|
Income Ideas Internet Marketing Learning & Inspiration Business Tools
|
Creating Business Niches
Business isn't just about how great you are as a VA. Business isn't just about your skills and your experience and rates. Owning a business is about getting your website out in front of potential clients. You need to get started creating your businesses niches, define your target market and much more. Janice Byer writes about marketing, image, target markets and more!
Image is
Everything!
By Janice D. Byer, CCVA, MVA
Docu-Type Administrative & Web Design Services
Marketing is an integral part to any business, especially for a Virtual
Assistance who has to rely on a professional and creative image. How you
get the word out about your VA service can have a tremendous impact on
the success of your business. Just throwing together a business card or
brochure to hand out, or a quick website is not enough. You need to
create a marketing strategy, one that will portray you as capable of
creating an image for your clients.
Your marketing strategy is all about creativeness and communication. How
you communicate your message will have an effect on how you are
perceived in the minds of your customers. If your own marketing material
is not enough to get the attention of your potential clients, or if they
have a negative perception, then how can you expect them to have
confidence in you being able to help them with their needs?
Having a clear idea of what drives your customer to buy can help you to
communicate to them why they need your services and how you can create
and maintain their image.
So how do you go about making sure that you are saying the right thing
and portraying the right image, and that your potential client will keep
you in mind?
1. Determine the objective of your marketing material. What do you want
to accomplish with this piece of advertising? Do you want your client to
call you for further information, do you want them to cash in a coupon
or to bookmark your website for future reference? Give them a directive.
2. Decide who will be your target market. Are you trying to sell to a
large corporation or to the mother of small children? ‘Who’ is going to
buy from you is ‘who’ you need to focus your message on.
3. Compose a positioning statement. In a single sentence convey exactly
how you want your customer to perceive you, something that will stick in
their mind. (ie. “We specialize in word processing.....”)
4. Now, add a primary benefit to that sentence. (ie. “...so you can get
experienced help when you are short staffed or overloaded...”)
5. And then, throw in a supporting benefit. (ie. “...saving you time and
money on your staffing needs.”)
6. Now, work with this sentence to get your main message across. If you
only had space for one message, what would it be?
7. Add any other supporting messages that will convey the benefits of
having your product or service. (ie. “No need to provide equipment. We
do everything in our office.”)
8. Give your customer an opportunity to provide a desired response. How
do you want them to react to your communication? (ie. “Wow, this is a
great service that will save me money” or “I could really use this
service to get a handle on things.”)
9. Make sure to project the right tone in your communication. Use a
number of adjectives to describe your product or service, expressing how
you want to be regarded. (ie. professional, innovative, exciting,
friendly, newsworthy, creative, etc.)
10. Last, but not least, consider how you are going to execute your
message. Does it fit best on a 3-fold brochure and what kind of paper do
you want to use? Do you need a tear-off coupon on it? Does your message
fit best on one page of a website or several pages? How are you going to
turn your marketing strategy into hard copy or virtual copy?
All in all, you are designing and executing your marketing strategy to
attract potential clients and to show them your creativeness and
capabilities. Always have them in mind when putting ideas down on paper
or on the web. What you think is appealing may not be appealing to your
customer. Ensure that your message will catch their eye and impress upon
them that your service can make their lives so much easier in more ways
than one.... and better than your competitor!
Janice Byer, owner of Docu-Type Administrative & Web Design Services
(http://www.docutype.net) provides professional, creative and affordable
virtual office assistance and small business website design. She is a
Certified Canadian Virtual Assistant (CCVA) and Master Virtual Assistant
(MVA). She is also the author of Surfin' The Net - Docu-Type's Virtual
Collection of Links, (http://www.docutype.net/SurfinTheNet/linksebook.htm)
which is filled with the secrets of her success. Visit her website for
more information and to get your copy.
MommysPlace Recommends the Following:
Direct Sales | Home Based Business Ideas | Organized Moms | WAHM Resources | Affiliate Marketing | ebay Auction Business | Become a Virtual Assistant | Direct Sales Companies | SEO Articles | How to Write a Newsletter | Work at Home Articles | Work at Home Guides | Home Based Employment | Resume Writing Examples | Letter of Reccomendation | Benefit of Telecommuting | Become a Coach
About Us | Contact
copyright 1999-2008
Linking Partners: Learn internet marketing strategies at
http://www.allnaturalwahm.com



