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Work &
Finance > Work At Home
Home-Based Answering Service
GETTING
STARTED | TYPES OF
HOME-BASED ANSWERING SERVICES | HOW
TO OBTAIN CLIENTS | YOUR
"HOME" OFFICE | TEN
EASY STEPS TO ORGANIZE YOUR BUSINESS | THE
ART OF NETWORKING | MARKETING
YOU MUST DO | ADDITIONAL TIPS
FOR SUCCESS | START-UP COSTS
AND HOW TO FUND THEM | FINANCIAL
AND LEGAL CONSIDERATIONS
MARKETING YOU MUST DO
While networking can be an effective marketing tool for
you, it is not the only way to put your name and services
in front of a potential client. Further, many individuals
do not like the practice of networking and would prefer to
solicit prospects on another basis.
Marketing is a collection of activities that helps you
to obtain business. These actions may involve advertising,
direct mail, press releases, public appearances,
promotional flyers or brochures. Your services will not be
contracted unless people know about them. This is where
marketing is useful. Marketing should create and image for
you, one that is professional and encourages individuals
to look further into what you have to offer.
Marketing is also about understanding who your base of
potential clients is and where they are located. Narrowing
down your scope of marketing to concentrate on the people
most likely to contract for your answering service
requires thoughtful analysis. For example, you could begin
by focusing on just sole proprietors at first. These are
people most likely to be working away from their business
and in potential need of phone help.
There are numerous media outlets to advertise your
services. It costs money to advertise in newspapers or
send brochures out to targeted potential customers, so
gauge your budget accordingly when selecting your
marketing outlets. Radio and television advertising also
carry a price, but can also be effective in reaching a
broad number of people.
Your marketing pieces, whether a brochure,
advertisement or commercial must list plenty of reasons
for your services being important and specifically why you
should pro-vide these services. You should decide on and
then list the services you offer as some or all of this
copy will become a focal point of any piece you create.
A brochure can provide a professional image for you
while serving functionally to explain the services you
provide. It should be simple in appearance and easy to
read and absorb. Be informative without being wordy.
Anticipate and answer the questions someone might have
about your type of business, such as how many hours per
day your service will take calls.
The brochure layout is usually a six panel, front and
back 8 ½ , 11 inch sheet of paper. The panels include:
-a cover indicating your business name, address,
telephone number and logo; -first inside panel describing
your business and who a good prospect for your services
would be; -middle inside panel should list your services
and a brief description of each; -third inside panel
should provide a list of testimonials from others who have
used your service, or, if new, from network contacts
willing to describe your phone voice, organizational
skills and reliability and put their name and business
next to their quote; -middle outside panel should contain
a brief biography of yourself and your credentials along
with any partners or other employees you may wish to
highlight; and -final outside panel which will be designed
as a self-mailer with your return address on it. You will
mail the brochure using this panel as your envelope.
You should write the copy for your brochure, but get
some help laying it out from either the graphic artist who
designed your logo or the printer who will be printing the
marketing piece. Using two colors and minimal design
should keep the price of producing these mailing brochures
very reasonable. The brochure can also be used as a
hand-out piece. It adds credence to your business venture
and lifts you above those others that don’t bother
investing the money in this important marketing tool.
Advertising can also put your name and service out to a
variety of people. A classified advertisement offering
your services may initiate some phone calls, but a larger
display advertisement is more likely to draw your
potential prospect’s attention. Your advertisement
should be written to attract the eye of the reader. The
headline is the most critical part of the piece, but this
will either invite the reader to keep reading or go on to
the next page.
Your key service is to help a business avoid losing
money by having that personal contact when someone calls
their office. This concept is what your headline should
incorporate, such as "How To Make Your Business More
Profitable" or a similar theme.
People buy most often for emotional reasons. You are
selling a service. Thus the advertisement you create must
have an emotional pull that can convince a person to call
you for more information. An advertisement simply listing
your services won’t generate the response you want and
need. But it the emotional enticement is to help a
business financially, to provide that human touch in a
mechanized world, you will have a better chance of
attracting potential clients.
The remainder of the advertisement can list some
details about you and the services you provide, but the
headlines remains focused on emotion. Certainly you can
continue with the emotional copy throughout the piece,
mixing in some of the important details. The better story
you tell, the better your response. But the headline will
cause people to read the story. A poor headline will send
most readers elsewhere and a good story will remain
unread.
