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Posts Tagged ‘LinkedIn’

The 8/15 Plan For Using LinkedIn

Posted By Michael Roby | Thursday, April 1st, 2010

LinkedIn® provides professional services marketing and sales people with a wonderful tool for building and expanding relationships and growing business. Consider the following tips for maximizing the use – and profitability – of one the top business building tools on the Internet.

This daily game plan has 8 steps and takes 15 – 20 minutes.

  1. Comment on Comments – Show your connections you are paying attention.
  2. Make recommendations – If you have not made a recommendation for a connection, DO SO if at all possible. Please make sincere recommendations; remember, your name is on the line. If you cannot recommend someone in good faith, don’t do it.
  3. Make your profile publicly available – While you can set the information which is publicly available to non-members/contacts, be careful with blocking too much information as this will also be unavailable to the search engines. As a minimum, consider providing enough information for the search engines to index your profile and cache the external links you have listed! In terms of optimizing your profile, the main goals are normally to rank for your own name, company name and possibly industry keywords related to this.
  4. Comment on Profile Updates – Congratulate others on promotions and awards, inquire about other changes, and always offer assistance.
  5. Check your Inbox – Respond to requests and messages in a timely manner.
  6. Look in the “People You May Know Section” – Find new connections and leads.
  7. Check Your Groups – Look for new discussions, answer questions, and look for other items of interest. Ask questions to gather information and open new relationships.
  8. Use LinkedIn® Answers – This can help to build up your reputation within a field. For SEO it also builds the number of internal links pointing to your profile from within LinkedIn, therefore helping to strengthen your profile in the search engines!

A word of warning: LinkedIn® is a tool, not a religion. Relationships are still made person-to-person, not digitally. You can receive an introduction or introduce yourself on the web, but true relationship building comes from personal interaction. LinkedIn® and other social media sites help maintain and grow relationships. In a busy world, that is truly priceless!

Lighten Up: Using Humor To Market And Sell

Posted By Michael Roby | Thursday, March 18th, 2010

Marketing is serious business, and you should always be serious about serious business. Yeah, right…

Logan Crawford portrays a comical news anchor in a series of TV commercials for AT&T’s the Backflip, from Motorola. Crawford is seen “reporting the news that’s important to you…” with impeccable sources such as Facebook and Twitter. The key feature of the Motorola Backflip is advertised as “Facebook, Twitter, text and more, streaming on a single screen.” ATT Logo - Small

The commercial spoofs the common absurdity of social media posts with lines like, “This just in via text message and wall post: “The search is on for cute boots.” Another line reads, “This just in on Twitter and Facebook: A local bachelor has just enrolled in Karate.”

Here’s the paradox; so many social media posts are trivial dribble – and AT&T is using that fact to SELL. We buy from companies that get us to laugh at ourselves. The question is simple; do you take yourself a little too seriously in your marketing and sales presentations. The work of an advisor is serious business, but too often advisors treat every recommendation as if they are a doctor telling a patient they have terminal cancer. As a professional it is perfectly acceptable lighten up, use a little humor, and let your clients see you are real, even when you are making important recommendations. Don’t try to be a comedian, just relax and be yourself.

Good selling!

CLICK HERE TO SEE THE AT&T COMMERCIAL

The Role Of Word-Of-Mouth Advertising: Five Steps To Grow Your Business

Posted By Michael Roby | Friday, December 11th, 2009

Mayo Clinic is the largest integrated, not-for-profit group medical practice in the world. More than 3,300 physicians, scientists and researchers and 46,000 allied health staff work at Mayo Clinic, which has sites in Rochester, Minn., Jacksonville, Fla., and Scottsdale/Phoenix, Ariz. Collectively, the three locations treat more than half a million people each year.  In 2008, Mayo treated over 338,000 patients in 1.5 million outpatient visits. So how does one of the world’s preeminent medical groups get their patients?

In a presentation given by Lee Aass, Communications Manager at Mayo Clinic and social media guru, he shares some interesting data concerning patient acquisition.  Most people assume Mayo’s patients result exclusively from physician referrals, but 84% of Mayo’s patients are influenced to choose Mayo as a medical services provider as a result of  word-of-mouth advertising!

Sources of Information Influencing Preference for Mayo Clinic

Word of Mouth                  84%
Stories in the media          57%
MD Recommendation         44%
Advertising                       27%
Internet/Websites             26%
Mailings to Home              18%

The implications are huge for provider of professional services. Word-of mouth advertising offers a powerful, cost-effective means of attracting business. With social media tools like Facebook and LinkedIn, word-of-mouth offers tremendous potential. Consider these questions:

  • What are your clients saying about you?
  • How can you manage word-of-mouth messaging for your business?
  • Can Word-of Mouth be a part of your business development strategy?

Like any marketing, you must be strategic when crafting your word-of-mouth marketing. Consider these five steps to grow your business:

  1. People love to share memorable experiences – good and bad.  How do you create a memorable experience for your clients? Make a list of what you do for people that makes you memorable. If you wonder what your clients think, send them an email asking them why they choose to work with you.
  2. Craft a defining statement of 25 words or less that is benefit-focused, conversational and repeatable. A defining statement is not an “Elevator Speech.” Elevator speeches are too long in today’s world. You don’t have 30 seconds to get people’s attention – they make a decision about whether or not to listen in six to eight seconds. If you lose them, good luck regaining their attention.  Use the defining statement with clients – frequently.
  3. Train your team to use the defining statement in client conversations. This includes phone greetings, service calls, and routine client interaction.
  4. Incorporate this defining statement into all of your collateral sales and marketing materials.
  5. Utilize social media tools to help spread the word about you and your business. Many resources exist that make word-of-mouth advertising easy. Consider outsourcing your social media marketing to a team member or social media service vendor.

Make it easy for your clients to tell others about your services. It certainly works for Mayo Clinic!

Good selling!