Marketing Strategy on a Dime: A guide for solopreneur coaches and consultants
A marketing strategy is critical for every business. But how do you develop a marketing strategy when you have to do everything — and you don’t quite know how to go about it? In this article I show you how to develop a marketing strategy for your solopreneur business — quickly and without spending a dime.
What is a marketing strategy (as opposed to a marketing plan)?
Let’s start off making a distinction between “strategy” and “plan”:
A strategy defines what you’re going to do (and sometimes what not). A plan defines how you’re going to do it.
A good analogy is thinking of a road trip:
Similarly, a marketing strategy will tell us what we’re going to do, and leave the detail of how we’re going to do it for the marketing plan.
Before we look at the detail, we first need to understand why a marketing strategy is important.
Why is a marketing strategy important?
We can of course just do marketing by throwing stuff at the wall to see what sticks. But this “spray and pray” approach can result in a lot of bad marketing, creating the wrong impressions and wasting a lot of time.
Even a half-way decent marketing strategy will help us craft marketing that:
So with that in mind, let’s have a look at what goes into a marketing strategy.
What goes into a marketing strategy?
A marketing strategy for solopreneurs coaches and consultants should contain at least the following:
Most of these points are fairly obvious, but there are a couple that need a little more explanation.
Inbound vs Outbound Marketing
Outbound marketing is where you “go out” to potential clients and see if they’re interested in your services. This kind of marketing requires a lot of research (to find the people you need to speak to), getting through the inevitable gatekeepers and hope you’re catching them at a good time.
Inbound marketing is based on the idea that if they notice you, and they’re interested in what you have to say, they will come to you. Typically, this is done through content marketing (articles or social media posts), public speaking or webinars.
I much prefer inbound over outbound marketing, because when they come to you a) you know they’re interested in what you have to offer, and b) they’re ready to talk. But both types of marketing have their place, so don’t let my preference sway you.
Content Pillars
One of the biggest challenges we have to deal with is what we’re going to talk about - what is our marketing about?
One way to address this problem is to choose a small number of content pillars - the main topics we’re expert in and can talk about at length.
If you choose three or four content pillars (or main topics), and consistently talk about these topics (and sub-topics), you will eventually become known as an expert in those topics. Stand out as an expert, show up consistently and frequently, and people will think of you when they have a problem in your areas of expertise.
Content pillars help us stay focused on our areas of expertise, and generate sub-topics (and sub-sub-topics) to generate ideas for content.
An example of a marketing strategy
Here’s my marketing strategy:
As a marketing strategy, there are lots of ways we can poke holes in this strategy. One of the things I don’t do (for example) is creating customer avatars - I’ve never found them to help me personally.
But this strategy is working for me, so I will stick with it.
How do you use your marketing strategy?
Once you have a marketing strategy that makes sense:
But a strategy is only as good as the execution.
Your strategy is only as good as how well you execute
Marketing strategies can’t be “right” or “wrong”. They can be “good” or “bad”, but ultimately it’s the execution that counts.
Marketing is a long-term game. You have to show up consistently (and frequently) with quality content to get noticed in all the noise out there. Think 12 to 18 months before you start seeing real results.
And this is where most of us fail. I’m still struggling to show up on LinkedIn every day, and I know that for my strategy to really pay off, I have to develop the disciplines, systems and time management to be there. It’s a work in progress.
So don’t overthink your marketing strategy. Keep it simple - this is one case where less is more. Then focus on the execution.
Hope that helps!
This article was originally published in?The Accomplished Solopreneur. Join the list to get one short, actionable tip in your inbox every Saturday morning.
Co-Founder. Author. Teacher. Consultant. I help business leaders strategically align marketing with their business vision and goals.
1 年Exactly.
Getting Business Owners Unstuck for 15+ years
1 年Great advice. I agree that inbound marketing is more effective than outbound marketing.