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Aggressive Small Business Marketing & Advertising

Showing archives from 07/2005.

Dreamers, Crazies, Entrepreneurs

Posted by Michael Cage on Thursday, July 21, 2005

Last week, I spent back-to-back consulting days with two different successful entrepreneurs. They had only fourth things in common.

Several years ago I sat in a seminar with one of my mentors, Dan Kennedy.

Dan, with over 200 people in the room, went through a line of questions: How many of you have filed bankruptcy? How many have had a car repossessed? How many have fought with collection agencies? And others along the same line. In a room full of successful entrepreneurs, with questions asked that most would squirm and run from, more than 3/4 of the hands were raised.

Jim Rohn is fond of saying becoming a millionaire is nothing compared to the real prize of who you must become in the process.

The journey of the entrepreneur is a hero's journey. Those who take it face the pain and tragedy and ugliness with a smirk that says, "bwahaha, is that the best you've got?" It lets them understand something deep in their bones about themselves and the world that those who turn their back on their destiny can never comprehend.

Wherever you are today is where you are meant to be. All that matters is what's next.

Last year, Barry Moltz was kind enough to send me a copy of his book, "You Need to Be a Little Crazy." I enjoyed the book, and I treasure the inscription.

"Michael, Stay crazy. Barry."

It's as good an entrepreneur's mantra as any.

Stay crazy, friends.

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Keith Ferrazzi: “To move others, you have to speak beyond yourself.”

Posted by Michael Cage on Sunday, July 03, 2005

Keith Ferrazzi, writing on a lesson learned after losing a run for political office, had this to say in his networking book, Never Eat Alone: And Other Secrets to Success, One Relationship at a Time:

"The experience taught me an important lesson. No matter what organization I represented or what professional avenue I pursued in the future, all my efforts had to be powered by a deep passion and a set of beliefs that went well beyond my own personal benefit. To move others, you have to speak beyond yourself. Boldly putting yourself out there was one thing, and a good thing, but that wasn't enough. There was a difference between getting attention and getting attention for your desire to change the world."

Keith also publishes the Never Eat Alone Blog, it's well worth a read.

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How to recapture “lost” customers and clients

Posted by Michael Cage on Saturday, July 02, 2005

One of my favorite lunch spots is a Mexican chain called Qdoba. Like many restaurants, they have a customer loyalty program. In a nutshell, the more you eat there, the more incentives they give you to keep coming back. It's a good deal all around. This week, something happened with that program that impressed me, and packs a heck of a marketing lesson for local small business owners.

Let me explain...

I've been traveling lately, and had not been to Qdoba in nearly a month. When I returned home from my last trip, I checked my E-mail and found a message from them inside.

Here's an excerpt:

We're About To Put Your Face On A Milk Carton.

Michael,

We haven't seen you around lately.

And we miss you. So here's a quick reminder about why you came here in the first place. We've got hundreds of menu options, from burritos to grilled quesadillas, taco salads and Warm 3-Cheese Queso that has been known to bring taste buds to their knees. And, it's all made fast, fresh and right in front of you from real, fresh ingredients. One taste will remind you. You'll never go missing again.

--> GET FRESH FOR FREE. Buy any entree, get any entree of equal or lesser value FREE.

The "marketing geek" term for this is a lost customer promotion. The idea is bring people who had been good customers in the past, but have not been in recently, back in the restaurant to buy again. These campaigns are astoundingly effective, but most businesses just do not execute the strategy well. This is why I was so impressed by Qdoba.

Most retail, service and business-to-business companies assume that if a customer or client bought once they will be back when they are ready to buy again. This is foolish and flat-out wrong. The most successful small businesses know that customers and clients stop buying not because they are unhappy, but simply because they feel unappreciated and ignored.

A lost client campaign is a cheap and effective way to make those clients feel appreciated and let them know you want them back. It only takes one return sale you wouldn't have otherwise had to pay for an entire campaign every single month. Here is a simple, 3-step strategy you can use to put one of these systems to work in your own small business.

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