News
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The Top 5 Ways to
Attract and Keep Customers in Any Economy
By Barry A. Densa, freelance
marketing & sales copywriter
I have a friend in Florida who owns six Subway
franchises.
He's rolling in dough, whole wheat and greenbacks.
He loves the recession. He's remodeling his house
(stimulating one South Florida contractor to keep
swinging a hammer).
Dollar stores are also doing a gang-buster business.
The healthcare industry is thriving, too, but
they're in a world of their own (as long as there's
no cure for sickness and aging.)
Supermarkets are packed. People are cooking, not
dining out in restaurants.
In fact, anyone selling a staple of life, or
offering a low-ticket product or service, they're
just happier than a pig in... you know what.
For the rest of us...This economy sucks.
But only if, during the long-gone good-times, your
business had been on cruise control and you got
complacent, fat and lazy, and saw your customers as
dollar signs and not people.
Without naming names, some marketers are clearly
suffering far less than others, because they cared
to look deep into their customer's eyes and not just
plumb the depths of their wallets.
Call it relationship building, call it caring about
your customers, or just call it staying in business,
making a great income, taking vacations, and buying
new cars (Japanese or German) even in a recession.
While I can't offer you, for obvious reasons, a
precise 5-point strategy to achieve this type of
recession insurance for your particular business...I
can give you the general blueprint.
The top 5 ways to keep your prospects loyal and
their wallets open
First, a note of caution: Reducing your prices may
help, of course, and may even be prudent. But that's
a short-term fix, which commoditizes your service.
In fact, by reducing your prices, what you're doing
is training, even forcing, your customers to price
shop.
Remember, price is what your customer pays, value is
what your customer receives.
Accent the value, and the customer will pay your
price.
And you do it this way...
1. Allay your customer fears:
Right now your customers are looking more and more
like deer in the headlights. They're watching way
too many doom and gloom news shows. They're hearing
about once-upon-a-time giants of industry filing for
bankruptcy, shutting doors and putting thousands of
people out of work. They may even know a few.
And, quite frankly, they're afraid they may be next.
So they're holding on to their money; worried the
good times will never return. Frugal and
conservative defines them. Food and shelter are
their biggest concern to the near exclusion of
everything else.
Your job then is to lift their heads, open their
eyes and sing, "The Sun Will Come Out Tomorrow."
Help them understand that change is the only
constant in life—and this economic melt-down, this
too shall pass.
Show them that the light at the end of the tunnel is
getting closer—give them hope, and put your arm
around their shoulders.
Then infuse them with some good ol' time religion,
lift their spirits and get them dancing in the
aisles—put excitement and happiness back in their
lives.
2. Confirm their suspicions:
Conspiracies, real and imagined, abound in times of
economic stress.
Your customers see danger everywhere they look, and
they wonder who is really there to watch over and
protect their best interests, and who is there to
fleece them of their shrinking income.
Don’t deny the reality your customers perceive.
Don't argue with or ignore their fears. Place
yourself on their side. Put yourself in their shoes.
Recognize that the quickest way to bond and, most
importantly, become an advocate on behalf of your
customers is to first accept and validate (within
reasonable limits) their viewpoint.
Then, once you've shown them you understand and
agree with them, you'll find it so much easier to
persuade them of your viewpoint.
Switch their allegiance from fear and suspicion to
that of fearlessness and confidence and you'll
immediately become their champion and protector.
After all, it's so much easier to close a deal, make
a sale, even to a skittish and suspicious customer,
when they trust you—and see in you a like-minded and
kindred spirit.
3. Justify their failures:
Don't make your customers feel like losers.
If they've yet to reach their goals, pat them on the
back and then show them why.
There's a big difference between criticizing and
critiquing. Be a coach, a mentor, help them to see
why they stumbled and fell, and how they can pick
themselves up and still reach the finish line.
Never put the blame solely on their shoulders.
Show them that many factors, often beyond their
control, contributed to their failure, just as other
factors, equally beyond their control will determine
the shape of their eventual success.
And yet with your expert help, show them how you can
decrease the number of failures they will face, and
how you will increase their odds of success, however
defined.
4. Throw rocks at their enemies:
This is too easy, and a cousin of number 3, above.
Indentify the immediate threat or obstacle
confronting your customer's well-being, happiness
and success. Join them in a justifiable hate fest.
Heap scorn, ridicule and bad intentions on the
perceived roadblock.
And then quickly move on. Don't wallow in that
shallow pool, but splash there just long enough to
gain your customer's attention and confidence.
Then, once you have made common cause with your
customer—sharing the same enemy and holding to
shared goals—and working together to achieve
them—you'll be accepted on their team, and into
their inner sanctum—a trusted confidant.
5. Encourage their dreams:
Isn't that what it's all about? Dreams and their
fulfillment.
Without dreams what are we? Our dreams define us.
Our dreams are our life's work.
Some dreams are large, some are small, but all need
more than just wishful thinking. They need the
mechanism to make them come true.
What you market and sell are not made of metal,
wood, plastic, gigabytes or an intangible
service—they are dream-makers. They are magic and
they are real.
And for your customers, your products or services
are their best chance of reaching for the stars.
Do not deceive your customer into believing they can
accomplish the impossible, or that the impossible is
achievable.
But if your product or service can indeed make your
customer's dreams come true, do not hide the
truth—but rather proclaim it, prove it and deliver
it.
And when you do all of the above, with style and
grace, truth and honesty...
Your business will thrive in any economy.
---Source: Barry A. Densa is one of America's top
freelance Marketing and Sales Copywriters. Visit
WritingWithPersonality.com and see how easily and
quickly Barry converts prospects into buyers using
"salesmanship in print." And while there, sign up
for his highly regarded FREE ezine:
Marketing Wit &
Wisdom!
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Melissa Data
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