Header
  SITE MEMBERS:  
 
Username: 
Password: 



 
     
  Latest Entries  
   
     
  Blog Authors  
   
     
  Welcome To Our Website!  
 
Why You Shouldn't Do What the Gurus Do
Wednesday, Apr 7, 2010 at 4:31 PM (Public Entry)
georgette e-Points: 817
Name: Georgette Pann
City: Kingston
State: PA
Country: US
Company: NutriFitness
My: Blog | Profile | Threads
Member Directory!
Why You Shouldn't Do What the Gurus Do
C.J. Hayden, MCC
Online at http://www.getclientsnow.com/what-gurus-do.htm
====================================================

It's only natural to emulate successful people. You'd like to copy
their success, so it seems it would make sense to copy their
approach to sales and marketing. But modeling your marketing after
the gurus in your field may not get you where they are.

Simply put, the present situation of these successful people may be
entirely different from your own. They typically have plenty of
money to spend, staff to help, a large in-house mailing list,
widespread name recognition, a suite of products and services to
offer, and many years of completed work to draw from. If you don't
have all this in your business, trying to copy their marketing and
sales approach may be a recipe for failure rather than success.

Here are five ways that doing what the gurus do can lead you astray.

1. Relying on email and website traffic alone to promote your
business.

With a high-traffic website and a large email list, a guru may need
nothing more than to make an offer on his website and send some
emails to his list to land plenty of new clients. But if your
website gets few visitors and your mailing list is small, you'll
need to find other ways to attract and reach out to prospects.
Personal networking, phone calls, public speaking, or other
high-contact activities will need to be part of your marketing mix.
Email and web copy alone aren't going to do the trick.

2. Counting on your reputation and personal charisma to convince
people to do business with you.

When new prospects make contact with a guru, they're usually already
familiar with her work. They arrive pre-disposed to do business, and
rarely ask about her background or even question her rates. She, in
turn, expects most prospects to turn into clients, and speaks to
them with confidence and authority. She spends little, if any, time
persuading them she's the right person for the job.

When new prospects make contact with you, regardless of who
initiates the conversation, they may know very little about you. You
will need to build their trust in your ability to help, provide
evidence that you have the skills and experience they need, and
convince them you are worth the price you are asking. A winning
personality may not be enough to land the sale, especially when your
prospects must justify their buying decisions to a boss or a spouse.

3. Promoting your own free workshops or teleclasses instead of guest
speaking for others.

Gurus frequently offer no-charge workshops or teleclasses to convert
prospects to paying clients. With a large email list, it costs
almost nothing to promote these. Most of the people who attend will
be those already on the guru's list. Trying to do this without an
existing prospect list will almost always fail. You'll have to
expend far too much effort just to attract an adequate number of
participants. And they'll still be only prospects; you'll still have
to convince them to spend money with you.

A much more effective strategy for an entrepreneur without a
substantial prospect list is to offer yourself as a speaker to
professional meetings, conferences, and teleclass series sponsored
by others. That way, the sponsor promotes the program and provides
the audience, and you get a host of new prospects to sell to without
all the effort.

4. Spending unbudgeted amounts on promotional opportunities.

You'll often see gurus as paid sponsors for events or initiatives,
advertising on websites or in publications, or exhibiting at trade
shows or conferences. They can afford this relatively expensive type
of promotion because their higher income allows a higher advertising
budget, and because they have multiple products and services to
sell. And, what you may not know is that gurus often receive
benefits like these at no cost in return for speaking or promoting
the event or publication to their list.

When someone offers you a paid promotional opportunity like this, do
the math before saying yes. Divide the cost of participating by the
number of new prospects you expect to attract as a result. Is that
cost per person a reasonable amount for you to pay? Remember, too,
that these will only be prospects, not clients. You'll still need to
convince them to buy before you can earn back what you spent.

5. Maintaining multiple websites, ezines, blogs, or social
networking identities with different themes.

Gurus have paid staff, multiple products and services to sell (and
earn income from), and a large body of existing work to repurpose
for ezine articles, blog posts, etc. If you have one part-time
assistant or none at all, a short list of products and services to
offer, and must create most of your material from scratch, you will
be hard-pressed to manage just ONE website, plus ONE ezine, plus ONE
blog, plus ONE Facebook/Twitter/LinkedIn identity, even with all on
the same theme.

The typical guru became a guru because he established a name for
himself doing one recognizable thing. Only after building a
successful business and reputation did he have the resources
available to branch out to multiple brands and market niches
simultaneously. If he tried to do this before becoming successful,
you probably never heard about those ventures, because they didn't
survive.

The essential message underlying all these examples is this. Copying
what successful people do after they have already achieved success
will not necessarily help you become successful in the first place.
Their present situation is not yours. If you want to become a guru
yourself, you may need to copy what the gurus did before they ever
achieved guruhood.


Copyright © 2009, C.J. Hayden

C.J. Hayden is the author of Get Clients Now!™ Thousands of business owners and independent professionals have used her simple sales and marketing system to double or triple their income. Get a free copy of "Five Secrets to Finding All the Clients You'll Ever Need" at www.getclientsnow.com.
Permalink ~ Bookmark ~ Digg It ~ Reddit ~ Comments Off ~ 0 TrackBacks ~ Edit ~ Delete