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Branding & Marketing

March 20, 2018 by Candice Benson

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Ideal Customer Profile (1)

When starting any business, the number one thing you need to know is your ideal customer. If you are first starting out, you may think "anyone who wants to buy my service is my ideal customer" and while that can be true, the sooner you figure out your target market, the sooner you will see success. New business owners and entrepreneurs sometimes forget that you get to choose who you want to do business with.

Ideal Customer Profile

Building an Ideal Customer Profile will guide the products and services you offer, the words you use and the emotions you build through your marketing. This profile is not a set it and forget it type of document. With testing and feedback, you will refine your Ideal Customer Profile which will allow you to become more efficient with your resources and marketing efforts.

Everything you do, from your branding and your website to which social media networks you are on rely on knowing who your ideal customer is. Remember that your "Ideal Customers" are the ones you will dedicate money and time to acquire.

Before we build a ideal customer persona, we need a little more information. Let's get started.

Who are you serving?

Note that the answer is not "EVERYONE". The reason for this is that when you market to everyone, you connect with no one.

When you market to everyone, you connect with no one. Click To Tweet

While your product or service could in fact be beneficial to many people, who specifically is most likely to purchase it or who would benefit the most from it? It's important to narrow your target market so you don't waste time and money marketing to people who aren't good potential customers.

What brings them to you?

What problems does your product/service solve for your customer? What needs does your product/service satisfy? How does it improve your customer's life?  Of all the benefits you offer, which are the most important to your ideal customer?

When, where and how do customers buy from you?

What has to happen to the customer for them to buy from you? What time of the year, season, month or week do they buy? Where are they when they purchase from you? How do they buy your product/service? How do they buy similar products/services? How does your customer make buying decisions?

 

Building a Ideal Customer Profile

When building a customer profile, it is important to understand both demographics and psychographics in relation to your ideal customer. Take a couple minutes to think through and answer the following questions:

Demographics

Demographics are the typical external characteristics about your target market. Most are quantifiable with a range or yes/no answer, like:

  • What gender is my ideal customer?
  • How old are they?
  • Where are they located geographically? Where do they live and work?
  • Does my ideal customer have a spouse?
  • Do they have children?
  • What level of education has my ideal customer received?
  • What does my customer do for a living?
  • How much do they make a year?
Psychographics

Psychographics go beyond demographics to the internal characteristics of your target market. Psychographics focus on things like your customers psychology, behaviours or beliefs.

  • What is my ideal customer interested in?
  • What do they do for fun?
  • What do they value? What do they believe in?
  • What are they frustrated with? What do they find challenging?
  • What fears or worries do they have?
  • What do they desire, want or aspire to?
  • What do they want to achieve in the next five years?
  • What websites do they frequent?
  • What media do they consume?

Once you have answered these questions, you will notice you are better able to picture your ideal customer in your mind.

Now do just that. Think about your ideal customer, picture them in your mind. Do you currently have any customers or clients that are similar to him/her?

If so, great! If not, it's time to get to work.

Why are you working with people who are not your ideal customer? What's stopping you from only working with your dream clients? Click To Tweet

What mental blocks do you have in place preventing you from working with your ideal customer?

Take some time to think these through and join us for our next post on how to find and market to your ideal customers.

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Filed Under: Branding & Marketing, Featured

January 15, 2018 by Candice Benson

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15 Tips _ Exhibitor's Checklist (3)

With spring on its way, trade show season is in full swing. Whether for boats, crafts, home and garden, bridal, etc., there's a trade show out there for each and every type of business. Being an exhibitor at a trade show is a great way to build brand awareness and your customer base.

We get it, being an entrepreneur is tough enough without adding another thing to the list. That's why we've collected all the information you need into 15 actionable steps and created a handy exhibitor checklist for you.

Grab your free PDF download!

Exhibitor's Checklist for a Successful Trade Show

1. Figure Out What Trade shows You Will Attend this Year

Make a plan for what tradeshows you will attend. Reach out to your network to see which shows they attend every year or ask your booth neighbours which other trade shows they regularly attend. Pick the shows that best align with your marketing goals and your target audience.

