One Man's Voice

  • Communication Faux Pas

    The posting below is borrowed [reposted] from Rita Coco's CocoAbundance email message that she sends to many many colleagues periodically. A true diamond in the rough, Rita challenges business leaders to think and change. Read below and consider your communications and approach with your prospects and even existing clients.

    I (AJ) have to ask..."Are you kicking yoursellf in the teeth with your first smile?"

     

    from Rita Coco:

    The Communication Faux Pas

    If you only knew how your prospects hear you...
    you would immediately change how you talk to them!

    As a nation, our marketing communications are broken.

    As business owners, we need our future customers to choose us. We are wasting prospects’ time if they cannot decide, in a few precious seconds, if we can even be helpful to them (and, we are wasting our time too!).

    We need to stop monologuing and start dialoging with our prospects; they deserve more than our ineffective, ‘self-pushing’ conversations. They deserve an opportunity to know whether we can solve a problem and/or make their life better – and if not – help them find someone who can.

    Self-pushing conversations are loaded with statements containing:

    Who we are
    What we have
    How we do things
    Where we are located
    How long we have been in business

    I call these statements; the ROYAL “WE”; these messages are autobiographical and self-serving when out of context. Businesses focused on these statements go “we, we, we, all the way home” – and never to the bank. They also waste people’s time. Self-pushing statements all too often make their entrance at the beginning of our marketing communications. They appear on the website home page, the front fold of the brochure, the first paragraph of a sales letter or in the line immediately following “Hello” in a call script.

    Self-pushing statements are a company’s monologue;
    they waste our precious marketing dollars and customers’ and prospects’ time.

    Small businesses are almost always unaware of their one-sided communication with prospects. Start-ups self-promote because they know more about what they sell than who they sell to. Existing businesses use ‘we’ messages as a way to look ‘more professional’, inadvertently lengthening their sales cycle and clouding up prospect communications.

    When it comes to marketing communications, 80% of small businesses look at other (local and global) marketing communications and follow what everyone else does, then wonder why they are not attracting prospects.

    A company’s monologues build a wall between them and their prospects;
    A company’s dialogues invite prospects to converse with them.

    What can you do today to make a shift from monologuing to dialoguing?

    Start creating powerful dialogues within your marketing communications; prove that you can solve the prospect’s problems. Instead of self-pushing statements, here are customer-directed questions you can use to initiate a dialogue:

    Do you need…?
    Do you desire…?
    Is your business being affected in this way…?
    Is this shift (describe the shift) what you want your business to take?
    Is this positive result (describe the result) what you are looking for?

    How you complete these questions will make or break your dialogue.
    For example: how do you know what your best customers’ most important needs and desires are? (Remember: your product or service is not their desire or need; it is the results (impact) of buying and using what you have that they want!)

    Here are some initial steps to create your own customer dialogue:

    1. Look critically at customer testimonials you already have; pick and use the content in the impactful testimonials for your communications.
    2. Revisit your passion: your passion is something that changes your marketplace for the better. What impact do you want them to experience?
    3. Be selective in who you want to serve; then you can focus on a specific impact for a specific marketplace.
    4. Start talking to your customers.
    5. Start collecting testimonials.

    Should you become ‘aware’ of self-pushing monologues, you will want to take immediate action - but won’t know how. Steps 4 and 5 (above) are the most difficult steps to perform because they involve spending time with current customers; time you and they may not have. You must know exactly how long to engage your customer, what questions to ask and how to ask them, so that the time is fruitful for you - and a lovely touch point for them. Just preparing for this level of dialogue can be discouraging – but it does not have to be that way!

    RCC can help.

    1.  Save the date, April 15th 2010. RCC is offering a workshop to tune-up your present marketing materials. Bring your web pages, your brochures, your blogs, your commercials, your presentations and leave with improved communications that will increase your prospecting activity. Email rita@ritacoco.com if you are interested in attending.

    2.  Too busy to work on your marketing? RCC offers several services that increase prospecting. If you are too busy to work on your business, we can help you remove the bottlenecks between you and your growth. Call or email us; we can help! (Contact information is below.)

    Can you help?
    At RCC, we’re on a mission to transform small businesses by making the owners aware of efficient processes – similar to our discussion in this Cup of CocoA on upgrading our communications process. Do you know of an event, function, or organization dedicated to helping small business owners, one that needs a speaker? Rita Coco Consulting offers FREE business-building presentations. Please call or email us—and thanks!

    © 2010, Rita Coco, Rita Coco Consulting [reposted at http://www.ajleto.com/ 3/1/2010 by aj@ajleto.com]

    Rita Coco Consulting | Sign up for a free cup of CocoAbundance! | http://www.ritacoco.com/ | rita@ritacoco.com | 508-829-8282 (P) | 774-364-0872 (C) | 128 Lovell Road, Holden, MA 01520

    What you don't measure you can't manage; what you don't manage, you can't grow.

  • 80:20 Rule began as an Italian observation.

    I'm always watching, learning and taking it in. It's what I do. It's how I develop my thoughts and make my decisions.

    When I received my new article notification about Rick Roberge's recent article (titled: How to Lose Your 80% of Your Business) I was obviously intrigued, because his titles are normally positive using happy words. I read the article and I think that if you have a job or do work for others, even as a volunteer, you should too. It's a great article!

    Lastly, many of you know that I'm Italian and I'm pleased to know that the 80:20 Rule began as an observation of Vilfredo Pareto, an Italiani Economist.

  • Waiting...

    I think Joe Tomaski (a classmate from college) recreates the performance best, but the phrase "I hate waiting!" brings me back to the time when the Assumption College Chorale was performing in Miami and Miami Beach, Florida. We were riding the bus back from shopping all afternoon and there was a passenger, reminiscent of Estelle Getty's Sophia Petrillo, who had missed her stop. She chanted "I hate waiting..." followed by many statements, all intoned with the same three words. We were certain she would have some type of fit, but as the thoroughfare continued her chant took on a slightly pleasant melody. Was she It's been at least 8 if not a full 10 years and often I approach Joe while he's tending bar and I cheerfully announce "I hate waiting!" to which he joyfully chuckles and greets me with a hug. That same trip afforded us the opportunity to perform in the church that was pictured in the movie The Specialist and in a packed gymnasium at a Miami Catholic School that is a sister school to the Religious of the Assumption, the Sisters who assisted in my college education.

    OK, enough memory lane. Miss Miami Missed-stop comes to mind so regularly that I just have to revisit her dilemma on a community/global scale.

    The reason for the post is waiting, why? Because no one does it. When did the world start putting everything on high heat and scrambling to figured what wouldn't burn. When the auto shut-off crock pot replace the stove-top slow-cooker? Why has email replaced face-to-face conversation? Does successful collaboration really happen in a place without an address or GPS location called the Net? What a circus.

    Waiting has become a phenomena in that many start with severely negative levels of patience and assumed perceptions of intelligence leading interactions to derail at strife and anguish. Is it that we tend to ask for a second and take a day or more? Is our existence settling into a devastating flurry of mis-meanings. Is well-meaning intention too frequently punished? Is the table turning from innocent until proven guilty to the opposite? Are lying idiots rising to the top? I'm not sure.

    Thoughts?

    Posted Dec 29 2009, 04:59 AM by ajleto with no comments
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