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    The Top Ten Ways to Get Beyond Networking And Generate Cash-Building Exposure
    Gain the exposure you need to succeed with these ten tips:1. Present yourself as a specialist and/or an authority in your field. Identify where you excel and use your skills, core competencies, knowledge and experience to become a valuable resource.2. Be clear on the services you provide, the target markets you serve and the kind of results you can deliver. Create an effective oral introductory message and printed business card that clearly provides this information.3. Demonstrate confidence. You can say whatever you want, but if your interpersonal skills, communication abilities, and overall body language doesn’t project a confident image – you won’t be taken seriously.4. Genuinely care about
    keting once they have a few clients. Of course, this means they never build a sustainable business and eventually have to go get a job. Continually market, even if your practice is full. Over time, you can reduce the time you put into marketing because your system is efficient, automated and your message has saturated the market.

    4. No plan -- Many coaches have no marketing plan, but instead do what I call hunt and peck marketing. This wastes valuable time because marketing methods can't be leveraged. Instead, create a long term, leveraged marketing plan directed at your niche. Here's an example: have a targeted website that allows visitors to subscribe to your ezine, which advertises a free teleclass enrolling prospects into a workshop series or group coaching forum on topics they care about, and concurrently sell your own products relative to your market. All of this is directed at your niche.

    5. No faith -- So many coaches don't value themselves, their time or their services. They give away time beyond a sample session

    Can A Virtual Assistant Help Your Business?
    In general, a Virtual Assistant (VA) is someone who performs administrative tasks away from the office of their clients. A VA is the modern day version of the executive assistant or personal assistant.A VA is usually not an employee, which comes in very handy for many home business owners. If you live (own or rent) in a place where the business or city codes say you can't have an employee in your home - you CAN hire a VA! No employee benefits to deal with either!Each VA works a little differently. It is important for you to identify the skill-set you are looking for and know how many hours you're initially looking to contract for before you start the interview process. Below is a list of things to conside
    Financial success in a coaching practice comes down to two primary things -- how successfully you market to one narrow coaching niche or target market and how you value yourself, time and services. That's not to say that it's not also important that you are a skillful coach and have integrity in your coaching relationships. But these other factors weigh in more heavily with regard to sustained financial success. We'll talk about valuing yourself in a future edition. Today's focus is niche marketing.

    Why Choose One Niche?

    I know that you became a coach to coach, not to market, right? You want that freedom in lifestyle of working for yourself, with an unlimited income, while supporting others to their most fulfilling life.

    I understand. And the reality is, marketing is not an option, it's a requirement. So why not market with ease? By choosing one distinctive niche you can have fun marketing, leverage your time and have a higher return on your investment. Here are the virtues of target marketing:

    - Eliminate the discomfort of trying to explain coaching. Instead speak directly to your target market about their wants and challenges. They are already interested because your services are geared to them.

    - Build visibility and credibility faster through referrals.

    - Make every marketing hour count more by funneling prospective clients into a series of leveraged marketing efforts -- a targeted website with a subscription to a bi-weekly ezine, that advertises a free teleclass on a relevant subject, that enrolls prospects into an 8 week workshop or long term group coaching event, that teases products you have for sale. All of this is directed at your target market and works in concert.

    - Command higher fees.

    - Develop expertise more quickly. Then get recognized for that expertise by others who will want you to speak publicly, be on panels, write articles. They advertise for you.

    - Build a sustained pipeline of prospective clients.

    - Reduce your time in marketing as you saturate the market.

    - Distinguish yourself from the other 25,000 coaches out there, most of whom do not target market and make less than $10K per year.

    How to Choose Your Niche

    Start by thinking about the demographics you represent. If you're a 50 year old individual with 10 years of experience in the pharmaceutical industry, your niche could be midcareer pharmaceutical execs. If you're a woman with children who went back to work two years ago, you could work with moms re-entering the workforce to manage the transition. If you're a retired corporate executive, your niche could be sunsetting corporate executives to create their next phase of life's work.

