differentiate, REALLY?

By Bill Doerr · Comments (0)
Friday, April 13th, 2012

Four (4) things prospects like to know:

WHAT . . . do you do for your clients?

WHO . . . you do that for?

HOW . . . you do that?

WHY . . .  are you better than other firms?

Your TALKING LOGO addresses most of these questions.

But what’s the REAL basis for ‘standing out’ from your competitors?  It’s NOT (darn it!) as easy as crafting a great message you can use when you meet someone for the first time.

How Do You STAND OUT . . . to a Prospective Client?
Years ago a famous marketing professor at Harvard Business School (Ted Leavitt) was asked to help a major accounting firm ‘differentiate’ their audit services.  A major corporation’s audit business is worth a LOT of money to the accounting firm that “wins the audit” away from other competitors.Leavitt told his client that two qualities are needed to ‘differentiate’ anything:
1)  Beneficial . . . it must offer a meaningful benefit, and
2)  Unique . . . it can’t be like anything else

Then, he explained the challenge . . . “If something is truly beneficial, it won’t be ‘unique’ for long — competitors will follow suit and if something is truly unique, maybe what you’re offering isn’t all that beneficial”.

Everything this firm offered in an audit was also being offered by their competitors.  So where was the opportunity to differentiate?  It didn’t (seem to) exist!

The Challenge of Differentiating Your Business and Services
But Leavitt had an idea.  He asked to interview their best audit clients to learn, “WHY . . . did they choose your firm to get an audit?”. The client agreed.
A large number of clients later told him, “We just liked them better than any other firm”.
“Perception IS Reality”
In marketing, being ‘liked’ isn’t about being ‘nice’ (even if you are!).  It’s about being seen as a Preferred Provider relative to your competitors.

The clients suggested a number of PERCEPTIONS about Leavitt’s client and told him that it was how they behaved during their meetings that convinced them his client was the ‘best firm’ to use to get that audit.  Basically, it was what they SAID and DID that convinced these prospects to go with Leavitt’s client.

The Big Lesson Here
Ask your ‘best clients’ the question, “Why did you choose OUR firm?”.  Follow that up with, “What did we SAY or DO to make you believe we were ‘the best’ firm to use?

You’ll learn what you need to say and do in front of prospects . . . to ‘Stand Out’ from the crowd of your (alleged!) competitors.
Bill Doerr

About Bill Doerr

I'm a Markitect -- I help clients design the marketing plans for their dream business and find highly qualified contractors to build them out so my clients can 'enjoy the view'. As a Certified Duct Tape Marketing Consultant, I believe marketing is more about creating and maintaining a key relationship -- 'Client' -- than anything else. In fact, once you do that, all else tends to fall into place, doesn't it? '-)

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Categories : Marketing Strategy
Tags : differentiation, unique selling proposition

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