Posted in Marketing & Sales on March 3, 2010


Time and time again, when people are introduced to network marketing sales, they are told that this business is not about sales, but its about something else.  The harsh reality is that in MLM you have to make sales in order to make money, just like in any other business.  Below I’ll reveal three of the top lies being told, and the truth behind them.

#1 “Its not selling, its sharing”. This is one of the biggest phrases being told to new MLM sales reps.

The real truth is that in network marketing sales, as with any business, at its most basic level is about an exchange of value, in this case money for a product or business opportunity.   The whole sharing mentality is often told to new MLMers who have a great fear of doing actual selling.

The sharing technique is really just one person relying on the relationships that they have with friends and family, and the trust they have built up with them.  They use this as a point of leverage to grow their business and sell their MLM product or opportunity.

#2 “We are not in sales, we are into educating people on making better choices”.  Educational marketing is a fairly well known technique in the sales and marketing industry, and in network marketing sales as well.  

A great example of this can be witnessed at home depot.  One of the things that many people love about home depot is that they hold classes and seminars on how to conduct home repairs and projects.  This educational marketing at its best.  

They bring in a targeted audience who want to learn something, they teach them that one thing, and then get the sale in a very easy way.  

You can see this technique applied many times in network marketing sales with educational sessions, webinars, conference calls.  All aimed at educating people which makes the sale easier.

#3 “The product sells itself”.  Products don’t sell or market themselves, people sell products, plain and simple.  Try this as an exercise to illustrate this point.  Buy a big box of the latest wiz bang juice, top of the line, best in the world.  

Now, sit the box of juice in your driveway, and leave it there for a little bit.

Does the product magically jump up and sell itself?  Are any sales made without someone proactively working to market the product?

No, real people getting in front of targeted prospects and explaining the benefits of a product or business is what makes the sale, not the product itself.

I hope that discussing some of the points in network marketing sales clears up what this business is really about.  Just like any other business, a sale needs to happen in order for profit to be made.

If you’d like to learn more about network marketing sales, read the information below and follow the instructions.

Posted in Marketing & Sales on March 1, 2010


Starting a membership website is one of the most powerful and stable ways to earn consistently on the Internet. People are willing to pay for access to valuable information, products and services; and you can successfully take advantage of this. You just need to be skillful and creative enough to make your business venture stand out from the rest.

This article discusses some useful ideas that could help you increase your membership sales and retain more members to your membership website.

Membership Site Marketing And Promotion

No matter how great or valuable your content is, it will not make you any money unless you make people aware of its existence. The good news is that the Internet offers excellent marketing opportunities… even if you don’t have much to invest yet in your advertising campaign. Here are some ideas:

1) Optimize your membership website for targeted keywords, so interested people could find it in the search engines easily. Search for “search engine optimization” or SEO in Google to learn some tips and tactics about how to get your site ranked highly for your keywords. 

2) Create a separate website designed for the purpose of promoting a paid membership one. This could be a squeeze page that can offer a small part of your content to give a taste of what your paid service is like. It is also useful in link building to your paid membership site.

3) Having your own affiliate program is a powerful way to leverage from other people’s assets. You can have other marketers promote your membership site through their own websites, and they will have an incentive to do a good job as you are going to share part of the profit with them.

You can provide incentives – such as discounts or bonuses – for your existing customers to promote your website by bringing in new members. But the better option is to make every one of your members your affiliates. Provide them with all the necessary affiliate tools and training materials (video works best) to help them earn affiliate commissions.

4) Some free marketing strategies may work as effectively as – or even better than – any paid method. You can include links to your website through a forum sig line or blog comment (but make sure you follow the rules and do it subtly). Informative articles posted on the pages of high-PR article directories could reach a large number of people and create better awareness of your site.

It’s best to diversify your marketing as much as possible to attract more paying members. Make sure you attractively and informatively describe the features, benefits and advantages of your services in your site and advertisement messages. You could choose to outsource this part of the marketing and have a professional copywriter do the work for you.

Sales Strategies To Increase Membership Sales

Your sales strategy is vital when you are aiming to increase the income from your membership website.

1) Free trials are being used by many marketers, simply because they reduce skepticism and get more orders. Make your offer appealing and irresistible, highlighting the benefits of your full membership.

2) Offer more member categories with different levels of access for the various types of content you have to offer. You can offer discounts for existing members to sign up to an upper category. Diversify your promotional offers by providing an automatic sign up to a higher level of access to new members only for a limited time period.

