The Reason No One is Listening: 4 Tips to Get More Business

Whether you have a product or service to sell or are just trying to get discovered so that you can get hired, do you ever feel like this? …Like no one is listening because they are too busy getting their own message out that they don’t have time to listen to what you’re saying?

If you are doing any type of marketing (and we are all marketers even if your title doesn’t say so…), you’re probably thinking about, planning or executing a strategy to sell something. You want to get the word out (awareness), so you put out ads in magazines, post updates on Facebook and Tweet ’til your fingers bleed. If you’re working your B2B back channel, you might be on LinkedIn drumming up leads..

You hope people like what you have to say or sell (interest), provide some kind of incentive or promotion (desire) and then try and close the sale (action). These 4 steps make up the traditional Sales or Marketing Funnel.

So for everything that you do, where’s the engagement and action? Where’s the “business” part of “business development?’ It can be frustrating or keep you up at night if your customer pool is drying up.

If you’re like me, even at the time of writing this, you are probably being pulled in several different directions. Frankly, I’m surprised you’re reading this far down. You’ve got 200 unopened emails in your In Box and several voice and text messages. You cram down some food at one or more of the 3 times per day allotted for eating-maybe. You scurry from one place to another whether it’s inside an office or not, so you’ll be on time. You’ve got work to do-lots of it and it never ends. You have family commitments, kids who have tons of homework and soccer and lacrosse twice a week. You volunteer at the school or sit on a board of directors somewhere. You’ve got church or temple or that spiritual road biking club that rides 2x per week at 6am before work.  You have a side job or passion project. You’re busy. And so is everyone else.

How do you break through the clutter? How do you get people to pay attention to you? After all, you’ve got something really important to say or a product that will solve people’s problems.

There is actually a lot of really good stuff on this including Chris Brogan’s “Grow Bigger Ears” article and Brian Solis’ piece on community management. I really like this part of Brian’s post:

“It was never just about listening, monitoring and responding. No matter how sophisticated these processes become, this is still and always will be about building a community where communities are active and emerging. This is about investing in a community through inspired action and engagement. And, this is about creating an adaptive business to not only compete for the future, but compete for relevance.”

In his book “Flip the Funnel” Joseph Jaffe (@JaffeJuice) suggests that we spend way too much time and money on the acquisition or hunt for new business and that we should flip the Marketing Funnel. Flipping  the funnel over on its head means focusing on the customers we already have or just made-first. “Instead of ending with your customers, why not begin with your lifeblood, the single biggest-if not the only-reason you’re in business today? The new flipped funnel is about Acknowledgment, Dialogue, Incentivization and Activation.”

4 Tips to Getting More Business:

1. Acknowledge. What do you do for those who become your new customers?

2. Dialogue. Are you engaging people, listening and taking action?

3. Incentivize. What are you doing to retain customers? Do you treat certain (repeat) customers differently?

4. Activation. Getting your customer involved in the brand and giving them a reason to stay.

I’d love to hear your thoughts on this, leave a comment below.

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  • http://annejacksonwrites.com Anne Jackson

    This is so spot on…I have been attempting to do something like this in social media world for the last two years…whittling down a large, inattentive audience to a small but active and loyal “family”… It meant changing my blog, Twitter and Facebook strategies. Some people were shocked…why delete my old accounts and lose everyone that had joined in three years? Why “lose” all my “followers?”nnWhile my blog traffic has decreased significantly (my old blog actually still gets more traffic than my new one), my followers on Twitter are down by 75%…the people I do engage with, the 25% that stuck around (and we’ll say even the 12.5% of those who are REALLY tuned in) support, encourage, and engage.nnI wouldn’t have traded the large, empty numbers for the world. I’m so happy I made the switch.

  • http://twitter.com/swire Zack Swire

    Great post and so true. In running an ad agency, I all too often see how agencies get excited about getting the next account and don’t keep focused on their current clients. It’s up to us to continue sharpening the saw and to continue challenging the status-quo. We’ve beat out some big agencies because of this. And, when we do, we don’t forget how hard we worked to get there. Our clients put a lot of faith and trust in us to produce results. It’s our job to keep fresh, to learn from our results as we go and to continually build on that relationship.

  • http://www.LinkedOC.com bryan elliott

    Thanks Zack

  • http://www.LinkedOC.com bryan elliott

    Thanks Anne, yes agree-quality over quantity…

  • Sean Bishop

    Yes, some interesting points made here, I do this generally anyway with all clients and hope to retain them as well, but it’s been very difficult in this market Things seem to be improving and we’ve landed two new clients just last week. I feel dialogue is key and clearly understanding your client’s needs, there is so much confusion out there, anyway, thanks for the post Bryan.

  • Sean Bishop

    Yes, some interesting points made here, I do this generally anyway with all clients and hope to retain them as well, but it’s been very difficult in this market Things seem to be improving and we’ve landed two new clients just last week. I feel dialogue is key and clearly understanding your client’s needs, there is so much confusion out there, anyway, thanks for the post Bryan.

  • Sean Bishop

    Yes, some interesting points made here, I do this generally anyway with all clients and hope to retain them as well, but it’s been very difficult in this market Things seem to be improving and we’ve landed two new clients just last week. I feel dialogue is key and clearly understanding your client’s needs, there is so much confusion out there, anyway, thanks for the post Bryan.

  • http://www.LinkedOC.com bryan elliott

    Thanks Sean

  • Angela

    Agreed. You will gain more if you take the time to explore other opportunity with your existing/best customers. Ask them to introduce you to other departments

  • http://www.verzdesign.com singapore seo company

    I love this post !! The points are to be reg all the day in mind !! Good worku2026.n

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