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Make 2012 Your Best Year Ever: 50 Business Tips in 50 Minutes

Submitted by michelle on Fri, 12/02/2011 - 17:18
Tags:
  • knowledgecircle
  • No
  • nurture marketing
  • sales leads
  • webinar

Nurture Marketing's managing partner, Eric Rabinowitz, is guest speaking for KnowledgeCircle's webinar on December 15th, Make 2012 Your Best Year Ever: 50 Business Tips in 50 Minutes.

Join Eric, along with a panel of IT channel partners and IT industry experts for a fast paced webinar where you will learn 50 great ideas on the following topics:

• How to build a high performance sales team
• How to create long term profitable client relationships
• How to leverage the power of social media networks
• How to align your entire organizations sales and marketing initiatives with your customers’ needs
• How to set focus your business on success and profit

Register Now 

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Nurture Marketing's own Jim Cecil Nominated as Most Influential in Sales Lead Management

Submitted by michelle on Mon, 11/28/2011 - 13:19
Tags:
  • Jim Cecil
  • nomination
  • nurture marketing
  • sales lead
  • SLMA
  • Latest

For those lucky enough to know Jim Cecil, Nurture Marketing's co-founder and managing partner, this will come as no surprise to you. Jim was recently nominated by Sales Lead Management Association (SLMA) as one of their 50 Most Influential People in Sales Lead Management.

Please vote for Jim before November 30, 2011!

View full Press Release here.

Nominations for this distinguishing SLMA award are submitted by nominee peers and colleagues. Members and non-members of the SLMA may vote for up to three people and the top 50 nominees receiving votes will be listed on the SLMA website, will receive a certificate and special logo, and will be interviewed throughout the year.

"To even be nominated among this august group of lead generators is humbling. It's an exciting time. Being part of effective demand creation in the cloud is changing the very landscape of marketing, stirring the executive level and blazing a new trail towards customer connections. What a time to be in the game. WOW!" says Jim.

Jim Cecil is truly one of the most giving, nurturing people in the world of marketing (and the world in general if you ask us).

Good luck, Jim!

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How to Market in a Down Economy

Submitted by michelle on Fri, 08/26/2011 - 14:31
Tags:
  • B2B Marketing
  • down economy
  • free marketing ideas
  • marketing tips
  • nurture marketing
  • Latest

Sure, times are tough for all of us right now and marketing budgets are being cut up like a bad kindergarten craft project. Of course we don't recommend cutting the one thing that will keep you on top when the economy is back on track (and we know it will be), but we understand that's just the reality for many businesses. Instead, we want to give you some tips to help you make small changes that can make a big impact right now.

Our NurtureNotes newsletter for September has the Top 10 tips for marketing in a down economy so be sure to sign up now and get free marketing tips delivered right to your inbox every month.

Today, let's talk about three small changes to help get you started.

1. Rethink your messaging.
Are you spending lots of money to grow your business right now? If so, congratulations! If not, you are in the same boat as most of your customers. Instead of going on and on about benefits that aren't on their radar right now, focus on the things that are important to them – like money. Shift your messaging to solve their problems, not sell your product or service. Their problems are a lot different today than they were just a year ago. Even loyal customers are looking for ways to cut costs, and that might just be with your competitors.

2. Mix up your marketing.
It's easy to get stuck in a marketing rut. What worked in the past doesn't seem to be working as well right now and that's for several reasons. Your prospects are scattered all over the place and you are supposed to find them how? If you only use email campaigns, try a few direct mail pieces. Not a fan of social media? It's time to become one and soon you will have some fans of your own. Never thought about old school telemarketing? You would be surprised how effective a personal call can be these days. If you don't have the resources to explore new marketing avenues on your own, hire a professional marketing firm to help you out. (We happen to know a great one!)

3. Dress to impress.
This goes beyond traditional marketing tactics but deserves a spot in our Top 10. A first impression can be everything and it's critical to find new ways to differentiate your company and your brand. Whether you are greeting a customer on the phone, in your office or in theirs, think about the image your front line is portraying. In a business casual world, become the designer suit. Polish up your image whether it’s how your receptionist greets your visitors or callers, revamp your website to welcome online visitors, or ask your sales staff to take it up a notch next week.

