How your Ideal Customers can help you generate a ton of new business without spending a cent!
There is no bigger source of future revenue and profit than the Ideal
Clients you have now—at least the ones you really like to do business
with, who don’t beat you up on pricing and who pay on time.
We want you to write a personal note to every person you deal
with at every one of your Ideal Customers, thanking them for their
business and asking for a personal meeting. At that meeting, present a
customized overview of how you are going to focus on the one thing
that’s most important to them. You should offer very specific new ways
you are going to do this.
At the same meetings, launch your Referral program.
Say, “We ask ourselves every day, what can we do today to get
XYZ Company (the one you are meeting with) to recommend us? Would the
improvements we have presented to you today convince you to recommend
us to other companies who need this approach?”
When they say, “Yes!” (they will), say “In that case, we are
delighted to offer a Referral Price to you: at the end of our fiscal
year, we will rebate 2% of the value of all revenue directly
attributable to your referrals and introductions.” If you have a better
idea go ahead, offer it.
Here’s the real secret to a powerful Referral Program
Your Referral sources will feel reluctant to actively recommend
you, even though they like the work you do and they’ve promised to
help. Why? Because who wants to risk making a recommend that may turn
out to be a disaster! And furthermore, who can remember to look for
opportunities to recommend you.
Most of us ask for a recommendation and then wonder, usually
about six months later, “Whatever happened to that recommendation
so-and-so was going to give us?”
This Referral plan will not run itself. You will need to tell
your referral sources exactly what will happen when you contact one of
their recommended colleagues or friends, so they trust you with that
precious information.
Assign someone to getting case studies and written
recommendations from your referral sources, following up every month to
remind people about the program (a combination of phone calls,
e-newsletter, and personal meetings).
Ask for introductions to colleagues at trade events or
fund-raisers. Ask to be invited to club meetings. Ask to be invited to
join organizations you need to be sponsored for. If you get a referral,
make sure you let your referral source know you contacted the referral
and what happened.
This looks like work, and it is. But it’s also about 75% less
work, and a lot less money, than cold calling, or selling to prospects
without a recommendation. And it works.
Our favourite referral event for a home improvement company is
the open house the homeowners host to show friends and neighbours their
new space.
Another is a technology consulting firm that assigned an
account executive to manage their partnerships with big software
vendors like Microsoft, and tripled their leads.