In fact all your marketing should revolve around this simple principle and action: Create valuable information to give away and give it away in vast quantities.
Sounds simple, but like everything, it's not really. It actually takes some thought and effort to give away valuable information so that it's truly appreciated.
I recommend that you follow the law of Marketing Syntax - the order in which you communicate your marketing message: Problem - Outcome - Value - Proof - Offer.
First is the Problem or pressing issue - Why do your clients need you in the first place? When prospects hear this they want to know more - how can you help them?
Second is the Ultimate Outcome - This is what your clients get when they work with you. It's your big promise. It's the difference you make. Now they're interested.
Third is Value - This is simply an expansion of your Ultimate Outcome. What are all the other benefits clients receive when they work with you? They want to know in detail.
Fourth is Proof - Who have you worked with and what kind of results have you produced in the real world? What's the low down and are you on the up and up?
Finally is the Offer - This is when you get your prospect to take action. And if you don't make an offer that they can easily take advantage of, the marketing game comes to a dead stop.
But what is the offer? Is is the offer for your services? Is it a proposal? Is it the close for a contract?
Alas no. This will all come later.
The offer is for the Free Stuff. Yes, you have to sell your free offer. You first need to get attention and interest. Then you need to build your case and prove you are credible and successful.
And only then are they going to check out your free stuff.
In other words, you can't expect great results if you just throw free stuff at prospects. They won't pay any attention to it. They won't value it. They won't go any further.
Is there anything more pathetic than begging people to take your free stuff? Studies have proven that you can't give dollar bills away on a street corner. People won't even take them!
But when you take the time, effort and focus to get someone's attention and build your case and credibility, then your free stuff becomes interesting, intriguing, desirable and valuable.
And this is why free stuff should never be completely free.
There's a small and important price for free stuff. If they want it, they need to give you something valuable in return.
Take a look at the many ways you can give away free stuff:
On your web site
Offer a valuable report. They are free to have it if they also subscribe to your eZine and give you their email address and name. You can now send more valuable information in addition to your next offer.
At a talk
The same report will do. But don't just hand it out to everyone who comes. They won't value it (or even read it). Trade it for their business card and let them know you'll add them to your eZine list as well. Again, you can now follow-up.
When you network
That good old report can do triple duty and more. When you connect with someone you think you might be able to help, get their card and offer to send the report. And then follow up to answer any questions.
Giving something away is the final step in this initial marketing process, but another way of looking at it is that it's also the first step of the selling process.
When you realize that you have to sell your free offer for the permission to follow up in some way, you have grasped the essence of InfoGuru Marketing.
Colon Cleanse Free Offer
One of the reasons I love the business model I teach is because it effortlessly PULLS clients to me. I never have to chase them or worry about having as full a roaster as I want. The first step in making this happen is creating what I call your CFO - Compelling F.r.e.e. Offer. The problem is that very few solo-preneurs actually utilize this simple method of attracting all the clients they want.
Your Compelling F.r.e.e. Offer (CFO) is what entices people to want to find out more about you and what it is that you're offering. When you make your complimentary offer compelling enough, more people will be interested in taking advantage of it, which increase the audience to which you can then market to.
Your CFO can be packaged in a variety of ways: a mini e-course, a checklist, a CD, an audio download, a special report, a free teleseminar, etc. I offer a few different CFOs - a mini ecourse, an audio download, and for joint ventures I offer one of my paid products for free as a bonus to their paid offering.
The content of your CFO should be broad in scope, yet address a particular problem your target market is struggling with, something that they'd pay to have a solution to. That's what makes your offer compelling in the first place, and it's what attracts them into your Marketing & Product Funnel. Your CFO should be loaded with valuable content, so much so that you leave your prospect thinking, "wow, if this is what he/she gives away, imagine what his/her paid stuff must be like!"
To lead them further down your funnel, you'll want to be sure to not give away the store in your CFO, but share what the problem is, what your solution to the problem is, giving them a taste of how you can solve it for them. But what's key to making your CFO successful is to not just give great content, but to leave them with wanted more. The 'more' comes by way of your paid products and services.
The results of having a CFO are three-fold: you build your credibility and become known as an expert in your niche, your word-of-mouth marketing catches fire, and you're approached to share your CFO with even more people through joint ventures and strategic partnerships.
The mistake I made when I first started my consulting business was trying to pitch my services to people who didn't even know me (I cringed when I remember all those wasted early morning networking breakfasts). We all know that it's much easier to get business by referral, right? Because the person referring you has a relationship with you, and they have come to know, like and trust you well enough to pass your name along to their friends and colleagues.
That's what this method of marketing does for you. Your CFO is the start of building that critical know, like and trust factor with your prospects so that when they are ready to invest some money in a solution to their problem - whether via a product or service - your name is at the top of the list.
And the best part? You NEVER have to sell them on what you're offering. It's brilliant, really.
So, start researching what it is that your target market wants most, what problem is keeping them up at night. Then create your solution and offer it to them as your CFO. to get them into your Marketing & Product Funnel. It's a winning formula every time!
Both Robert Middleton & Alicia Forest are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Robert Middleton has sinced written about articles on various topics from Marketing, Marketing and Sales and Negotiation. Robert Middleton, the owner of Action Plan Marketing, has been helping Independent Professionals be better marketers since 1984. On his web site find valuab. Robert Middleton's top article generates over 8100 views. to your Favourites.
Alicia Forest has sinced written about articles on various topics from Internet Marketing, Marketing and Internet Marketing. Alicia M Forest, MBA, Multiple Streams Queen & CoachT, founder of and creator of 21 Easy & Essential Steps to Online Success SystemT, teaches profess. Alicia Forest's top article generates over 14800 views. to your Favourites.
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