Have some tips of your own to share? Be sure to leave a comment below. We enjoy hearing from you.

Sign up for NurtureNotes monthly marketing tips. 

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Just sharing a little love...

Submitted by michelle on Fri, 07/01/2011 - 12:47
Tags:
  • nurture marketing
  • nurturing
  • testimonials
  • tom sant
  • Latest

Our Nurture Marketing Writer's Guild is an ongoing support system where we learn from industry experts, and each other, to consistently keep up-to-date on the latest techniques, styles and solve challenges. Recently, we were thrilled to speak with Dr. Tom Sant and gain some awesome insight. We thought we would share his kind words about our managing partner, Jim Cecil, and the concept of nurture marketing. Thanks Dr. Sant!


From Dr. Tom Sant:

A couple of weeks ago I had the pleasure of having a virtual conversation with members of the Nurture Writing Guild. Inspired and led by Jim Cecil, who has been one of my favorite people for more years than either he or I care to remember, the Guild consists of professional freelance writers who create effective nurture messages for clients.

The whole concept of nurture marketing is one that I strongly believe in. And Jim Cecil is the leading exponent of that approach to business development.

The concept is simple: stay in contact with your customers and your prospects. Send them messages, news items, personal notes, tips, and whatever else you think they might find interesting or enjoyable. Do it regularly, say once every month to six weeks. Over time, people will feel more connected to you, they will have a sense of your competence, and they will think of you first if they need help in your area of expertise. Jim calls that maintaining "top-of-mind awareness" so that when they are ready to buy, they think of you first.

In The Giants of Sales, I wrote about Joe Girard, the "world's greatest salesman," according to the Guinness Book of World Records, who used a variation of nurture marketing to sell Chevrolets.  He sold over 13,000 cars in 12 years, working as a solo sales guy on the floor of a Chevrolet dealership in Detroit. All by himself, selling cars retail to individual buyers, Joe Girard sold more cars per year than 95% of all the dealerships in North America. 

So how did nurture marketing figure into his method? He realized that every person he met knew a couple of hundred other people, some of whom might be looking for a car. If he stayed in touch with all of those people he had met, reminding them he was out there, then when they or their friends, relatives or employees decided it was time to buy that new car, they'd think of Joe Girard first. 

Joe sold cars back in the days before e-mail, so he did the old-fashioned way: he sent out greeting cards. He was fierce about collecting names and mailing addresses from everyone he met, and once he had your contact data, he sent you a message every month. In fact, at his peak, he mailed over 13,000 cards a month. He kept the message simple and personal, and he never used his mailing list to try to directly sell anything. No special offers on oil changes or lube jobs.

For us, we have multiple media that we can use to nurture our contacts. How hard is it to send an e-mail with a link to an article? How tricky is it to send a note of congratulations when you see that someone had updated his or her LinkedIn profile with a new job? But very few people bother, even sales people who probably know better.

Recently I conducted a class for a major bank, working with a group of 30 high potential young managers. After it was over, I received three thank you notes.  Maybe only ten percent of the attendees thought the training was worthwhile, but I suspect that there were actually a few others who liked it but just didn’t bother to say "thanks". So which of these 30 do you think I'd recommend first?

Jim and his colleagues have recognized that writing a short, focused message that's interesting to read and not too self-serving or technical is hard. Lots of companies would like to use nurture marketing—even something very simple like Twitter—but just don't have the time or talent to pull it off.  So the Nurture Writing Guild has stepped up to fill that gap. 

You can learn more about nurture marketing here: www.nurturemarketing.com. And you can access some of Jim Cecil's wisdom at his blog:  http://nurturemarketingblog.com/. Jim's warm and funny and smart as can be. He's definitely somebody to read if you're involved in any kind of sales or marketing or business development role. 

To order the world's best-selling book on writing winning proposals, Persuasive Business Proposals, click here. For Dr. Tom's fascinating study of the origins of the most important ideas in professional sales and the individuals who first came up with them, The Giants of Sales, please click here. To improve your writing, take a look at Tom’s book, The Language of Success, which you can order here.   

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