| Answer Upon |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Business > Marketing > Free or Not Free - That is the Question |
|
Answer Upon - Free or Not Free - That is the Question
BCG Matrix after all you created your job didn’t you? It’s time you put your skills to work in marketing. Join new clubs and organizations. Volunteer for something totally unrelated to your field of work. Go to church socials, neighborhood meetings, your kid’s school functions. Send news releases, articles, coupons, to companies and media via email or fax. Put yourself in as many “free” website listings as possible. Create your own free or low cost website. Give discounts to current clients that bring you more work (incentive!). Use endorsements from happy customers. Donate some form of your work to a charity fundraiser (Professional Organizers may offer a “free” office organizing). Get business cardsThe choice of each definite model depends on company’s age, success, product and other specifications. Ashridge Portfolio Display, which help identify fit between the business unit critical success factors and the parent's skills and resources and fit between business unit parenting opportunities and the parent's skills and resources. Businesses are classified as 'heartland businesses' where the parent can add value easily, 'ballast businesses' are those well understood by the parent but the parent is unable to exploit, 'value trap businesses' are th The Business Leader as Ultramarathoner You may be in business for yourself or as a small company, but no matter what, especially if you just started this business, you need publicity! It’s great that your spouse or best friend believes in you. You may even have total strangers tell you what a great idea you have. Some may tell you they wish they had thought of it themselves or had the guts to try it. You know you can do your job well, you know you could make money at this. But as hard as you work, you have little income to show for it. So how do you get the word out? And at what price?Have you ever heard of an ultramarathon? A standard marathon is just over 26 miles. An ultramarathon is usually on the order of 50 or 100 miles, though there are some that span one thousand! Imagine the endurance required to run such a race.Running a business requires the kind of devotion and stamina that ultramarathoners can only dream about. Like the 100-mile runner, the successful business leader must maintain focus, keeping an eye on the path...on the mileposts that mark progress...and on the long-range goal.Unlike an ultramar First, no matter what career you have chosen, be professional. Most likely you have educated yourself in this field, put in long “precious” hours and invested funds that you really can’t afford to lose. You deserve respect from other professionals, but you must work at maintaining your credibility. Therefore, as a dedicated worker, you should direct your energy to always looking, acting and proving the part. You represent all persons that have the same job as you. Secondly, (this correlates directly to what I just said) any form of publicity that you as an individual may receive, will impact all people in your profession. If you can show that you can help someone better their life, whether through a product or service, people will look for that product and service again. If people in your line of work get a bad reputation, how do you think it will affect you even though you have a good one? On the other hand, you may find that people are drawn to you simply because they “heard” good things about the field you are in. Great – that seems simple enough. But exactly how do we market ourselves – and more importantly what’s it going to cost? Some publicity will cost money; almost all will require time and effort. How much you want to put forth is totally up to you. Last summer I had an article in Fast Company Magazine. That article not only shed light on my particular career (Professional Organizers) but it generated an appearance on CNN-FN Market Call on a segment titled “Maverick of the Morning”. Getting publicity in the media whether it is print, radio or TV can be quite expensive. Many assumed this was “free” publicity, and although they are correct in the fact that I never paid for the article or the television special directly, it did cost me. I took the time to attend a conference in San Francisco, which was over two years ago now, at the cost of $2000. The networking contact I made at the conference was the senior editor of Fast Company. Then with some perseverance and some skills from a marketing company that I also “hired”, eventually the article was printed. Not everyone has a huge “public relations” account to pull from, so you must get creative. This can’t be that hard for you, after all you created your job didn’t you? It’s time you put your skills to work in marketing. Join new clubs and organizations. Volunteer for something totally unrelated to your field of work. Go to church socials, neighborhood meetings, your kid’s school functions. Send news releases, articles, coupons, to companies and media via email or fax. Put yourself in as many “free” website listings as possible. Create your own free or low cost website. Give discounts to current clients that bring you more work (incentive!). Use