3 ways to kill your sales
Most MSP's want more new clients.?
Yet most scupper themselves in several ways. Mostly it's through a complete lack of having a marketing system.
The key word there is system. You can't do marketing haphazardly?now and again, and expect to build a solid pipeline of leads and prospects.
Good marketing requires consistently implementing a small number of actions that:
Here are 3 sales killers thatI see them everywhere... and yet they are so easily fixed.
Sales killer 1: IVR
You do know that people hate IVR, don't you? Rather than making your business stand out as bigger than it actually is, it just comes across as impersonal.
There's one MSP I ring every now and again that has 5 options on their IVR. I've pressed all 5 buttons, and each time I get through to the same first line support guy!
I wonder how many potential clients just put down the phone when they hear an IVR menu...?
People buy from people. They hate automation that they perceive gets in their way.
Just because you have a clever IVR solution in your VoIP toolkit, doesn't mean you should use it.
Sales killer 2: Marketing from your point of view
Most MSP's website and marketing materials are bland and lack impact. And far too often, they are created from the business's point of view.
We, we, we. We do this. We do that.
Who cares?
You might. But your prospects don't.
They don't care about you. They only care about what you can do for them.
So put yourself in their shoes. Be them. Work out their buyer persona.
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What do they need? What do they want? Most importantly, what do they fear?
I once an MSP to rewrite his home page. His company is an education specialist here in the UK.?
What's the average headteacher scared of? Lost learning time, bad Ofsted (regulator) and the school screwing up.?
From his or her point of view, an MSP that already specialises in education (and already supports 1,500 teachers) is WAY safer than one that doesn't.
We don't need to talk about the company. We just need to look at it from the head's point of view, and demonstrate that they can mitigate most of their fears with one "no brainer" decision.
Interestingly, thinking this way makes price A factor in the buying decision, and not THE decision. Even in the price sensitive education market.
Sales killer 3: Being "samey"
Google "IT support <Your Town>".
Click on the first 10 websites that come up, regardless of whether they are adverts, in the map listing or the organic listing. Doesn't matter.
You'll notice they're all the same. Different words and pictures, but the same themes. Same offerings. No differentiation.
Now look at your website.?
Oh. Damn. Same problem. Your website says more of the same things the other guys are saying.
Samey kills sales. Because the people you want to talk to are an uneducated audience. They don't know what they don't know.?
So they make buying decisions at an emotional level, not using their brains. They pick an MSP that feels good to them.
If your marketing is the same as everyone else's, you'll be compared to everyone else. And you don't want that.
Because then you have a one in 10 chance (or worse) of engaging with them.
Better to stand out. To be different.
Standing out and being different is the key to having more conversations with more of the right people.
Leading BTP - Hampshire's strongest-performing business IT support & services company - THE fastest IT support you will ever experience - and we're the ONLY company out there with an IT support app "BTP Rocket".
1 年Don’t agree with the IVR thing.
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1 年We all are drawn to being "samsey" because we are all chasing the same customers. Great point on differentiation.
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1 年I hate a IVR too Paul! We only have one as it was at the request of our largest client! But two simple options, 1 for support, 2 for everything else. And they do go through to different people. Another client fed back that it should be my voice on there, not a lady I asked to do it for me. That seems to work well, and confuses the hell out of people who actually know who I am and start talking to me, even though it is a recording. I went to a business event on my estate last year and someone I had never met as he works for one of Charlie's accounts said "I know that voice, you must be Christian from Northstar IT". So I guess they can work, but don't make them a barrier and keep them as simple as possible. I want a potential customer to see us exactly as we are, not some persona of being a massive impersonal company. If they want that, I know where to send them. Rant over ??
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1 年Paul Green LOVE every word.. even making up "samey"