2. Set Trade Show Goals

What is your main goal for attending this trade show? Are you looking for grow your customer base or promote brand awareness? Maybe you want to make direct sales at the show. Are you collecting contact information to generate sales leads? Make sure to set SMART goals so you can measure your success at the end. (SMART goals are specific, measureable, attainable, relevant and time-bound).

3. Get a Booth Early

Not only can you benefit from early-bird pricing discounts, but you may also be able to get more free advertising. Trade shows generally put up flyers and posts on social media to promote their event and build excitement. As one of the early exhibitors, you may be able to get your logo on early promotional materials for more exposure.

Tip: If it's your first time attending a tradeshow, you may be eligible for a first-timer discount. Be sure to ask the organizers about it.

4. Speak with the Floor Manager

Your booth's location is very important to the amount of foot traffic you will receive. Not only that, but who is surrounding you could directly affect your sales. Having a competing business could negatively affect your sales, while having a complementary business nearby could offer an opportunity for cross-promotion.

In some cases, it may be worth the splurge for a corner booth. A corner booth will give you foot traffic from two different directions for double the chances of tradeshow success.

5. Pre-Show Promotion

Reach out to attendees before the show through social media, your website, email and advertisements. Pre-show promotion is key to driving traffic to your booth in a sea of other booths.

6. Practice Your Elevator Pitch

Before going to the show, make sure you have practiced your sales pitch. A compelling sales message needs to get across the key points you want to communicate in 30 seconds or less. Practice it over and over again until you and your booth staff are able to deliver it with confidence and ease.

7. Get Noticed

With hundreds of other exhibitors, you need to create an eye-catching display to stand out from the crowd. Try pairing a branded backdrop banner with a exciting vertical pop-up banner. If you sell products, make sure to arrange them in an interesting and innovative display. If you are a service provider, having dramatic before and after photos, or a video of the work being performed can make for an unforgettable presentation. Extra lighting can also grab attention and draw the eye towards your booth.

8. Have a Clear Call to Action

What exactly do you want customers to do? Are they purchasing a product at your booth? Should they sign up for your email list for more information? Are they to set up a consultation meeting with you? Whatever you want them to do, make sure it is clear in your booth advertising and that your staff manning the booth are well-rehearsed in what the goal is.

9. Don't let Potential Customers Leave Empty-Handed

As an attendee, the sheer amount of information and exhibition booths can be overwhelming. Make sure potential customers are not leaving your booth empty-handed. Whether you have giveaways or other traditional swag (flyers, postcards, rack cards, pens or even just business cards), ensure that they leave with something memorable.

10. Gather Contact Info

Making sure customers have your contact info is important, but taking their information can be a bigger key to trade show success. Gather as many contacts as you can and keep notes about your conversation or a specific request. These will be very valuable when you go to follow up after the show.

11. Get Social

Using popular hashtags, check-ins and mentions throughout the trade show is a recognized way of building excitement to visit your booth. Having something customers can interact with in an online social way can build interest and engagement.

Don't forget to stay active on social networks after the show to continue to build your audience.

 12. Follow up

Remember all those contacts you collected earlier? Now is the time to follow up. If you have notes for a contact, make sure to personalize the email to show that you are not just spamming an email list. ****

13. Be Searchable Online

Your job isn't over yet. You need to make sure your potential customers can find you online. Whether it's a simple landing page website or a fully interactive or ecommerce website, it is essential that you are able to be found online. Before making a purchase, 81% of consumers conduct research online. By having a up to date and user friendly site, you are much more likely to turn your leads into sales. Don't forget to include customer reviews - 88% consumers trust online reviews as much as a personal recommendation.

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14. Measure Your Results

Look back at the goals you set. How did you do? Did you reach your targets? Analyze what went well and what could be changed for even more success in the future. Take notes on whether to participate in this trade show again the following year and include suggested changes, enhancements or other trade show ideas. If you've decided to sign up again for next year, do it as soon as possible to reap the benefits of early bird pricing.