3) Encourage prospects to make full payment for one year, or even a lifetime membership, by offering discounts or other incentives. This helps in reducing the cancellation rate.

4) Provide high quality and innovative services, and always have a support desk available to attend to their needs.

5) Use the power of Web 2.0 and networking. Send Twitter alerts about upcoming posting of valuable content, exclusive news, promotional offers and all other things that can be applicable to your particular service. Provide your members with networking opportunities by adding a forum on your website.

6) Show your customers as much personal attention and care as possible. Sending greeting cards on holidays, for example, can be done cheaply and quickly.

The best thing about adopting any of these strategies is that they will not only make your membership website more attractive, but will also allow you to charge more in the form of subscription fees.

You could multiply your membership website income as long as you dedicate sufficient time and attention in carrying out the methods described above. Wishing you more membership site profits!

Posted in Marketing & Sales on March 1, 2010


Exhibitions allow your company to interact with your target audience face-to-face in a very specific environment. How do you stand out? What’s more, how do you get the best return from your marketing spend by exhibiting, or is it simply a PR exercise?

Exhibition marketing strategy

Although you cannot guarantee the quality of any exhibition, you can, like all marketing activities, control how you choose to take advantage of the opportunity.

With appropriate planning and goal setting, you will not only establish specific targets, you will be able to identify your prospects, sell relevant benefits and increase your return.

Planning

Set specific goals

By analyzing your target audience, you will know how to message your exhibition stand and who to approach before, during and after your exhibition.

The more specific and realistic your goals, the more likely you will achieve them. But, make sure you delve deeper when identifying your prospects:

- Do you want to generate 200 sales leads? Or, more specifically;

- 50 sales leads of people looking to spend in the next six months? Or;

- Meet 25 qualified new prospects at senior purchasing level in IT for companies with 500+ seats?

Attract your target market

The theme of your exhibition campaign should be targeted towards your specific target market. The messaging in this is very important, ie. financial directors will have different priorities when assessing your product or service compared to a sales director.

You have your brand and brand guidelines, but your exhibition theme needs to engage your specific audience. This includes the design of your exhibition stand, the imagery and words you use and your handouts; even the type of person manning your stand and their sales pitch will need to be appropriate.

Cohesive branding

Once you have established your target market, you can begin to understand what will engage them.

You can utilize your current sales process. What questions and credentials are asked of you when you do a sales pitch? Can these be created into collateral to pass out, pre-qualifying your company to a lead?

Production time guidelines

Conceptual design, development and artworking is as easy as you make it. With a clear brief, your design agency has more chance of delivering concepts that target your requirements.

Allow for at least two weeks of initial creative. Then you will also need time for development and artwork creation – anywhere between 1 and 3 weeks depending on how you drive the project, client-side, and how reactive your agency is. Then follows production times:

- Stand build takes about 2-3 weeks, depending on complexity.

- Allow 2 weeks for the production of a pop-up stand or banner stand.

- Simple brochures or leaflets can be produced in a matter of days, a more complex piece may take a couple of weeks to print and produce.

- The same goes for promotional gifts and clothing. Allow 2-4 weeks production time.

Organize backwards and leave extra time. You book your stand well in advance, why not start production early?

Prepare your exhibition staff

People like people like people, and exhibitions are a great way of connecting directly with a prospect. The staff manning your exhibition stand need to understand the specific goals of the event, potential questions that may arise from a visitor and who to target.

Maximize the effectiveness of results by pin-pointing strengths and weaknesses of your team and applying roles in the process. If you incentivize your staff, do so in a way to encourage teamwork, rather than aggressive, competing sales people. It’s about company performance, not individual commissions.

Market your attendance

Use your existing marketing databases to let contacts know that you are attending an event. Contact local and trade press with releases about your appearance. Is there anything you can utilize to add more appeal, such as a new product launch?

Up-front incentives

Can you create a reason to motivate people to visit your exhibition stand? A competition or prize draw can achieve this, but does it fit in with your brand values and target market? Is there a better way of achieving the same thing?

Stock up and organize

Make sure you prepare for different eventualities. Do you have enough stock? Top up on hand-outs, refreshments, and any other items you may need, including spares leads and batteries… what’s the worst that can happen? Plan for it.

Also, on your feet for most of the day, you may welcome areas for rest, away from the glare of the delegates on your stand. How will this be planned? You don’t want resting staff sitting with their feet up, eating a chocolate bar, when a top prospect may pass at any time.

The Exhibition

The day has arrived and you have a great exhibition stand that should attract the right prospects. The marketing messaging is spot-on, your sales objectives are clear; your staff know their goals and are motivated. It’s now down to the people on your stand.

