Posts Tagged ‘referral business’
You’re using technology to improve your business. Maybe you’re even reading this on a smart phone or tablet. You don’t have a complete social media strategy yet, but you’re working on it. Mostly, you need help, now, on how to use technology to improve your bottom line.
In a previous SURFACES│StonExpo/Marmomacc Americas Blog “You’re Really Good At Change, But What’s Next?” I reported some practical, inexpensive ideas on how you can use technology in your business. Here are a few more tools and ideas you and your staff can use right now:
-Search for your store on Google and consumer review sites (like angieslist.com, yelp.com and complaints.com); if you find compliments about your business when you do the searches, have them on a computer ready to show to customers in your store, and put links to them on your Web site;
-Get a small, inexpensive “shoot and share” video camera; ask your staff to each record themselves as if they were telling a customer about your business and why the customer should buy from you; when they have a version they like, ask them to show it to you and one another; they’ll be practicing – on one another instead of a customer – while training each other; you might even find videos good enough to use on your Web site or YouTube.com;
-Ask satisfied customers for video testimonials about their new floors and your business; these can be used (with permission) in your store, on your Web site, etc.; (yes, I know, you think customers won’t agree to do this, but as time passes Gen X’ers and Millennials are much less concerned about privacy issues than Boomers, so you may be pleasantly surprised at the results).
Yes, at some point, all new technology is scary. But if we take small steps we’ll learn and benefit from the technologies. After all, there’s a reason that DVD’s replaced VHS tapes, and Blu-ray is replacing DVD’s. When people see benefits from new technology, they adapt the new technology. These tips can help you benefit from new technologies today, simply. Good luck!
Margaret Thatcher, former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, is quoted as having said “Being powerful is like being a lady. If you have to tell people you are, you aren’t.” Trust is similar – if you have to ask people to trust you, they probably shouldn’t. Trust needs to be earned.
Trust is becoming increasingly important as you try to serve your customers. It’s part of the reason why they
-check your Web site and your competitors’ Web sites, or Google you and review sites like angieslist.com before coming to your store;
-check with their friends on facebook.com and twitter.com for second, third and fourth opinions before buying from you; and
-bring friends to your store and want to check with their family before committing to buy new flooring.
How do you earn their trust, then? Certainly your reputation and brand are critical to ever getting them in your door. Once they walk in, what can you then do to earn their trust? Because they can’t trust someone they don’t know, it’s critical to build a relationship with your customers.
First, we need to listen to each customer, both online and when she comes into the store. Each customer has a unique situation and we need to be ready to provide unique solutions, not the same solution as we try to give everyone else based on go-to products.
We need to demonstrate by our actions – good eye contact, sincerity, and listening – that we genuinely have the customer’s best interests in mind. We are her partner in finding that unique solution. Nothing is more important than she is.
She needs to believe that the options you present serve her interests as well as your own. What do I mean by this? Just because you have three rolls of a beige texture in the back doesn’t mean that you should put it first on her list of carpet options! Make sure the products you show her deliver on her unique needs in a way she’ll understand. This is possible if we have listened well and demonstrated our partnership role.
And, your customer needs to understand the selection process, and that it truly is her selection. You’re not selling – you’re enabling her selection of the best product for her.
Trust based on this kind of a relationship with your customer will strengthen your reputation in your market. As Benjamin Franklin once said, “Glass, china and reputations are easily cracked and never well mended.” Protect your reputation by building trust with your customer.
The beauty of natural stone – rock as old as time, harvested from some of the most delicate and unforgiving lands on our planet, trucked, floated, or flown to any imaginable destination, and customized to the most exacting specifications of your unique project – and all yours for the low price of $27.00 per square foot installed.
Where did we go wrong? When did one of the oldest, richest, and most storied crafts known to man become a commoditized industry replete with bargain pricing, blinking neon signs, free undermount sinks included with purchase, incompetent workers, and unprincipled business practices? When did we pervert the art and beauty of natural stone by categorizing these inimitable natural resources into groups and colors that we sell at prices that severely undermine the value of our product and integrity of our industry?
