Face to Face Marketing and Door to Door Marketing
Nothing beats the reality that one gets when you can interact with potential clients face to face physically moving from door to door within a community or household to household, face to face field marketing is also called personal selling or door to door marketing, customers are met directly in order to sell their products, using this method of field marketing we rely on our skills and persuasive abilities. During the period where we get to interact with the client face to face we get more chance to pass across edible information which would be useful to all our customers at that time and it’s also an opportunity for us to get feedback and to gauge your opinion about our business.
Marketing |
I did door-to-door sales for nine years, in hundreds of different cities and towns all across the india. Through long, hard, agonizing trial and error, I eventually developed enough skill that I could take any product into any area on any day and make sales.
In the beginning, I struggled. But when I was about to give up on myself and quit (like 99.9% of people that try door-to-door sales do within their first few days), experienced salesperson to give me a chance to get on track.
What I saw that day changed my life forever.
I watched as the experienced salesperson drove to an area where he had previous sales success, and listened as he explained to me why he parked his car in the exact spot he did to start his day and laid out his exact plan of attack.
Within the first 10 minutes, I learned a valuable lesson that not only made my door-to-door sales career much easier, but has also been the key to bringing in millions of dollars in revenue for my own companies, and those of thousands of others I’ve consulted to:
A current customer is the easiest person to make a sale to – many, many times easier (and less expensive) than trying to get new customers.
Most business owners operate a risky, day-to-day, transactional business, believing that the reason for getting a customer is to make a sale. That’s their biggest problem: making nothing more than “a” sale to a customer. After that initial transaction, they simply hope that their product or service or location is good enough that they will get a repeat visit from that customer.
On the other hand, sharp business owners (and door-to-door salespeople!) know that the point to making a sale is to get a customer. We have systems put together to maximize the value of that customer by making future offers to them, so that they buy more of the same product or service, or a different version, or even an entirely different product or service.
In other words, we recognize that a current customer is the easiest person to sell to, and a prospect is the hardest and most-expensive person to sell to. Therefore, we concentrate on maximizing the value of every new customer we get.
If you want to grow your business during these challenging economic times (and even during boom times), your time and effort should be invested in working to turn prospects into customers and retain them to market to in the future.
While your marketing is doing its job to get you prospects, you need to be working on turning those prospects into customers. There are a few key ways to draw them in and seal the deal. You need to be:
Inviting
Informative
Enjoyable
The biggest fear of most new customers is the dreaded “buyer’s remorse.” You want to minimize this as best you can, and if you’ve provided a quality product or service that delivers on the marketing claims you’ve made, the risk will be lower.
However, returns can still occur. Here are the two most effective ways to deal with this:
Offer to refund money — no questions asked
Offer a bonus they can keep even if they return the product
These offers alone will also lessen the impact of buyer’s remorse, because the customer will trust you more just because you showed the confidence in your product or service to offer these options in the first place.
There are number of other ways to turn a prospect into a customer:
Offer a special price as an opportunity for them to test the market.
Offer a lower price with a legitimate reason, such as clearing out inventory to pay a tax bill, for your kid’s braces, or another tangible reason. (Added bonus: Customers love you for doing this, because it makes you so much more human to them.)
Offer a referral incentive.
Offer a smaller, less expensive entry-level product to build trust.
Offer package deals.
Offer to charge less for their first purchase if they become a repeat customer.
Offer extra incentives, such as longer warranties or free bonuses, if they order by a certain date.
Offer financing options, if applicable.
Offer a bonus if they pay in full.
Offer special packaging or delivery.
Offer “name-your-own-price” incentives.
Offer comparative data or other comparison tools.
Offer to let them trade up or upgrade to something better if they want.
Offer additional, educational information to help them make the decision.
The options are really only limited by your imagination and marketing skill. You can use these or other ideas to discover what works the best for your specific business, with your specific products, services and target market.
Even if you ever find yourself doing door-to-door sales.
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Enabling the Three Value Conversations
In his keynote at #CTW16, Corporate Visions Tim Riesterer positioned the triple threat as a sales ideal, likening the rep who masters the entire buying cycle to Gene Kelly, one of Hollywoods original triple threats, who excelled at acting, dancing and singing.
But the concept of the sales triple threat is relevant to product marketers and sales enablement leaders too, especially if youre trying to unify your marketing and sales message and develop content that reinforces winning behaviors. And so there was no escaping a Gene Kelly reference in the marketing breakout session on Enabling the Three Value Conversations, led by Eric Nitschke, director of product marketing and sales enablement at Corporate Visions.
To make articulating value a mainstay of your content (and by extension, your sales team), Nitschke advised that companies focus their messaging efforts on three moments of truth in every buying cycleor three value conversations.
Value Conversation #1: Create Value This is where your message needs to defeat the status quo bias and create clear differentiation between you and your competition. Your why change story should follow a specific choreography that you can incorporate in your content, leading prospects from an insight, to an explanation of how their current approach is flawed, to a new and safer approach, andfinallyto a better outcome. This story needs to be disruptive, and it has to create urgency by demonstrating what the consequences of buyer inaction will be.
Value Conversation #2: Elevate Value This is where enablement content has to help salespeople create a business case that passes muster with savvy executive-level buyers. You can create an executive buying vision by first adopting a CXO-relevant perspective, and linking their external factors and business initiatives to a business change scenario that yields performance improvements and measurable results.
Value Conversation #3: Capture Value Develop content that prepares reps to negotiate better and more creatively. One way to do this most effectively is by leading with an unconsidered need, which can expand the value of (and need for) your solutions, and give your reps leverage as pricing tension heats up.
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