    The name of the game is narrowing and specifying to one group that you enjoy, relate to and have some first hand experience in their realm. While you don't need vast expertise in your niche, you and your prospects will be served by at least some sense of the challenges this group faces. And, if you have expertise, use it to market to your niche unless it makes your stomach turn.

    Favorite Mistakes

    The most common mistakes coaches make in marketing are:

    1. The market is too broad -- If you choose something like women in transition, professionals or entrepreneurs, you'll find it difficult to build sustainable financial success. The word professional can describe almost any business person these days. Imagine trying to write a bi-weekly ezine that would interest doctors, lawyers, hair stylists, massage therapists, coaches, CPAs. Market to just one of these groups instead and watch your business take off.

    2. Second and third guessing -- Pick a niche, develop a marketing plan and stick with it a few years so you can enjoy the benefits. Many coaches change their niche every few months so that every one they speak with has heard a different 30 second intro and the coach loses legitimacy. Unfortunately, the message is not -- I'm open minded and trying a little of everything. Instead, it's -- I'm indecisive and not serious about my business.

    3. Cyclical marketing -- Many coaches will stop marketing once they have a few clients. Of course, this means they never build a sustainable business and eventually have to go get a job. Continually market, even if your practice is full. Over time, you can reduce the time you put into marketing because your system is efficient, automated and your message has saturated the market.

    4. No plan -- Many coaches have no marketing plan, but instead do what I call hunt and peck marketing. This wastes valuable time because marketing methods can't be leveraged. Instead, create a long term, leveraged marketing plan directed at your niche. Here's an example: have a targeted website that allows visitors to subscribe to your ezine, which advertises a free teleclass enrolling prospects into a workshop series or group coaching forum on topics they care about, and concurrently sell your own products relative to your market. All of this is directed at your niche.

    5. No faith -- So many coaches don't value themselves, their time or their services. They give away time beyond a sample session,

    How to Write and Deliver a Dynamite Speech - Part One
    A dynamite speech is built upon a strong foundation of form and structure. I call this the architecture of the speech. Without the proper form and structure – the right elements organized in the right order – your speech may collapse in on you while you’re standing there in front of your audience. Maybe that’s already happened to you and you don’t want it to happen again.Step One of the 21 Steps of the Dynamite Speech System is Define Your Core Message. Before you start choosing stories and making PowerPoint slides, you have to have a clear purpose, a distinct point of focus that keeps you on track and makes it easy for your audience to follow you. I call this point of focus your core m
    ying to explain coaching. Instead speak directly to your target market about their wants and challenges. They are already interested because your services are geared to them.

    - Build visibility and credibility faster through referrals.

    - Make every marketing hour count more by funneling prospective clients into a series of leveraged marketing efforts -- a targeted website with a subscription to a bi-weekly ezine, that advertises a free teleclass on a relevant subject, that enrolls prospects into an 8 week workshop or long term group coaching event, that teases products you have for sale. All of this is directed at your target market and works in concert.

    - Command higher fees.

    - Develop expertise more quickly. Then get recognized for that expertise by others who will want you to speak publicly, be on panels, write articles. They advertise for you.

    - Build a sustained pipeline of prospective clients.

    - Reduce your time in marketing as you saturate the market.

    - Distinguish yourself from the other 25,000 coaches out there, most of whom do not target market and make less than $10K per year.

    How to Choose Your Niche

    Start by thinking about the demographics you represent. If you're a 50 year old individual with 10 years of experience in the pharmaceutical industry, your niche could be midcareer pharmaceutical execs. If you're a woman with children who went back to work two years ago, you could work with moms re-entering the workforce to manage the transition. If you're a retired corporate executive, your niche could be sunsetting corporate executives to create their next phase of life's work.

    The name of the game is narrowing and specifying to one group that you enjoy, relate to and have some first hand experience in their realm. While you don't need vast expertise in your niche, you and your prospects will be served by at least some sense of the challenges this group faces. And, if you have expertise, use it to market to your niche unless it makes your stomach turn.