endorsements from happy customers. Donate some form of your work to a charity fundraiser (Professional Organizers may offer a “free” office organizing). Get business cards, Work Ethic of Entrepreneurial Start-ups hours and invested funds that you really can’t afford to lose. You deserve respect from other professionals, but you must work at maintaining your credibility. Therefore, as a dedicated worker, you should direct your energy to always looking, acting and proving the part. You represent all persons that have the same job as you.What level of commitment is necessary to take a new high-tech product from seed to weed? What does it is absolutely required in terms of dedication in order to start in your garage and build a prototype to launch into the market? I believe it takes a massive amount of perseverance and it is not something to take lightly. I believe it takes a 6 month to one year every waking hour time frame with all the personal character, stick-to-it-ness and inner will you can muster.Many entrepreneurs say that they can make the sacrifice for 6 plus months to Secondly, (this correlates directly to what I just said) any form of publicity that you as an individual may receive, will impact all people in your profession. If you can show that you can help someone better their life, whether through a product or service, people will look for that product and service again. If people in your line of work get a bad reputation, how do you think it will affect you even though you have a good one? On the other hand, you may find that people are drawn to you simply because they “heard” good things about the field you are in. Great – that seems simple enough. But exactly how do we market ourselves – and more importantly what’s it going to cost? Some publicity will cost money; almost all will require time and effort. How much you want to put forth is totally up to you. Last summer I had an article in Fast Company Magazine. That article not only shed light on my particular career (Professional Organizers) but it generated an appearance on CNN-FN Market Call on a segment titled “Maverick of the Morning”. Getting publicity in the media whether it is print, radio or TV can be quite expensive. Many assumed this was “free” publicity, and although they are correct in the fact that I never paid for the article or the television special directly, it did cost me. I took the time to attend a conference in San Francisco, which was over two years ago now, at the cost of $2000. The networking contact I made at the conference was the senior editor of Fast Company. Then with some perseverance and some skills from a marketing company that I also “hired”, eventually the article was printed. Not everyone has a huge “public relations” account to pull from, so you must get creative. This can’t be that hard for you, after all you created your job didn’t you? It’s time you put your skills to work in marketing. Join new clubs and organizations. Volunteer for something totally unrelated to your field of work. Go to church socials, neighborhood meetings, your kid’s school functions. Send news releases, articles, coupons, to companies and media via email or fax. Put yourself in as many “free” website listings as possible. Create your own free or low cost website. Give discounts to current clients that bring you more work (incentive!). Use endorsements from happy customers. Donate some form of your work to a charity fundraiser (Professional Organizers may offer a “free” office organizing). Get business cards Maximize Income - 5 Ways to Earn While You Sleep and Maximize Your Income how do you think it will affect you even though you have a good one? On the other hand, you may find that people are drawn to you simply because they “heard” good things about the field you are in.How often have you said, “I wish I could earn more income.” Well, if wishes were fishes, we’d have some for dinner, so stop wishing and learn the Secret to Creating Wealth and Maximize your Income while you Sleep.1. Create Multiple Income StreamsGenerate wealth from your website by creating Residual Income Streams that Multiply with Viral Marketing. When you give something away, be sure it redirects traffic back to your website. Increase cash flow by giving more away.2. Increase Residual Income StreamsCreate multiple use p Great – that seems simple enough. But exactly how do we market ourselves – and more importantly what’s it going to cost? Some publicity will cost money; almost all will require time and effort. How much you want to put forth is totally up to you. Last summer I had an article in Fast Company Magazine. That article not only shed light on my particular career (Professional Organizers) but it generated an appearance on CNN-FN Market Call on a segment titled “Maverick of the Morning”. Getting publicity in the media whether it is print, radio or TV can be quite expensive. Many assumed this was “free” publicity, and although they are correct in the fact that I never paid for the article or the television special directly, it did cost me. I took the time to attend a conference in San Francisco, which was over two years ago now, at the cost of $2000. The networking contact I made at the conference was the senior editor of Fast Company. Then with some perseverance and some skills