Paul Lemberg

  • Home
  • About
    • About Paul Lemberg
    • Core Values
    • Partial Client List
    • Success Stories
  • Coaching/Programs
    • 1:1 Business Coaching
    • Why hire a business coach
    • Profit Ramp Intensive
    • Private Consultation
    • Strategy & Planning Workshop
  • Book Paul to Speak
  • BLOG
  • Contact Me
You are here: Home / Archives for marketing

By pl 5 Comments

The Danger of Doing Nothing…

Last week I ran a business-building workshop for 14 consultants and coaches to help them grow their businesses to high-six and low-seven figures..

On the second day during a break, one of the attendees pulled me out on the terrace. He wanted to ask a really important question.

“Which strategy should I run next to guarantee new clients quickly?”

Naively, I fell right into his trap…

“Tell me about how your marketing system works now,” I asked.

“I don’t have a system,” he responded, a little too quickly.

“Okay, so what kinds of things have you been doing to bring in business?”

“I’m not doing anything. I was waiting for your workshop.”

(You can see where this is going, can’t you?)

“How long have you been waiting…?”

“It’s been about four months. I launched my practice with a few referrals, but now I really need new clients…”

Since January…

Doing nothing…

Waiting four months…

Do you know the right answer to this guy’s question?

If you’ve been reading my posts or watching my videos, you know I’m a big fan of DOING ANYTHING.

Yes, that’s right.  That’s the answer: DO ANYTHING.

It doesn’t really matter what you do, as long as you are always doing something to promote your services, your products, your ideas… 

You see, you have no way of knowing what’s really going to work.

So instead of trying to figure out the perfect strategy, your best bet is simply to take some kind of action.

Do something and see what happens. If you get good results, keep doing it. If you don’t get the results you want, fix what you’re doing or do something else. No matter what, keep doing something.

Of course, there are things that generally work well, and you should be doing those.  But really, who knows?

The best course of action, the most powerful one, is to layer all the various strategies available one on top of the other in a synergistic model. That’s the strategic system I teach.

But in lieu of knowing all those things, you just have to do anything.

Because the outcome of doing nothing is predictable.

By the way…

Can you guess how many new clients that guy enrolled before my workshop?

Yeah… That’s right…

My advice?

Get busy!

To your outrageous success,

Paul

P.S. What are you going to do today to create new business opportunities?

 

 

Filed Under: Business Coaching, Business Strategy, Decision making, leadership, List building, marketing, Mindset Tagged With: business coaching, decision making, leadership, marketing, Mindset

By pl 5 Comments

Is Your Business At Risk

My guess is that you know someone with a story like this…

Everything seemed rosy.

Business was humming along, money being made, the future looking bright…

And wham!

 

All of a sudden the whole thing is tanking, and before long, the business is DEAD.

Do Not Let This Happen To You…

Watch the video now.

Filed Under: Business Coaching, Business Strategy, marketing, Mindset, Sales Tagged With: business coaching, marketing, planning, sales, stragegy

By pl 33 Comments

10 Business Strategy Questions To Figure Out Your Company’s Future…

What’s the fastest way to shift your thinking?

Ask the right questions.

What’s the surest way to change your future?

Same answer…

Ask the right questions…

Ask the right questions and you can change anything.  The trick then, is to ask the right questions.  (And yes, you do have to answer them.)

So what are the right questions? In this video I bring up 10 of them.  Are these the only 10 questions, or even the most important 10 questions?  Of course not, but they’re 10 good ones to help chart the future of your business and to make sure you are taking a direction that can get you there.

Watch the video and leave  your comments below.

 

Filed Under: Business Strategy, Decision making, Goal Setting, marketing, Mindset, strategic planning

By pl 35 Comments

Keys to Business Failure Part 2

Last week I was in NYC doing a strategy session with one of my coaching clients. We laid out the exact steps they’re going to follow for the coming year to break through to the next level – in other words really generate some serious revenue.

Nothing weird about that of course because that’s what most of my clients want…

Except they kept bringing up the issue of wanting to make sure it all works out for them.  They don’t want to take on any more risk….

In other words, they want to guarantee success.

And it was perfect timing for that conversation because I’ve been working on this video series.