Ladies and Gentlemen: we have done this to ourselves. Fortunately, current economic forces are providing us the ideal opportunity to repair our broken industry.
The business of stone fabrication is expensive and labor-intensive – cumbersome at best. The downfall of our industry began when uneducated individuals dove headfirst into the business convinced that the limitless profits of fabricating natural stone would greatly outweigh the paltry cost of operating a fabrication facility. All you need is slabs, laborers to fabricate those slabs, and some overeager customers who are willing to part with their hard-earned cash for a poorly crafted countertop… right?
Wrong. An intelligent and experienced fabricator will quickly inform you that these basic costs do not begin to scratch the surface of the burdensome expense of the stone business. A truly responsible stone fabricator will have a significant overhead, which will include myriad tangible costs: facilities, machinery and equipment, product, personnel, vehicles, safety equipment, liability and workers’ compensation insurances, and federal and state taxes- just to name a few. There will also be a multitude of intangible costs: knowledge, skill, experience, and ethics.
The intelligent and experienced fabricator cannot compete with the parasite whose sole purpose is to pocket as much cash as possible before vanishing without a trace, leaving the stone industry in disrepair with street prices that are irresponsible, unsustainable, and degrading to our craft.
The effects of industry reticence to combat and discourage these destructive practices are immeasurable. We are fractured, discouraged, and fatigued. Coincidentally, the economic forces currently threatening each of our businesses have created a unique opportunity for intelligent and experienced fabricators to finally take a stand against this industry perversion. There is no better time for candid discussion and discovery than now. Through education, awareness, accountability, and principle, intelligent and experienced fabricators throughout our country and around the world can save our broken industry. I hope you will join me.
You can also join John Kilfoyle for the Countertop Installers Forum: Solutions to the Most Common Problems (WE23T) on Wednesday, January 25, 2012, 4:00pm – 5:30pm at StonExpo/Marmomacc Americas. Click here to register for StonExpo/Marmomacc Americas.
In recent years, it has crossed most business owner’s minds to cut back on their advertising budget. Traditional advertising such as magazines, newspaper and television can be expensive. And while these outlets are still important, we must admit that times have changed. Social media is taking over the world and none more-so than Facebook. If you haven’t already created a business page… it’s time.
Setting up your page is the easy part. Getting ‘Likes’ and keeping your customers entertained is the hard part. To help you out, I’ve put together a list of 20 ways to promote your Facebook page:
Showroom Signage
-Type ‘like {page name}’ and send to FBOOK (32665)
-QR codes
-Bathroom Stall Door
Business Essentials
-Business Cards
-Outgoing Envelopes
Marketing Collateral
-Company Brochures
-Trade-show Giveaways (pens, balloons, etc.)
-Print Ads
Website
-Like Button
-Comment Box
Other
-Incoming Answering Service
Email
-Signature
-E-Newsletter
Company Property
-Vehicle Bumper Stickers
-Employee Apparel
-Store Front Marquee
Within Facebook
-Tag Your Customers In Pictures
-Ask Your Employees to LIKE You
-LIKE Other Local Businesses/Causes/Personalities/Organizations
The BEST Way
-WORD OF MOUTH!
If you need more direction in the best practices of social media for your flooring or stone business, I invite you to join us during Surfaces │StonExpo/Marmomacc Americas 2012 for the following how-to workshop.
Social Media: How To For Business
January 23, 2012, 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.
Presented by: Sarah B Johnson, MKG Department (www.mkgdept.net) and Christine B Whittemore, Simple Marketing Now, LLC (www.simplemarketingnow.com)
For more information about the session, visit:
http://connect.surfaces.com/connect/public/SessionDetails.aspx?SessionID=7236&maxSessions=91&aeid=257,258
In the 1980’s, Ronald Reagan was president of the USA, the economy was strong, and you were asking yourself, “Do I need a computer?” In the 1990’s, the economy was weak, people were watching Jerry Springer, and you were asking yourself, “Do I need a cell phone?” Came the new millennium, there’s a Starbucks® on every corner, we were all concerned about security, and you were asking yourself “Do I need a Web site?” Somehow, you made it through all these changes, proving that you’re really good at handling change, even technology change.
