Marketing to Professionals, Solo Entrepreneurs: How to do this Yourself, Part 3

May 12, 2010 by umutkshr
Filed under: Marketing Tips, Uncategorized 
Making Friends - Marketing Cartoon

Image by HubSpot via Flickr

In part 2 of this series, we introduced the concept of the target group, the answer to the question: “who” will be my buyers, where do they live, how do I reach them, are there enough of them to make it worthwhile, do they have the money to buy and are they willing to buy what I want to sell?


Defining the target group is of great importance. You have to set your sights on a much focused, defined target of opportunity. You might call this market opportunity a special “niche”. This market niche is your best opportunity. It’s a small, but potentially lucrative sliver, usually of a much larger market segment, occupied by a very select group of people who have the money and the inclination to buy what you can offer. You’re no longer marketing to a large or what we call mass market, competing with every Tom, Dick and Sally. You are not trying to be all things to all people. You only want to be all things to this select group of people. Niches are easier to defend, and the big boys don’t often pay much attention, because they are considered too small to warrant the effort and potential payback required by the large corporations. If you play it right, the game is yours.

Once you have identified your target audience, and the niche in which they reside, work or play, then you must figure out the best way to reach, inform and motivate them to take a good look at you and what you offer. The way to do this is with the Unique Selling Proposition (for a more detailed explanation of the U.S.P. and its pivotal role in marketing, see my previous article “Flying Blind without the 2 Secrets of the U.S.P.”) Simply put, the USP is the way you differentiate yourself from your competitors…preemptively. By preemptively, I mean by doing it incisively; by being first into the market, by making it very difficult to be copied by competitors, unless they want to risk being mocked as a me-too or copy-cats.

If you wish to be positioned in the mind of your prospects as a straight-shooter, right-down-the-line, conservative type, then there are obvious things you can do to attract attention to yourself; but at the same time, do things that demonstrate that you are the one for the job. If, as another example, you want to be positioned possibly as a bit of a maverick, or outlaw, not prone to be the same as others, and often taking a path others fear to tread, then there are ways you can dress, act, speak, write, deliver speeches and others, that will give people the idea that you are not like the rest of the consultants, professionals, practitioners or service providers.

The preemptive part is the hardest to pull off. But you must. This is the essence of what most often sets you apart, positively. It is the part that will stick in the mind of the beholding prospective client. Even two decades later, I still get asked: “aren’t you the guy who used to give speeches, doing that “shirt” thing?” They may have forgotten my name, but not my distinctive bit that set me apart from the other speakers and consultants. This helped me be preemptive in the “giving speeches game”. Keep in mind that giving speeches and being thought of as a consummate expert in your field, is the best way to be invited to pitch your services to a prospective client. Once you get your big fat foot in the door, the “selling” is up to you, one-on-one.

Which brings me to the specific tactics you can now employ, depending on the U.S.P. you have adopted. Let’s just discuss a few that might come in handy for you. Naturally, you can write informative, helpful, relevant articles/columns that are not self-serving “puff pieces”. Write for industry journals and for the general media, but write to help the people you hope to work with. If you can’t write, learn quickly, or get someone like me to write these articles for you. Then join industry and local community groups that might be a source of good leads and opportunities.

Start offering to give speeches at the Social, Service, Scientific, Medical, Military, Educational, Entertainment, Religious, Recreational, and Fraternal organizations, sororities, fraternities or associations in your town. Use the word: ‘SMERF’ to remember the classifications of each group.

When you give speeches, look at it as if you are making sales calls on dozens of prospects at the same time. Make it count. Do you homework. Be sure to include some references to your audience and something they will immediately recognize that perhaps only an “insider” might know or care about. That heightens your credibility with them. Make sure they are aware and hear what you say, and most important: that they remember you. Give them a “memory-hook” to remember you by. Say it loud and well. Differentiate yourself and do it preemptively. Immediately after you deliver speeches, you will receive telephone calls or emails to discuss matters privately. This is your chance. Now you have that big fat foot in the door.

You can connect with me via social media sites at – FacebookTwitterLinkedInHellotxtDipity.com and Stumble Upon. If you are not signed up…they are free…you will meet a lot of other marketers to communicate with and possibly JV with. Social Networking is on fire right now, so be sure to use it. Note: with Hellotxt.com and Dipity.com you can update all your social sites!   I look forward to being “social” with you!

If you would like help with your writing either for the web or otherwise, you may be interested in my other site Quick Penmanship. Here you can sign up for my weekly newsletter where you will be presented with what I call “starters” for your writing. Just a little suggestion about a topic that may spark your writing…and you will also receive a free eBook just for signing up….and of course you can cancel anytime.

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2 Comments on Marketing to Professionals, Solo Entrepreneurs: How to do this Yourself, Part 3

    [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Max Maxim. Max Maxim said: Marketing yourself to professionals, Part 3… http://ht.ly/1KpsR [...]

    [...] Part 3 of this series will address the importance of the target group and the formulation of the most critical and important aspect in marketing: the Unique Selling Proposition. [...]

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