15. Prepare for Your Next Show

Now that you've made it through a trade show successfully, it's time to plan for your next one.

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Filed Under: Branding & Marketing

January 2, 2018 by Candice Benson

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Make Your Website Work for You

Does your website just sit there? Or does it bring new leads, subscribers and buyers every day? Good web design means your website works hard for you.

Know, Like, Trust = Conversions

All brands and businesses need to go through the Know, Like, Trust paradigm to get to the Conversion stage. First, consumers must know who you are and what you do. Next, they must like what you do or have to say. Finally, they must come to trust you or believe in you before moving onto the final stage, the conversion.

The Conversion stage is the ultimate goal of the business. This is where a consumer is persuaded into a specific action, like purchasing from you or subscribing to your emails (where you can eventually hope to continue the know, like, trust pattern until they eventually convert to sales).

So, what does a website have to do with this? Well, a website can provide you many benefits, most importantly, streamlining this process through building brand awareness and trust.

Brand Awareness (Know, Like)

A website needs to make a good first impression. A good website has attractive and consistent branding, and is easy to navigate. Images and videos are of high quality and the purpose of the website is clear.

The content of the website is designed in a way to help people get to know you and learn more about you. It explains what you do and how you do it, who you serve and why, and what results you get.

In order to get people to like you, your content shows who you are, what you stand for and what you have to say. This kind of content showcases your (your brand’s) personality and might offer behind the scenes glimpses into your life.

Be an Expert (Trust)

Providing valuable content will help build your credibility. Free, high-quality content will position you as an expert in your field and the one to go to for proven results. Providing value builds trust in you/your brand and will have people happy to support you.

Get Subscribers/Make Sales (Conversions)

Now that you’ve provided the information and content needed for your customers to know and like you, and have provided valuable content for them to trust you as an expert, they are ready to move to the next stage.

 

But How?

 

Know Your Audience

Before doing anything, you must know your audience. Your website is not built for you, it is always built for your audience. Knowing the demographics and psychographics of your customers is essential to building a website for them.

Good First Impression

A visitor to your website decides whether they like it or not in less than a second. Page load speed, colours, branding, typography, layout, popups, ads, and quality of images and video are all a part of a good first impression. Ease of navigation and clarity of purpose are also essential to making a good first impression.

Responsive Website

All websites must be responsive. With more and more people using phones and tablets for their online browsing and searching, a website must be attractive on a smaller screen.

Provide Value

Don’t just sell your products or services, go the extra mile by sharing your expertise with your customers. Selling hiking equipment? Share a list of your favourite places to hike in your city. Selling advanced painting classes? Make some video tutorials of basic painting techniques. By providing extra value, you can turn a first-time customer into a life-long fan.

Social Proof

Do your customers rave about your product or service? Share some customer reviews on your website or social media channels to let your customers speak for you. Did you know that  88 percent of consumers trust online reviews as much as a personal recommendation (Forbes)?

Clear Calls to Action (CTAs)

Don’t make your customer guess what to do next. If you want them to sign up for your weekly newsletter, have it front and centre.

Social Sharing

Build your fan base the easy way. Make sharing to social networks as easy as possible. People trust their friends and family more than advertisements, so let them help build your brand awareness and trust.

Is your website working for you? If not, what is it missing?

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Filed Under: Branding & Marketing, Web Design

February 14, 2017 by Candice Benson

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What is Corporate Brand Identity

Brand Identity is an essential part of any business. But what exactly is it?

Your brand identity is who you are and how you want to be perceived by customers. It goes beyond any symbol, logo or tagline. It includes what your brand says, what your values are, and how you want your customers to feel when they interact with you. (Brand Image is sometimes used interchangeably, but your brand image is how customers actually perceive you, not how you would like them to perceive you.)

If you haven’t taken the time to develop your Corporate Brand Identity, you should do so now. Having a defined Brand Identity will make business decisions easier as you will know whether an action falls in line with your brand or not. You can use these questions to help guide the development of your vision, mission, values, essence and value proposition.

Who are you?

