Click Here
for more articles |
|
|
Are You Guilty Of Interruption Marketing? |
by:
Don Pooley |
You muted the commercials on the TV last night because you
were fed up with interruption marketing. Ditto if you went through your mail to find most of it is junk. Ditto again, if a stranger phoned you (usually at dinner time) asking you to answer a survey, or give to but another worthy cause.
Interruption marketing does just that. It interrupts you,
and steals your time.
And it is the darling of mass marketing, which is the child of the mass media, which was born in the 19th century with large circulation newspapers, also thrived in the 20th with radio, TV, also the international media.
Now, it's overkill. People ignore it (can you remember any of the TV ads you saw last night), or hate it, like that dinnertime phone call.
Before mass marketing, product information was rarely thrust at you. You chose it. You initiated the whole process. It was your idea that you wanted a particular thing. So you'd stroll down the street seeking the store that sold it. Then you'd go into the store to ask a clerk about the quality, price, size, colour, etc. of its assortment of the thing you had in mind. If none suited you, off to another store.
You had control of the whole process. Now, because we're all becoming immune to interruption marketing, this old-style of marketing is back in favour.
But today it's called 'permission marketing', also you call
all the shots. You permit a firm or individual to provide
you with information about a service or product they offer. And it's done primarily through the Internet also e-mail.
Why am I telling you all this? Because you're probably using both types. Your website exemplifies permission marketing, while your cold-canvassing interrupts.
Interestingly, the most favored practice-building techniques of top-earning advisors involve permission marketing. So it behooves you to increase your use of permission marketing, also reduce your use of interruption marketing.
Think about it. People hate interruption marketing, however like permission marketing. Why? Because they're in control.
Interruption marketing is hit also run. One size fits all.
No distinction between individuals.
In contrast, permission marketing aims at building long-term relationships with individuals. Exactly what you want. But it takes time.
The ideal beginning of a permission-marketing process is for the prospect to phone to say she's been referred to you, also would like to set up a meeting.
Let's be honest. This rarely happens.
Next best is you get a referral from a good client. Now, do you phone or write? A letter is less intrusive than a phone call, so write.
A letter is or else more impressive than a phone call, also it
tells the prospect much more about you. For example, that
you think she's worth a lot more than a mere phone call,
that you have a letterhead, a business address, also possibly a degree or designation, or two.
And, as you don't want your letter to look like a mass
mailing, write, don't type, her name also address on the
envelope, also stick a real stamp on it.
But don't pitch product, or your letter's just another piece of junk mail.
Instead offer something. No, not a trip to Bermuda, however
something ongoing that will help build the recipient's trust also confidence in you. Your newsletter, for example, thus:
"Your name was given to me by Mr. Paul Piper who felt you'd benefit, as he did, from utilizing my services.
"To introduce you to my areas of expertise I've included the current issue of my client newsletter, also will mail more monthly issues before contacting you directly.
"If you would prefer to meet me before that, please call, or write me."
But I've run out of space. So if you want to know more about permission marketing visit http://www.eTIP.ca/ also subscribe to my newsletter as it's or else an example.
About the author:
Don Pooley has shared his marketing know-how with audiences in major Canadian cities, London, Australia, Chicago, New York, San Francisco, Hong Kong, also Singapore, also now in his free ezine, TIP. Subscribe at http://www.eTIP.ca/
Circulated by Article Emporium
|
|