Watch this 10 minute video to make sure you avoid the things which guarantee failure…

Filed Under: Business Strategy, Goal Setting, leadership, marketing, Mindset, pricing, strategic planning Tagged With: marketing, pricing, resells, strategy, upsells

By pl 37 Comments

Strategies for Holding Sales

 

Follow these tips to make more money by holding sales promotions

It’s that time of year…

Maybe it should be called Sales Season.

Want to know how to make sales work for you – and have more cash coming in right now without hurting your year-round profits?

There are four important tips, and each one will make a difference to whether your sales bring in a much-welcomed cash boost or tank your margins until the end of time.

Watch this short video, and be sure to post your comments below when you’re done.  Tell me what you need to know and what you think…

~pl

 

 

 

 

 

 

Today I’m talking about how to have a sale. It’s on my mind because it’s sales season. Black Friday… Cyber Monday… This is the time of year when all retail businesses, marginal ones, finally make a profit.

Now everybody knows I’m the “higher prices” guy. You know… Higher prices leads to higher margins, which leads to stronger profits, and gives you more money if you use marketing and sales. It’s a virtuous circle. Stronger demonstrable value always, always is the most profitable strategy over the long haul.

But as we know people sometimes need incentives to take action. Time has to be compressed. Sometimes the pressure has to be turned up. Which brings us to The Sale.

Sales are not the only way, but they are a good way to get people to take action.

Sometimes you just have to stimulate some business, you just need to bring in cash right away. Used strategically, sales are not a bad thing. They ARE a bad thing to rely on for your whole business but strategically they’re not bad.

Here are some tips if you’re going to have a sale.

First, you can’t always be running a sale. I’m thinking of Banana Republic. I signed up for their buyer’s club account. And they’re always running a sale. Almost every other day I get some sort of a discount coupon from them. It does drive purchases, it does act as an incentive. But it absolutely hurts margins.

Next, have to offer a reason for the sale. You don’t want people to expect your sale and you don’t want them to think you’re going to do it all the time. Tell people why you’re making this particular sale. It could be a tax sale, maybe it’s a divorce sale, perhaps it’s an inventory sale. It might be your office burned down – a real fire sale or a flood sale. It could be a “you want to expand your business” sale. It could be “I’m an idiot and I just can’t stop myself and we’re going to have a sale”.

You have to offer something as a reason for the sale so that your customers don’t take it for granted that the sale prices are going to be the “new” prices.

Next, don’t have the sale at an expected time. In other words, Black Friday – while it does work to put companies in the black – doesn’t work because in fact Black Friday crushes all the sales for all of the time before, and some of the time after.

So don’t do your sale when people expect you to have a sale.

See, people will compress all their holiday shopping, they’ll compress it to one day. On Saturday right after Black Friday I was in the stores and while they weren’t empty, they really weren’t full. You know what I did on Black Friday? I bought my daughter a new computer. Why did I do it on Black Friday? I got a pretty good discount that I know I was going to get. If people expect your sale, they’re going to wait for it. If it’s the same time every year, they’re going to wait for it. No matter what, don’t always do it at the same time.

Next, have a defined, limited amount of time and stick to it.

If you say it’s going to be a 3-day sale, it’s a 3-day sale. Prices go back up afterwards. Banana Republic had a Black Friday sale, but – as you expect now that I keep mentioning them – prices stayed at the BF level.

Next, make your sales irregular in length. Don’t let  people know how long your sales always going to be so that they can wait until the end.

Last – It doesn’t always have to be the same kind of deal. You don’t have to cut price. You can cut price but you can also do things like a 2-for-1 or a 3-for-2. You can bundle services with a product or vice-versa. You can throw in the upsells, you can add premium value, you can even offer special things that people can’t get any other time. A limited time offer or a one time offer, in other words you can’t get this any other time so you better buy it now during the sale or promotional period.

All of these approaches give your customer more value and your average revenue per transaction where you’d like it to be.

I’m just going to recap to rules for having a profitable sale:

  1. Have a reason, a justification.
  2. Do it randomly in terms of time.
  3. Make it for a defined period of time
  4. Use other strategies besides cutting price.

This is Paul Lemberg and if you think it’s time to just bump up some business a little bit before the end of the year, go on have sale. To your outrageous success…

Filed Under: Business Strategy, marketing, Sales Tagged With: Banana Republic, black friday, cyber monday, growth, margins, marketing, profits, promotions, sale, sales

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • Next Page »

© Inventive Corp. All rights reserved.