Archive for Sales & Marketing
Analyze Your Product And Services Profitability
Posted by: | CommentsGiven the number of times we’ve had clients ask for help evaluating their product or service mix this past year, I figured it was time for a bit more of a technical discussion. So get that fresh cup of coffee and use this entry to begin to ponder how your products or services help — or hurt — your business.
Knowing the profitability of each individual product/service you provide can help you make decisions to improve your bottom line. You may want to discontinue products and services that aren’t particularly profitable while promoting the ones that improve your overall results.
One basic method of looking at profitability is called cost-volume-profit analysis (CVP). At its core CVP relies on the separation of fixed and variable costs to determine the break even point of a product (or service) and how much it contributes to profit after reaching this point. Read More→
Cross Promotion – A Low Cost Way to Grow Your Business
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With marketing budgets under pressure, business owners and managers are looking for ways to do more with less. One of the most effective ways you can find new customers with minimal expense is cross promotion.
Cross promotion is simply when two or more businesses combine resources to market their products or services to each other’s customers. The main criteria for success in cross promotion are that the businesses serve the same types of customers but don’t compete with each other.
There are hundreds of ways businesses can work together to achieve this. Here are a few cross-promotion ideas that can help you expand your market on a small budget. Read More→
Choose your customer wisely, you don’t want everyone
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Nearly every business is dependent on a constant flow of new accounts. It’s easy to ignore this because most businesses earn most of their revenue from old, established customers.
The problem is that a certain percentage of old customers will drift away or change their focus every year. They’ll change their buying habits, often for reasons that you can’t influence or life just happens.
So you need to continually market to recruit new customers, establish them, and start promoting them up your customer ladder, so that one day they’ll be part of your staple business clientele.
It’s easy to forget to do this – you’re so busy making money that you have no time to market. But then one day you wake up and find that several of your major customers have defected and you’re left with a gaping hole in your revenue and you have no easy means to fill it.
So you need to be systematic. Think like a commercial fisherman. You go out every day, invest and organize. Commercial fishermen never tell tall tales about the ones that got away. They don’t have to. Their livelihood depends on keeping every bit of their catch and therefore the focus is always on retention.
Step one in this systematic approach is to identify the sort of customer you’re looking for. You can use a range of criteria, including:
- geography (how close they are to you)
- their capacity to make repeat purchases
- their capacity to grow and extend their purchasing
- their preference for quality over price
- the likelihood that they will value your business
- their payment habits (prompt payers being obviously preferred)
- their industry sector
This way you make up a profile of the sort of customer that is likely to be of value to you in the long-term. Then you go out and prospect for them. This doesn’t have to cost you a lot of money. You can do a lot of research merely by surfing internet directories and Yellow Pages, selecting likely candidates and doing some online or other research on them. You can also get information from the directories of trade associations, clubs, chambers of commerce and trade magazines.
Once you’ve got a list of likely candidates, go into more depth. You might want to check out their credit records. Use your industry contacts to see what the ‘buzz’ is about them. Once you’ve done that, you start to make your pitch, whether that involves cold calling, sending out brochures or networking. The main thing is that, at the beginning of your sales process, you’re focused on your final goal, which is to develop a long-term relationship with a valuable customer.
Of course, you’ve still only cast your hooks into the water at this stage. There are other stages to the process. If you want more information, send me an email or give me a call to discuss how to segment your customer base and design a new customer acquisition marketing program.
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Break-Even Analysis – Your simple high value tool
Posted by: | CommentsOne of the trickiest aspects of bringing a new product to market is to estimate the total cost involved in its production. Cost of production effects margin and margin determines how many units must be sold to make a profit. If the number of units sold
can’t provide sufficient margin at a market acceptable price, then, no matter how good the product is, producing it will result in a loss for the business. The nexus between cost of production, price and units that need to be sold to make a profit, is called the ‘break-even point’.
Break-even analysis is one of the most important financial tools you can use to make better business decisions. Read More→
Discounting is Dangerous
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Offering a discount in the heat of negotiations may seem like a good idea at the time but thoughtless discounting is an easy way to lose money fast.
Before you succumb to the temptation to win new business by offering a discount take a moment to consider these ten problems associated with discounting.
- Discounting eats away profit margins!
- Negotiating a discount focuses the customer’s attention on your price. If your only competitive advantage is price you are in trouble because price can always be matched by a competitor. The focus should be on the benefits of the product to the customer that make the price, if not irrelevant, then at least not the primary influencer of the decision to buy. Read More→
Sketching Out The Competitive Landscape
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For anyone trying to grow a business, one of the necessary tasks is to map the competitive landscape and continue to keep tabs on how things develop in it over time. With a good understanding of the competition facing your business you’ll be able to spot and exploit opportunities as they develop. Ignoring the competition or letting success lull you into a false sense of security could mean nasty surprises further down the road. The following points can help you start developing a strategy: Read More→
