How to Find Time For Marketing
A big challenge for every small business owner is the need to
'find time' for marketing.
I can relate. None of us are full time marketers. We're all
providing services to clients. And when you're serving clients
too, it's hard to fit in sales calls and marketing activity.
It's hard to maintain momentum.
One thing is for sure, whatever shape our business is in right
now, we all have the same 365 days in 2006.
Will you use that time to create a structure that supports you
and brings in clients automatically, or will you still be
complaining about 'lack of time' when 2007 rolls around?
Despite being one of the most disorganised people on the planet,
and someone who was earning all my income from selling my time
just 18 months ago, I have managed to create an 'autopilot'
marketing machine, generate passive streams of income, and I now
earn more than I ever have, whilst working less hours. I truly
believe that you can do the same, so in this article I want to
share with you a few ideas that may help if you've been having
trouble 'finding time'.
1. If you don't enjoy it, you'll never 'find the time'
If the idea of marketing and selling your services leaves you
with a yucky feeling in the pit of your stomach, then let me
assure you, you'll never 'find time'. As long as you feel like
this, there will always be a more attractive activity pulling
your attention. Even if your fairy godmother gifted you with two
whole weeks, you'd still find ways to avoid marketing and
selling. It's called 'Creative Avoidance'.
Is your problem is really a 'lack of time' or are you creatively
avoiding marketing and selling?
2. If your business isn't structured properly, you'll never find
the time
If meeting your revenue goals is dependent upon you working with
clients 4-5 days a week, then it's going to be really hard to
find time for marketing. You may need to take a closer look at
your pricing structures and put together a business plan that
includes time for marketing, administration, rest, and time to
reinvest in yourself. E-Myth author Michael Gerber calls this
working 'on' the business, not just 'in' the business. My own
experience was that I had to simultaneously increase my prices
whilst slashing overheads to create a situation where I did have
time to work on my business.
If you're working flat out just to keep afloat, then you
definitely need to take a closer look at what you are charging.
3. If your only way of generating income is by selling your time,
then you'll never 'find the time for marketing.'
Somehow you need to break this catch 22, and the way to do that
is by 'productising' your services. Sharing your expertise
through a book, an audio package.
I know, I know! You're too busy working with clients to have the
time to create products. The good news is, there is a way to
create revenue producing products that does not have to take
hours of your time.
The first product I ever created was simply a recording of a day
long seminar that I ran. That product brought in £7,000
additional profit over the next 12 months, with no extra work on
my part. Be creative. Is it possible to package material and
information that you already have in a way that creates value
for your clients and customers? A little bit of effort right now
could be repaying you over and over for the next twelve months.
4. If you aren't clear on what the next action is, you'll never
'find the time for marketing'.
Think about an area of your marketing that you're struggling to
find time for. I'm willing to bet that you're thinking of it as
a project as opposed to a single action: 'Sorting out my website',
'rewriting my sales letter', 'building my opt-in list'. These
are projects, the success of which depends on a series of actions
plus knowledge. It's hard to move projects along when you think
of them in this way. It's your thinking that needs to change,
not time!
I learned this technique from time management guru David Allen.
He says 'often the simplest things are stuck because we haven't
made a final decision yet about the next action.' What can
happen is we think about the project and some part of us thinks,
'I don't have all the pieces between here and there'. We know
something is missing, but we're not sure what it is exactly, so
we quit. Or rather we don't quit, but we leave the project stuck
on our psychological radar, for us to feel a little bit worse
about every time we think of it.
Take an area of your marketing where you feel a bit stuck and
ask yourself 'What's the next action?' So 'I need to sort out my
website' may become 'I need to create a website which attracts
visitors and converts them into customers' which may become 'I
need to find 3 role models of successful business producing
websites in my industry' may become 'I need to spend 30 minutes
online researching websites'. It's much easier to find 30
minutes to take the next action than it is to find time to 'sort
out your website'.
In summary, you deserve to have a successful business and I
promise you that whatever myths you've been fed, you can create
that business without struggle, sacrifice or hours of extra
work. If 'finding time' has been a problem for you, maybe it's
your thinking that needs to change rather than your 'time
management.'
(c) Bernadette Doyle, 2006. Reprint rights granted to all
venues so long as the article and by-line are reprinted intact
and all links made live.
Bernadette Doyle is dedicated to helping self-employed and small
businesses become Client Magnets. Get her FREE report "7
Secrets of Becoming A Client Magnet and Attracting All the
Clients You Want" by visiting <a
href="http://www.clientmagnets.com">http://www.clientmagnets.com</a>
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