Which Marketing Solution is Right for You?
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Title: Which Marketing Solution is Right for You?
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Author: Jane Hendry
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Which Marketing Solution is Right for You?
Copyright 2006 Attractioneering
If you're running a small business, then at some point you
may be faced with the problem that you want to gear up your
marketing in order to grow the business, but at the same
time you're afraid of getting it wrong and losing whatever
you invest in it.
Whilst large businesses can afford to throw large amounts
of money at campaigns, and absorb the losses if their
marketing doesn't work, small businesses need a return on
every pound they spend. They need some level of certainty
that the money and effort they invest is going to produce
good results. Otherwise, what can happen is that they keep
doing what they're already doing (which probably isn't
working that well), or they blow a load of money on
advertising or marketing solutions that don't work, and
then lose faith in outside help or marketing altogether.
If you want to avoid wasting money on marketing and
advertising, or getting burnt by marketing consultants then
you'll want to minimise your risks and invest your money in
solutions that work for you.
As you read this article you'll discover 5 options for
learning how to do your own marketing or recruiting outside
help, and the advantages and disadvantages of each option.
5 Options for Learning Marketing Skills or Getting Help
with Marketing
1) Learn how to do it yourself through reading books,
attending workshops, using audio programmes etc.
The obvious advantage of this is that it's the cheapest
option, plus as you learn to do things for yourself, you
retain control of your marketing programme. However, the
major drawbacks are that the learning curve is very steep
and it may take a long time to learn what works, plus you
may end up learning a lot of generic information that
doesn't directly apply to your business or that doesn't
give you an actual step by step plan. You may learn what to
do, but not how to do it or the exact steps you need to
take to implement what you've learnt.
2) Use a marketing consultant/agency
The advantage of this is that you effectively hand over the
problem to someone else who deals with it on your behalf,
leaving you to get on with what you do best. The
disadvantages of this option are that you don't learn what
works for your business and you are no longer fully in
control of your marketing function - so you won't know why
some things work and others don't.
Also, this is probably the most expensive option, and some
marketing consultants have got a tendency to prescribe
their pet solution, before even diagnosing the actual
problem and the situation. Not only that, but if your
problem is, for example, lack of sales, and you decide the
solution is PR, and then hire a PR consultant, they will
work to your brief. In other words, you've diagnosed the
problem and precribed the solution. However, PR may not be
the best solution to your problem, and a proper analysis of
your target market and your current activities, budget and
opportunities is required before forming the conclusion
that a PR consultant is the answer.
3) Group coaching/training programmes
The advantage of this is the lower cost plus regular
classes and fieldwork that keep you on track. Some people
will benefit from working in a group, especially as they
learn from the experiences of others, and particularly if
there is a "buddying" system in place.
The disadvantage is the lack of personal
coaching/consulting or significant input from the expert in
examining your particular situation. Not only that, but
you'll be going at a pace as dictated by the course
outline, when you might want to move considerably faster or
even slower. Also, most programmes go through a range of
strategies as decided by the programme creator, some (or
many) of which are not applicable to your particular
situation. This is especially true if the programme is
designed for the generic "small business" - what works for
a dry cleaning business may not work for a consultant,
coach or professional.
The result is that you may be learning 10 or 12 strategies
at a rather superficial level, rather than homing in on the
2 or 3 strategies that are really going to deliver results
into your business, and which are manageable.
4) One to one business/marketing coaching
The advantage of this is the personal attention, and the
ability to address your specific issues. This works out a
little more expensive than a group training programme, but
less expensive than hiring a consultant.
How this works varies widely and a lot depends on whether
the coach is using a coaching model (i.e. they guide you in
working out your own solutions) or a marketing model (they
take on a role more similar to a consultant than a coach,
and tell you what will work for your situation). Most do
not seem to offer any structure, specific outcomes, or
programme of activities so it can be hard to tell what
you're getting for your money.
5) A Structured Programme of consulting, training and
mentoring delivered one to one
In this scenario the consultant uses a structured series of
exercises to analyse the client's situation, help them
build their marketing foundation, overcome problems and
obstacles standing in their way and works with them to
create a series of marketing actions that will work best
for them.
This typically costs about the same as marketing coaching,
but has more tangible outcomes and the consultant will also
be doing things on the client's behalf in between sessions.
The advantages are that the client is fully in control of
their own situation and is being guided and taught how to
do things for themselves. The consultant will also use
their expertise to steer the client towards solutions that
will work for their situation, their market and their type
of business, and filter out approaches that are irrelevant
or less likely to produce good results.
The disadvantages are that you still have to do the work
yourself (unless you pay for help with implementation), and
if the consultant is helping you to craft your message and
build your foundation, then there may be a delay before any
strategies get fully implemented. This is really the
approach that is analogous to building your house on rock
rather than on sand - it takes a little longer to lay the
foundations, but it's a sturdier, stronger solution in the
end.
© 2006 Jane Hendry, Attractioneering
About the Author:
Jane Hendry helps professionals, consultants and coaches to
create marketing systems that easily and consistently
attract their ideal clients. To get your f*ree Attraction
Marketing Starter Kit please visit
www.attractioneers.com . You will also find a F*REE
marketing plan template and a F*REE marketing evaluation.
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