    Favorite Mistakes

    The most common mistakes coaches make in marketing are:

    1. The market is too broad -- If you choose something like women in transition, professionals or entrepreneurs, you'll find it difficult to build sustainable financial success. The word professional can describe almost any business person these days. Imagine trying to write a bi-weekly ezine that would interest doctors, lawyers, hair stylists, massage therapists, coaches, CPAs. Market to just one of these groups instead and watch your business take off.

    2. Second and third guessing -- Pick a niche, develop a marketing plan and stick with it a few years so you can enjoy the benefits. Many coaches change their niche every few months so that every one they speak with has heard a different 30 second intro and the coach loses legitimacy. Unfortunately, the message is not -- I'm open minded and trying a little of everything. Instead, it's -- I'm indecisive and not serious about my business.

    3. Cyclical marketing -- Many coaches will stop marketing once they have a few clients. Of course, this means they never build a sustainable business and eventually have to go get a job. Continually market, even if your practice is full. Over time, you can reduce the time you put into marketing because your system is efficient, automated and your message has saturated the market.

    4. No plan -- Many coaches have no marketing plan, but instead do what I call hunt and peck marketing. This wastes valuable time because marketing methods can't be leveraged. Instead, create a long term, leveraged marketing plan directed at your niche. Here's an example: have a targeted website that allows visitors to subscribe to your ezine, which advertises a free teleclass enrolling prospects into a workshop series or group coaching forum on topics they care about, and concurrently sell your own products relative to your market. All of this is directed at your niche.

    5. No faith -- So many coaches don't value themselves, their time or their services. They give away time beyond a sample session

    Best Contact Centers
    The best contact centers must be leading providers of high quality contact center services. A contact center is the central point in an enterprise from which all customer contacts are managed. The contact center usually includes one or more online call centers but may also maintain other types of customer contact as well, such as e-mail newsletters, postal mail catalogs, website inquiries and chats, etc. A contact center is primarily meant for customer relationship management.The best contact centers will have ideal infrastructure that will enable the customer service representatives to attend personally to each customer. The customer service representatives are well trained in language skills and knowledgeable in U
    of whom do not target market and make less than $10K per year.

    How to Choose Your Niche

    Start by thinking about the demographics you represent. If you're a 50 year old individual with 10 years of experience in the pharmaceutical industry, your niche could be midcareer pharmaceutical execs. If you're a woman with children who went back to work two years ago, you could work with moms re-entering the workforce to manage the transition. If you're a retired corporate executive, your niche could be sunsetting corporate executives to create their next phase of life's work.

    The name of the game is narrowing and specifying to one group that you enjoy, relate to and have some first hand experience in their realm. While you don't need vast expertise in your niche, you and your prospects will be served by at least some sense of the challenges this group faces. And, if you have expertise, use it to market to your niche unless it makes your stomach turn.

    Favorite Mistakes

    The most common mistakes coaches make in marketing are:

    1. The market is too broad -- If you choose something like women in transition, professionals or entrepreneurs, you'll find it difficult to build sustainable financial success. The word professional can describe almost any business person these days. Imagine trying to write a bi-weekly ezine that would interest doctors, lawyers, hair stylists, massage therapists, coaches, CPAs. Market to just one of these groups instead and watch your business take off.

    2. Second and third guessing -- Pick a niche, develop a marketing plan and stick with it a few years so you can enjoy the benefits. Many coaches change their niche every few months so that every one they speak with has heard a different 30 second intro and the coach loses legitimacy. Unfortunately, the message is not -- I'm open minded and trying a little of everything. Instead, it's -- I'm indecisive and not serious about my business.

    3. Cyclical marketing -- Many coaches will stop marketing once they have a few clients. Of course, this means they never build a sustainable business and eventually have to go get a job. Continually market, even if your practice is full. Over time, you can reduce the time you put into marketing because your system is efficient, automated and your message has saturated the market.

    4. No plan -- Many coaches have no marketing plan, but instead do what I call hunt and peck marketing. This wastes valuable time because marketing methods can't be leveraged. Instead, create a long term, leveraged marketing plan directed at your niche. Here's an example: have a targeted website that allows visitors to subscribe to your ezine, which advertises a free teleclass enrolling prospects into a workshop series or group coaching forum on topics they care about, and concurrently sell your own products relative to your market. All of this is directed at your niche.