Be positive! List the benefits of working with you, not
the disadvantages or passing on your services. The
headline should concentrate perhaps on SAVE THOUSANDS OF
DOLLARS TODAY rather than AVOID LOSING THOUSANDS IN YOUR
BUSINESS. There are professional ad agencies and
copywriters who can assist you in getting it right. It may
be worth the price to put an ad together that generates
substantial response rather than saving the money, writing
the ad yourself and seeing little or no reaction to it.
The most effective ads tell us enough information, but
leave the reader curious to know more and thus, inviting
the person to call in. But once you have the person
calling in, you have an excellent chance to turn that
prospect into a client. After all, it’s your phone voice
and manner that you’re trying to sell, isn’t it? Here,
the individual will get a first hand chance to see how
their own clients will be handled should you strike up a
deal.
Run your advertisement in your local newspaper or other
smaller community publi-cations. Try radio advertising.
It’s a cost- effective way to reach people you may never
get to contact otherwise.
The other marketing option for you is direct mail. You
can generate some incredible responses her, but if your
are going to undertake the expense of a direct mail
operation, you should certainly secure some assistance
from professional copywriters to get the most "bang
for your buck". Postage costs alone are high with
direct mail so you need an effective piece.
Direct mail is tricky, because you must get your
message across with a minimum of words. The direct mail
piece is meant to entice a prospect into calling for more
infor-mation. Stay focused on this. If you try to do too
much, few if any people will read your piece and respond.
The importance of immediate action must be emphasized.
The piece is meant to motivate the prospect to act now,
today, not tomorrow or next week or next month. Effective
wording can accomplish this motivating technique.
Direct mail can help you reach thousands of people you
couldn’t call yourself. It expands your capacity to
reach potential clients and makes the most of your limited
manpower and, possibly, resources.
Look for a direct mail house that works with
copywriters. There is a big difference between advertising
and direct mail, so find and individual with direct mail
credentials. You could write the copy yourself if it will
capably produce the type of piece described.
If you intend to undertake the copywriting yourself,
remember these basic principles:
-Headline! Headline! Headline! Your opening paragraph
or title in your direct mail piece has to make people want
to open it up and read further. Don’t be coy! List a key
benefit immediately! Get your prospect to turn the page!
-While listing your benefits, keep them at reality level.
If something sounds too good to be true, it usually is.
People are wary today of others who over-promise, so as
you highlight the benefits of your business service,
emphasize how you are able to offer this many benefits
from your company. Utilize the word "you" to let
readers know they will be on the receiving end of the
benefits. -Be as precise as you can. Give prospects
tangible services and explain simply how they work. People
are bottom-line today and want to make up their mind to
pursue a service or not in quick fashion. Specifics give
people enough data to make up their mind and will almost
always help you get a response. It will also not waste
time for you and those who are not interested in your
services. -Obtain some testimonials to use other
people’s words, other than your own, to describe your
benefits and services. Use complete names to indicate
authenticity behind the comments. -Make your copy
conversational, easy to read, simple. Words should be
short. Sen-tences should be brief. Paragraphs should be
concise. The copy should encourage the reader to act. If a
reader understands the copy, the action you want (a
response) is more likely to happen. -Incentives often
motivate people to act immediately rather than
procrastinate. If, for a limited time (14 days, 30 days),
your service can be obtained for less than the usual
monthly rate, you’ve encouraged people to call in and
take action. If they understand the service you offer and
how it can benefit them, plus you add a feature such as an
incentive to call NOW, you’ll probably increase your
response by a large margin. Some people need that extra
shove. -Guarantee your work. Offer a no-risk, money back
30 day deal to try your service. If the customer isn’t
satisfied, offer the refund. This will reassure the
potential client and, since you have great confidence in
your own ability, you really aren’t giving anything away
since you know people will benefit from your services.
Your direct mail piece must sell you along with your
services. IN a phone business, you are the most valuable
asset. People buy from people. The more satisfied someone
is with you, the more likely the chance of securing a
contract.
Marketing is a potpourri of potential activity. Create
a marketing strategy and follow it through. You can’t
help but generate a number of individuals interested in
what you have to offer. Remember, too, that marketing is
an ongoing process. You are always on the lookout for new
clients. The value of continued marketing efforts is a
constant stream of prospects-- and financial security for
you!
>> ADDITIONAL
TIPS FOR SUCCESS
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