To answer this question, consider the main products and/or services you offer, those you will not offer, the service you provide your customers, and your advantages over your competitors. Consider doing a SWOT analysis on your business. Another important question to consider:

What problem are you solving for your customers?

These answers can be used to create your vision statement  and mission statement.

Your vision statement should be inspirational and aspirational and provide strategic direction for the future. It does not need to be more than one sentence and does not need to explain how you’re going to accomplish it. A good vision statement is clear and succinct.

Some examples:

Facebook: to give people the power to share and make the world more open and connected.

Habitat for Humanity: A world where everyone has a decent place to live.

Feeding America: A hunger-free America.

Your mission statement should be motivational and actionable. It defines the purpose of the company using simple and straightforward language.

Examples include:

Google: To organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful.

Amazon: To be Earth’s most customer-centric company where people can find and discover anything they want to buy online.

charity: water: We’re a non-profit organization bringing clean, safe drinking water to people in developing countries.

What does your company value?

Tell me, what does your company stand for and what do you want your employees to stand for? What unique things can your company offer the world? Do you value corporate social responsibility? Maybe you value the environment and choose to take actions to protect it. Do you value transparency? Or perhaps you value innovative thinkers or people who want to break the mold.

Take a moment to do a brain dump of all the things that you (your business) values.

Now that you have a list, let’s talk about how you might use it. Many companies choose to use this list as the company’s “Core Values“.

A good example of this is Starbucks. Starbucks has developed very clear set of core values:

“With our partners, our coffee and our customers at our core, we live these values:

  1. creating a culture of warmth and belonging, where everyone is welcome.
  2. acting with courage, challenging the status quo and finding new ways to grow our company and each other
  3. being present, connecting with transparency, dignity and respect.
  4. delivering our very best in all we do, holding ourselves accountable for results.

We are performance driven, through the lens of humanity. ”

How do you want to be recognized?

Most of us know about having an Elevator Pitch for our business, but what if you’re not the one introducing your business? Imagine one of your current customers describing your company to one of their friends who knew nothing about you.

What is the essence of your company? A brand’s essence is the intangible thoughts and feelings customers associate with it.  Every strong brand has at least one differentiating attribute. These intangible attributes must be perceived, otherwise they are just a commodity. (Brands compete on how they make you feel, commodities compete on price or convenience.)

Every day people make thousands of decisions based more on how they feel than logic. The brand essence is the single intangible attribute that differentiates the brand from its competition as perceived by the audience.

Examples:

  • Riding a Harley Davidson motorcycle feels liberating.
  • Experiencing Disney world feels magical.

Some people refer to the brand’s essence as the heart or soul of the company. Some questions to consider when trying to determine your brand essence:

  • When customers experience your product or service, what emotion do they feel?
  • What word would they use is describe your business’s personality?

List 5 words/themes people to use to describe your company. Now out of those five, which word best describes your business’s essence?

Who are you trying to reach?

The last part of your Corporate Brand Identity includes your Value Proposition. For this, first and foremost, you must consider who your target audience is. It is best to create an avatar of your target market including demographics, psychographics, interests, etc.

A value proposition is a clear statement that answers:

  • Who is the target customer for this product or service
  • How does your product/service solve a customer need?
  • What is benefit does your product/service deliver (physical or emotional)?
  • Why is your product/service different from competition and why should they purchase from you?

It needs to be clear to customers what it is, for whom and how it is useful. Remember that how your company speaks about your services is often different from how customers describe it. A successful value proposition will clearly communicates results customers will get from purchasing from your business and set you apart from your competitors.

You’ve Successfully Developed your Corporate Brand Identity

By taking the time to develop your Corporate Brand Identity, you will be able to clearly define what your brand stands for and how you want to be perceived. The vision and mission share the goals and purpose of the company, the core values and essence will communicate how you want customers to feel when they come into contact with your brand and your value proposition will position your brand as unique and exude confidence that your brand will deliver on its promise.

You are now ready to start crafting your brand strategy.

matt_and_candice-1024x739

Hello, we're Candice & Matt. We provide tips, tools and resources to help entrepreneurs build their dream businesses. Read More

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