    5. No faith -- So many coaches don't value themselves, their time or their services. They give away time beyond a sample session

    Which Pen Should You Choose For Your Business Promotion
    There are many different types of promotional pens that you can choose from for your business promotion, but another good point to make is that there are a variety of different pens that you could use for different promotions. Stepping outside of the box of traditional promotional pen hand outs and usages you can create an influx of new business or great promotions for your upcoming specials.There is a plethora of varieties of promotional pens that you can customize for your business. They range widely in price as well, which makes it easy to find the perfect promotional pen that fits your business and your budget. You can target a specific event, sale or promotion with your promotional pens as well.Perhaps y
    common mistakes coaches make in marketing are:

    1. The market is too broad -- If you choose something like women in transition, professionals or entrepreneurs, you'll find it difficult to build sustainable financial success. The word professional can describe almost any business person these days. Imagine trying to write a bi-weekly ezine that would interest doctors, lawyers, hair stylists, massage therapists, coaches, CPAs. Market to just one of these groups instead and watch your business take off.

    2. Second and third guessing -- Pick a niche, develop a marketing plan and stick with it a few years so you can enjoy the benefits. Many coaches change their niche every few months so that every one they speak with has heard a different 30 second intro and the coach loses legitimacy. Unfortunately, the message is not -- I'm open minded and trying a little of everything. Instead, it's -- I'm indecisive and not serious about my business.

    3. Cyclical marketing -- Many coaches will stop marketing once they have a few clients. Of course, this means they never build a sustainable business and eventually have to go get a job. Continually market, even if your practice is full. Over time, you can reduce the time you put into marketing because your system is efficient, automated and your message has saturated the market.

    4. No plan -- Many coaches have no marketing plan, but instead do what I call hunt and peck marketing. This wastes valuable time because marketing methods can't be leveraged. Instead, create a long term, leveraged marketing plan directed at your niche. Here's an example: have a targeted website that allows visitors to subscribe to your ezine, which advertises a free teleclass enrolling prospects into a workshop series or group coaching forum on topics they care about, and concurrently sell your own products relative to your market. All of this is directed at your niche.

    5. No faith -- So many coaches don't value themselves, their time or their services. They give away time beyond a sample session

    Shifting the Sales Compensation Paradigm
    Executive SummaryHow do you protect cash positions while balancing the seemingly contradictory problem of keeping cost of sales under control and your sales force intact while revenues decrease. Compensating sales efforts appropriately is one solution for protecting margins, profit and cash. Solving this issue may take creating a new paradigm for sales representative compensation.Longing For the Good Old DaysIt was like a feeding frenzy when business was booming, backlogs were steadily increasing and customers were paying regularly. Just like the stock market, everyone was chirping ‘go baby go’. But times have changed; no doubt your business plan has changed too. Now how we compensate a sales for
    keting once they have a few clients. Of course, this means they never build a sustainable business and eventually have to go get a job. Continually market, even if your practice is full. Over time, you can reduce the time you put into marketing because your system is efficient, automated and your message has saturated the market.

    4. No plan -- Many coaches have no marketing plan, but instead do what I call hunt and peck marketing. This wastes valuable time because marketing methods can't be leveraged. Instead, create a long term, leveraged marketing plan directed at your niche. Here's an example: have a targeted website that allows visitors to subscribe to your ezine, which advertises a free teleclass enrolling prospects into a workshop series or group coaching forum on topics they care about, and concurrently sell your own products relative to your market. All of this is directed at your niche.

    5. No faith -- So many coaches don't value themselves, their time or their services. They give away time beyond a sample session, discount fees, and keep clients that aren't right for them. They fail to seize the right opportunities. This negative energy chokes off prosperity and sends prospects away. When you market, trust that your services are highly valuable and show that in your thoughts, words and actions. (More on this in the next edition.)

    Take heart, take aim and target market. You'll be richly rewarded by a sustainable, financially successful business.

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