What
Are You Fishing With? Lure, Bait and Gear
by Catherine
Franz
A 10-step exercise for services professionals to
evaluate
clients...
Fly fishing -- it doesn't work, does it? When I first
watched someone fly-fishing, they released the line and
fling it far out into the water. No sooner had the fly
hit
the water was it being reeled back in. Even today, I
still
don't understand how this method catches any fish. Yet
it
does. The results had an opportunity to occur because
the line was pitched.
Fly fishing looks like so much more work compared to the
worm, bobber, sitting on a camp chair, day dreaming, an
occasional inconsequential conversation, sipping on a
beer
(okay root beer for family friendliness), relaxing and
waiting for the bite. The energy is more comfortable yet
the results less active -- maybe, maybe not.
If you talk to a fly-fisherman, they claim there isn't
anything better. And the same is uttered from a
by-the-seat-
of-the-pants fisherman as well (cute description huh?).
Doesn't this sound like one marketing pitted against the
other.
What makes the two different? Technique? Yes. Water type
-- salt or fresh? Yes. Type of fish? Yes. Equipment?
Yes. Supplies? Yes. Or is it the bait? Yes.
The right answer is "all of the above."
You can also throw in the temperature, weather, and time
of
day. Everything depends on the right combination in the
right order. You don't want to toss out the fly before
the
line. Well, I guess you can. But you miz-as-well kiss it
goodbye.
Or as my Grandmother used to say: Don't throw out the
bath water before the bath.
Marketing is not any different than fishing. If you are
tossing out the wrong hook to the right fish, they are
not
going to bite. If you have the right fish and hook, and
the
wrong technique, maybe a prayer or two will work. The
results might trickle now and then. Yet, not the results
you
need.
This is why marketing experts emphasize the importance
of
knowing your target market. If you don't know who you
are
trying to catch, you are forever going to be trying
different lures, hooks and techniques. Eventually,
wearing
you down and keeping you chasing the next best thing to
come
along that just might work.
You can't catch flounder in fresh water or blue gill in
salt.
Stop throwing out the fly without the line. Start
knowing
what bait they like to eat, what line spooks them, what
is
their timing for buying, and especially what type of
fish.
Start with this exercise for service professionals:
Start the exercise by hand to get the "feel" of it. Then
move the process into a spreadsheet to continue its
growth
and your clarity.
Step 1: Grab a blank sheet of paper. Turn the page
sideways --
landscape.
Step 2: You are going to making many vertical columns so
write
small.
On the left, create the first column. Record the name of
each one of your clients that you remember off the top
of your
head. Keep it simple and write just the name you
remember. It
could be just their first name, company name, or a
nickname or
label you privately gave them. Don't be kind be
truthful.
Step 3: Second column, title it "M/F." You guessed it,
"male
or female." Now, proceed down the column and write the
answer.
Step 4: Third column, title "M/S/D/U"=married, single,
divorced,
unknown. Continue down the column.
Step 5: Continue making columns for additional
categories
you know about your clients. Create a column for age or
age
group. Location, US, UK, Australia. If all the same,
skip
the column. Number of children. How long a client. Total
revenue for the past year. Service type. How did they
find
you?
Step 6: Add new distinctions and details over the next
few
days or week as you remember. Set aside the first five
minutes of the day to add to the list or as you
remember.
Step 7: If you find some information missing, contact
the
client or past client and ask.
Step 8: Look for similarities, for instance, 90% males,
single,
or divorced. Some of these patterns are going to be
obvious
and some aren't.
Step 9: Place a "*" or highlight your ideal client or
clients.
Many times, and without knowing it, because you are just
glad
for the business, the fish pick you.
Step 10: If you couldn't find "the ideal client" then
for
some reason you aren't attracting them. There are some
things you need to change, either inside yourself or
out,
probably both. Find the gap between the two? What do you
need to do or be differently in order to attract the
preferred type of clients?
Describe the type of ideal client you want. Place as
much
detail to them as possible, including revenue. What do
they
want that you aren't expressing you have? What do they
want
that you don't have and need to change?
At some point during this process you will want to
convert
this to a spreadsheet for ease of use. Start when the
information
feels it needs too.
This isn't a requirement, you may want to stop as soon
as
you see that you aren't expressing what the client is
willing to buy or some characteristics or type of
service
you don't provide that the client must have in order to
do
business with you. If this is the case, you can stop
here
and work on what needs to shift or change.
Feeling some reluctance in taking the time to do so? You
will not be the first.
Jim, an insurance agent from Arizona, sent me an e-mail
after his attendance on a teleclasses with this
exercise.
"Darn, Catherine, you're good. The exercise ate at me
all
night. I gave in and did the exercise this morning, even
though last night I was convinced that I already knew
all
the answers. Today, I discovered major holes in my
marketing. Just by closing one of these holes today
sales
increased. I look forward to continuing the exercise.
Thank you for your patient e-mail and letting me move
through my denial and seeing that thinking its all in my
head and writing it down is two different things."
This exercise deserves repeating regularly. You can use
the results of this exercise as a measurement when
reviewing
your yearly goals. Or comparing one year to another.
For first year businesses, I recommend completing this
exercise once every three months. After the first year,
shift to twice a year. After three, once a year. Or
before and after a new service or product is introduced.
About the Author
Catherine Franz, a Certified Professional Coach,
specializes
in infoproduct development. Newsletters and additional
articles available:
http://www.abundancecenter.com