Educate Your Prospects and They'll Turn into Lifelong
Customers

By David Carleton
There is a misconception in
business that your marketing's most
important function is to promote your products and services.
In fact, the most important function of your marketing
should be to establish that you are knowledgeable and can be
trusted.
Most of us don't do business with people we don't trust.
Even if you have the lowest prices, if your prospect doesn’t
trust you, it will be difficult to close the sale. This is
the basis for Education-Based Marketing.
Education-Based Marketing is
a powerful marketing strategy that establishes trust and
credibility using educational messages. It is the direct
opposite of traditional marketing, which uses selling-based
messages. People are tired of hearing worn-out, old sales
pitches.
Barriers shoot up the moment you begin delivering a sales
pitch. In contrast, people sit up and listen when you share
important facts and expert information that help them make a
good buying decision.
Determining Your
Educational Message
Imagine stepping into the
mind of your prospect and listening to their mental
conversation at the very moment they decide to begin
shopping for your products. What questions are they asking
themselves? The secret to attracting qualified prospects
early in the sales cycle is to find out the answers to those
questions and use them as the basis for your educational
marketing message.
For instance, if you were to
offer your prospect the choice between two free special
reports, one titled “Why brand A is the best ATV on the
market” and the other titled, “Six Little-Known Secrets to
Purchasing the Right ATV for Your Family,” which do you
think would be chosen?
From my experience, the second report will out pull the
first report 10:1. Educational information that helps your
prospects solve problems and make better decisions is the
type of information that will attract prospects.
How To Package Your
Educational Marketing Message to Generate Qualified
Prospects
Once you have developed your
educational message you need to package it and offer it for
free in exchange for your prospect’s contact information.
This is critical. Effective marketing is not just a matter
of getting the word out but more importantly, getting a
response back.
You can package your
educational message in a format your prospect will respond
to such as a written special report, an audiocassette, a
video tape, an email course, a CD-ROM, a seminar, or even a
toll-free phone message.
An important aspect to making
your educational message enticing is to give it a great
title. You’ll notice in the second title I just mentioned I
used a number (six) and the word “secrets.” People like
numbered lists and knowing things other people don’t know
(i.e. secrets). Put those two together and you have an
almost irresistible title. Give your educational messages
exciting titles and they will attract qualified prospects.
How To Deliver Your
Educational Marketing Message
Now that you have developed
and packaged your education message, you should develop
strategies and processes to give it away. To do this you
must first identify all the “customer touch points” in your
business and offer your educational message at each one of
those touch points. Common customer touch points are your
business phone, website, advertising, publicity, networking
conversations, home shows, etc.
For instance, instead of
ending your business phone conversations like this, “Well
Mrs. Jones, thanks so much for calling and I hope you come
by and visit us.”
End your phone conversation with an offer like this, “Well
Mrs. Jones, thanks so much for calling. By the way, we’ve
just developed a great special report that talks about the
top 10 common mistakes that people make when buying an ATV.
If you’ll give me your address I’ll send it to you free of
charge. Would that be okay?”
You’ve just accomplished
three very important things with this telephone strategy,
(1) you’ve generated goodwill by offering a valuable free
gift, (2) you got your prospect’s contact information so
that you can continue to market to her, and (3) you now have
a reason for a follow up phone call after she receives and
has read the special report.
Resist the Urge to
Give a Sales Pitch
It’s easy to set your
business apart using Education-Based Marketing because
most of your competitors are using selling-based marketing.
The beauty of Education-Based Marketing is that you give
prospective customers what they want, information and advice
— and remove what they don't want, a sales pitch.
By offering helpful advice,
you establish yourself as an authority because prospects see
you as a reliable source of information. Be careful not to
give in to the urge to include a sales pitch with your
educational message. This will only erode the trust you have
established and make you the same as your competitors in the
eyes of your prospect.
Instead, after you have provided some helpful information
you should warmly invite your prospects to call you, visit
your website, come to your store, or take advantage of your
free offer to do an onsite visit.
Conclusion
Education-Based Marketing
captures prospects earlier in the decision
process and establishes a relationship of trust, resulting
in dramatically higher sales and closing ratios.
Those businesses that seek to develop a
relationship of trust by delivering a non-threatening
educational message will position themselves as their
prospect’s first choice from which to buy
products.

To your success.

David Carleton
Street Smart Sales and Marketing
|