Feature Article: How to Use Information Products to Get More Referrals
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Article Title:
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Feature Article: How to Use Information Products to Get More Referrals
Article Description:
====================
Small business owners love customer referrals and for good
reason. Customer referrals are incredibly powerful because they
are sincere, personal endorsements made because the person making
the referral wants to look good to their peers. If the referral
works out it's a win for everyone.
Additional Article Information:
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844 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2009-02-26 14:12:00
Written By: Judy Murdoch
Copyright: 2009
Contact Email: judy@judymurdoch.com
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Feature Article: How to Use Information Products to Get More Referrals
Copyright (c) 2009 Judy Murdoch
Highly Contagious Marketing
www.judymurdoch.com/workbook.htm
A couple weeks ago, my good friend and colleague, Mary Walewski
sent me an email that contained a link and the short message,
"thought this might interest you."
The link was to download a promotions planning calendar; a
calendar that included specific steps to take each month around
setting up online promotions.
The calendar was f'ree and simple to download. All in all a
useful little tool.
And throughout the calendar are promotions for paid webinars the
calendar's author is offering. Now I'm not interested in the
webinars... at least not right now. But now I know they are
available and I'll be looking at the calendar at least once a
week and getting reminders.
This is a great example of how a small business can use
information products as a way to generate referrals that lead to
new customers.
This is something you can do in your own business. If you aren't
you are missing an opportunity to help people send you referrals.
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How Information Products Make It Easier for Customers to Refer
Business to You
==============================
Small business owners love customer referrals and for good
reason. Customer referrals are incredibly powerful because they
are sincere, personal endorsements made because the person making
the referral wants to look good to their peers. If the referral
works out it's a win for everyone.
The Downside of Referrals is They're Unpredictable. No matter
how much your customers love you, sending you a referral is
simply not their first priority. Not because they don't think
you're awesome and would like to help. Because there are
hundreds of other things, some urgent, that compete for their
attention.
The good news is that there are things you as a business owner
can do to increases the chances your customers will remember to
refer you. One way to improve those chances is by using
information products.
==============================
How Information Products Improve the Chances of Getting
Referrals
==============================
To give you a referral, your customer must remember you in the
context of the problem you solve. What does this mean?
Here's an example:
Dave is new to town and just bought a house. He moved in a couple
days ago and finds his hot water heater has sprung a leak. He
needs to take care the leak quickly so the small puddle around
his water heater doesn't turn into a small lake.
Dave calls his neighbor, Pete who has lived in the neighborhood
for ten years and asks Pete to recommend a good plumber. Pete
tells Dave to call Main Street Plumbing because Steve is great at
figuring out problems, his rates are reasonable, and he makes
emergency house calls.
Now here's how memorability and context work.
If Dave and Pete met under most circumstances, would Pete have
referred plumbing services to Dave? Very unlikely. Why? Context.
Let's say they walk by each other or see each other at a
barbecue. Would Pete say, "Hey, Dave, just in case you're
looking for a plumber, you should call Steve at Main Street
Plumbing." No it would sound weird unless they were already
talking about plumbing problems.
And even if Pete did tell Dave about Main Street Plumbing, it's
unlikely Dave would remember because plumbing problems aren't
top of mind at the moment the referral is given.
You can't predict when the situation will arise when the
referral is needed. But you CAN improve the chances that when the
situation DOES arise, someone will remember to refer you.
One way to increase the chance someone will remember you is using
an information product that your referral source is likely to use
regularly.
Like the calendar I mentioned at the beginning. And remember it
wasn't just a calendar (because if it were it would be competing
with the other six calendars vendors send me every year) it had
useful information and tips so that I would use it regularly.
==============================
Tips for Creating Products That Will Get You More Referrals
==============================
1. Make sure your contact information is clear and easy to
locate. This may seem obvious but I can't believe the number of
times a business doesn't put its name and contact information on
information products.
Always include your company name, your website address, your
phone number, and a memory tag if you have one {"24-hour
plumbing at your service")
2. Make sure you include useful, relevant information that your
customers are likely to need at least once a month.
3. Make sure the information helps your customer solve a problem
that you want referrals for.
Let's say every year Steve sends his customers a calendar with
tips on simple maintenance tasks that will prevent plumbing
disasters. Maybe two to three tips each month. Or he could do the
same thing with a monthly newsletter.
==============================
Bottom Line
==============================
Don't hope customers will send you referrals. Create a simple,
useful information product that will help customers remember you
so that when your customer encounters someone who needs your
help, they'll remember you and why they want to send you a
referral.
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Judy Murdoch helps small business owners create low-cost,
effective marketing campaigns using word-of-mouth referrals,
guerrilla marketing activities, and selected strategic alliances.
To download a free copy of the workbook, "Where Does it Hurt?
Marketing Solutions to the problems that Drive Your Customers
Crazy!" go to www.judymurdoch.com/workbook.htm
You can contact Judy at 303-475-2015 or judy@judymurdoch.com
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