from a marketing company that I also “hired”, eventually the article was printed. Not everyone has a huge “public relations” account to pull from, so you must get creative. This can’t be that hard for you, after all you created your job didn’t you? It’s time you put your skills to work in marketing. Join new clubs and organizations. Volunteer for something totally unrelated to your field of work. Go to church socials, neighborhood meetings, your kid’s school functions. Send news releases, articles, coupons, to companies and media via email or fax. Put yourself in as many “free” website listings as possible. Create your own free or low cost website. Give discounts to current clients that bring you more work (incentive!). Use endorsements from happy customers. Donate some form of your work to a charity fundraiser (Professional Organizers may offer a “free” office organizing). Get business cards Buying a Portable Trade Show Display Over the Internet - How to Eliminate the Frauds! licity in the media whether it is print, radio or TV can be quite expensive. Many assumed this was “free” publicity, and although they are correct in the fact that I never paid for the article or the television special directly, it did cost me. I took the time to attend a conference in San Francisco, which was over two years ago now, at the cost of $2000. The networking contact I made at the conference was the senior editor of Fast Company. Then with some perseverance and some skills from a marketing company that I also “hired”, eventually the article was printed.Portable tradeshow display sales, up until about 3 years ago, involved a sales person representing a tradeshow display manufacturer bringing a portable display to your place of business. He would spend about 1 hour showing how the display sets up, tears down and discussing the types of graphics options you have, among other tradeshow related information. With the advent of the internet, as well as the natural maturation of the popup display product, the "sales demo" has become a thing of the past.The internet has allowed about anyone to become Not everyone has a huge “public relations” account to pull from, so you must get creative. This can’t be that hard for you, after all you created your job didn’t you? It’s time you put your skills to work in marketing. Join new clubs and organizations. Volunteer for something totally unrelated to your field of work. Go to church socials, neighborhood meetings, your kid’s school functions. Send news releases, articles, coupons, to companies and media via email or fax. Put yourself in as many “free” website listings as possible. Create your own free or low cost website. Give discounts to current clients that bring you more work (incentive!). Use endorsements from happy customers. Donate some form of your work to a charity fundraiser (Professional Organizers may offer a “free” office organizing). Get business cards 10 Reasons Why People Won't Buy A Second Product From You after all you created your job didn’t you? It’s time you put your skills to work in marketing. Join new clubs and organizations. Volunteer for something totally unrelated to your field of work. Go to church socials, neighborhood meetings, your kid’s school functions. Send news releases, articles, coupons, to companies and media via email or fax. Put yourself in as many “free” website listings as possible. Create your own free or low cost website. Give discounts to current clients that bring you more work (incentive!). Use endorsements from happy customers. Donate some form of your work to a charity fundraiser (Professional Organizers may offer a “free” office organizing). Get business cards, magnets, even your answering machine that all say your name, business, phone, and website – create a catchy logo or motto.1. You didn't follow up after the first sale. After the sale you could have introduced your other product on the thank e-mail.2. You didn't ship the product in the about of time you stated. If they needed it in a hurry and you didn't provide, they won't rely on you again.3. Your product didn't do as promised. If your product didn't accomplish their desired goal they're not going to think your second product will either.4. Your customer couldn't get a hold of you in time when they had a "after question" sale. You could hav The key is not to be shy. Believing in yourself and what you do, is all it takes. Promote yourself by doing a great job. That will bring in business for you directly and enhance your particular career’s reputation as a whole. Remember, you are a professional, it’s time you show it off. You can spend as much or as little cash as you want on publicity. Obviously the big bucks can get you a big campaign, but if it costs your entire profit, what have you gained? And I have no doubt that time, although it is “free”, has a price for you. You must decide if something that has potential to bring in business is really worth your time and effort. Often, the things we do or people we meet that we least imagine would benefit our business, do. Keep an open mind and a positive attitude. That’s the answer to the question.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Tips and Tricks For Looking For a Job When Online Bad Interview: How A Bad Interview or Bad Interviewer Can Effect You
|