Get the most from your people

You need to keep the initial positive feeling as the day wears on. You may get tired, get a few knock-backs, but you need to ensure there is support for the whole team. A highly motivated, well-informed team differentiates you from other exhibitors. Regular briefings and teamwork are a must. Share goal progress and feedback from interactions to help refine your sales process. Keep the energy up and the attitudes positive.

Optimize your attention

You need to ensure that you maximize sales opportunities. To do this you will need to identify your prospects and spend the appropriate time to filter these as genuine sales leads.

Attract and engage

Your appropriate marketing messages should filter out casual visitors and draw relevant people in, but you do need to attract people yourself.

You can use an outgoing member of your team to leave your stand and approach people all over the exhibition. Use the strengths of your team to bring people in to your space.

Don’t be scared to reject visitors if they are not relevant. You are there to sell, not advise people who do what you do. Politely filter out wrong-fit visitors: They still have the power of word-of-mouth and you don’t want them doing this negatively.

Focus on the benefits your product or service has to offer the prospect directly. You should have demonstrations and marketing material that answers the questions of your prospects, based on your targeted sales pitch. If you end up with an interested prospect, close in on them gently, taking appropriate contact details.

Ensure you take good notes that you will remember when you get back to the office. Remember a few off-topic details so your follow-up is more personal. If you need to ask a question again to make sure you have the details correctly, do so. It shows you are interested as you focus on your prospect.

People like people

Firstly, you need to make sure you are approachable. If your team are huddled negatively discussing a recent visitor to your stand, your stand won’t exactly be inviting.

Also, remember that not every person clicks personally and rapport during sales is essential. Establish between your team who works best with which kind of person. If you make contact with a prospect on your stand and your discussions aren’t going well, don’t be afraid to bring in a more relevant colleague.

Earn media coverage

Pre-invite key journalists to visit your exhibition stand and encourage your marketing team to the event to help market your company on-site. Keep a good supply of your literature in the show press office and work with the show organiser to improve your profile. And, when the press visit your site, make sure someone is available to speak to th

em.

Keep it all business

A friendly environment on your exhibition stand may encourage people to drop in and stay chatting. Do you really want that?

Current customers might expect your undivided attention if they appear, but unless they’re your main reason for attending, try to set aside specific times for them, ideally in a hospitality area on or off the stand.

Networking with existing contacts is part of the appeal of an exhibition, but you’ll want to keep it under control.

Focus on your key goals

Remember, you are at the exhibition to achieve specific business goals and not every visitor is the right-fit. Keep your eye on the prize, your strategy in focus and you will engage with the right people.

After the exhibition

Away from the glare of the lights and the buzz of the exhibition, it’s back down to business. Now is the time to follow through all of the new sales opportunities you’ve generated. This is where some companies squander the benefits they’ve worked so hard to achieve while others capitalize on them and turn them into profits.

De-brief the team

When you get back to the office, sit down with the stand staff, your marketing team and key managers. Do an assessment of what worked and what didn’t. Discuss suggestions for improving performance at future exhibitions.

Measure your results

Now is the time to measure your success against the specific, measurable goals you set yourself before the event. Dissect the event in terms of effectiveness to help plan future events and determine future development of your techniques.

Successful sales teams follow lead-tracking up to a year later to track the new contacts right through to the bottom line. Only then can you determine the value of the exhibition for your company and whether your marketing budget was well spent.

Follow up all contacts

Every visitor to your exhibition stand should receive a timely follow-up, ranging from a simple thank-you letter to a visit, phone call or information pack, depending on the quality of the sales lead. To your prospects, the days and weeks following the exhibition define who most wants their business.

Send a generic mailing to all show visitors

You may not be able to meet every visitor at an exhibition, but you can contact them afterwards. Most event organizers make the visitor lists available for free or for a one-time rental fee. A quick ‘Sorry we missed you but did you know…’ can create a few new leads and at the very least, give your business additional profile to an industry audience.

Follow through on press releases

Call all the editors you mailed your press releases to or who visited you on your exhibition stand. Ask if there’s any more information they might need.

A phone call at the right time could mean a solid mention in a post-show review in the trade press.

Making the most of exhibitions

Exhibitions can be effective and by planning a few simple activities before, during and after each event, they work even harder for you and your marketing budget. Being able to get face-to-face with prospects in an industry setting can act as a quick route to a genuine sale.

Copyright 2010 ©  JM Entertainment Business Tips