But, change hasn’t stopped. The economy’s weak again and you’re asking yourself “Do I need to do something about another round of communications technologies – social media?” What should you do, and how do you get started?
Here are a few “technology tools and techniques” you and your staff can use right now as you figure out the rest of your social media strategy:
-Ask your staff to spend time looking through your Web site. Then have them each take you on a tour of your Web site. This way you’ll be certain they know what’s on your Web site! (Your customers know what’s there, and your staff should know as much or more than your customers do.) You might even ask them to present at least part of their tour to each other in a staff meeting, including how they would use that information or that part of the Web site with customers.
-Search for your store on Google and consumer review sites (like angieslist.com, yelp.com and complaints.com). Act on the complaints you find and fix what customers are complaining about.
-Ask your measurers to make narrated videos of the planned installations. Show the videos to the installers before they go to the job. Ask installers to send pictures or videos of issues they encounter on the job to the salesman or measurer – this will increase the speed and quality of resolving the issues and increase customer satisfaction. And, your business will show customers that it’s a market leader through its use of technology.
Good luck with these technology tools and techniques. I’ll have more in the SURFACES │StonExpo/Marmomacc Americas 2012 seminar that Paul Friederichsen and I are presenting titled “Making Marketing and Sales Work Together”: http://connect.surfaces.com/connect/public/SessionDetails.aspx?SessionID=7264&maxSessions=89&aeid=257,258
It still amazes me how so many of top business executives shy away from social media. In fact, I’ve run across corporate online “social phobia”: a fear that disgruntled customers will run amuck if given the chance at a digital soap box. These otherwise shrewd and enlightened professionals still believe that things like Facebook and Twitter are just the purview of their teenaged kids – much like their grandparents thought television would never amount to anything when there’s perfectly good radio to listen to. Are they in denial or what?
Consider a few of the many unbelievably compelling growth stats since 2005:
- Facebook has gone from 6 million members to an estimated 750 million today.
- Female Boomers are the fastest growing Facebook demographic.
- Twitter began in 2005 and has 110 million users.
- YouTube’s domain name was activated in 2005 and is now 2nd only to Google
… and owned by Google.
- Online advertising expenditures surpassed radio advertising.
- ~ 40% of US Companies use blogs for marketing purposes.
- More mobile devices are used in the US than TV’s and PC’s combined.
- 75% of the millennial demographic group has an online profile.
Whether you agree with it or not, social media is here to stay. It is the hottest communication channel in the known universe. Ignore it and scoff at it at your peril. The written word may be rapidly dying in newspapers across the country, but it is alive and well, having migrated to cyberspace thank you very much.
The definition of marketing is selling more things to more people more often. One way you do that successfully is to go where the people are. Which is why marketers are also discovering smart phones. Smart phone penetration is reaching upwards of 75%. Now combine that with how often each of us check our own smart phone each day for tweets, Facebook wall posts, LinkedIn updates, emails, texts, news, scores, etc. and you have an understanding about the rise in popularity of these devices to the marketer. Learn more at http://www.madisonavemedia.com/.
Granted, we will still continue to watch TV, listen to radio and read magazines. But any media strategy for any advertiser of any size for any product or service must build on a social foundation. If you’re one of those who still believe it’s a bunch of hype or kid’s stuff, I’ve got a buggy whip factory I’d like to sell you.
Want to get really psyched about this topic? Go to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3SuNx0UrnEo
Passionate referrals are like exquisite quality diamonds; they share their sparkle and shine with everyone around them. They also require constant care to allow their luster to come forward. But given the required care, they will remain brilliant for years to come. Read the rest of this entry »


