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Design and Operate a Referral System

This is part one of a two part post – today is Design the System – next is Operate the System.

For most, referrals happen accidentally as a result of doing good work or being in the right place at the right time. What if those valuable referrals could happen intentionally, as a result of doing work and putting yourself in the right place, with the right source, always at the right time.

Marketing is the most important system in any business and referral generation is simply one component of the lead generation cog, and as such, needs it’s own documented system as well.

I could write an entire book on this subject, oh wait, I am writing an entire book on this subject, and for my money, here are the referral generation system parts that must go into your design.

  • Become more referable – before you pass go you must analyze every way that your business interacts with customers and prospects – marketing related or not – and inject positive, brand supporting elements into the each interaction – many referrals are lost because shipping or finance roughed up the relationship.
  • Target your sources – 1) look at your customers under a microscope – what’s the profile of a customer that’s already referring business? Find that out and focus most of your attention on that kind of customer by making it easier for them to refer. 2) who else has your ideal customer as a target? Strategic partners should be a major focus of attention. This is the place where you need to look long and hard at your ability to make referrals to others – give and you shall receive!

    * In a recent survey I conducted on referrals respondents felt that less than 30% of their referrals came from strategic partners – I think that should be more like 60%

  • Educate your sources – ever get a bad referral? It was probably your fault. We can’t or shouldn’t ask for referrals until we tell our referral sources in great detail – how they would spot our ideal customers, the kinds of things our ideal customer might say to signal them as a lead, and the exact way/words to use when telling a prospect about us.
  • Motivate your sources – money for referrals is usually a crummy motivation, but a creative, on message kind of offer that turns referring business to you into a game is a great way to motivate your referral sources and shine a light on the subject of referrals for all. Of course, saying thank you never hurts either.
  • Follow-up with all – a referred lead is different, you’ve got to be prepared to follow-up in a different manner – in all likelihood the sales cycle will be different as well, plan on it. Follow-up also includes your referral sources. Build feedback loops so that your referral sources get to know how much good that are doing by referring your business. Create key indicators of referral success and make them part of your marketing measurement dashboard.

Each of these parts needs to be thought out, documented and baked into your day to day marketing efforts. Plan to change, expand and moderate your system parts as you take them out into the real world.

Now that you have a system, you’re almost half way there – a system design is an academic exercise until you put the process into action – tomorrow I’ll delve into operation your referral generation system.

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  • http://www.themarketingcoachva.com tim Nagle

    Thats all good information and I would like to add the core idea is getting a referral and where do they come from. Not only where do they come from, are they just a cold call or are they warm and fuzzy. The core of referrals comes from a previous client that understands your product, service and system. They have a understanding of how you will process this referral. When a customer becomes a client, they should be handled as a systematic approach from the beginning in order to focus on turning them into a referring client. This is where companies make the turning point into not just an organization that asks for referrals, but an organization that thrives on referrals. I have personally witnessed a million dollar a year advertising budget reduced in half and revenue grew 40% by designing a team that was focused on a proactive referral system, than a reactive referral action plan.

  • http://www.business901.com Joe Dager

    Great start to your book, John. Heck, can I get an advanced copy or is it to early?

    The last point is great. If you keep the entire loop involved, your referral source may become a secondary or primary sales arm.

  • http://www.themarketingcoachva.com tim Nagle

    I agree. Absolutely great information as always.

  • http://www.onesherpa.com Andee Sellman, One Sherpa

    John,
    Thanks for the great information again.
    One of the issues that we face is actually getting in the habit of ASKING for referrals. Often we’re focussed on the customer at hand and remembering to go back AFTER the transaction and harvest the referral sometimes get lost. When in the process of selling a current customer do you think the process of thinking about referrals should begin?

  • John Jantsch

    @Andee – I don’t think you can start too soon, make it a part of lead conversion – tell them you know they are going to be thrilled and when they are here’s the deal – then make a 90 day results review as part of your service and go back and get those referrals

  • http://atniz.com Atniz

    I am thinking of starting a referral system too for my dofollow blog commenting services. Looks like I need to look into so many aspects before make it live. Thanks for the tips.

  • http://www.themarketingcoachva.com Tim Nagle

    If I can chime in again, that is the best place to start, at the very beginning. As part of your educational material, company letterhead, uniforms patch, yard sign or whatever your organization uses to reach out to customer. Let it be know” Ask about our referral program!”
    The sales presentation should incorporate the referral strategy and become a tactic for closing leads and also, motivating employees/ salespeople to earn more commission. Of course, a thorough follow up process will be needed to keep the program accurate statistically.

  • http://www.seoresults.co.za/pages/seo-tips/ SEO Tips South Africa

    Referrals are generally guaranteed business, as people usually won’t shop around if they’ve already been exposed to your work and have had it praised and recommended by a third party. One sure-fire way (depending on your industry) of getting plenty referrals is to offer an incentive for referrals. Just remember that whilst cash is king it might not always be appropriate…

  • http://www.vbpoutsourcing.com KJ Rodgers

    I can’t wit to get this book!

  • http://www.more-for-small-business.com Kris Bovay

    I agree with all these points and in particular believe that follow up with those who’ve referred you is a basic courtesy or recognition and is necessary if you wish future referrals. Thanks!

  • http://www.exploremyblog.com ExploreMyBlog

    I was planning to develop Web referrals system for my blog and some viral marketing components, both of these are become very famous in the business now a days, it boost lot of visitors, customers and viewers to your web business.

  • http://www.carloatyourservice.com Carlo/Carlo At Your Service Productions

    Perfect information at the perfect time! This is an area that I knew that I needed to work on, so I truly appreciate your post. Thanks.

  • http://marketingeye.com.au/ WMJ

    Good information. I can get some help from it. It makes things goes easily~

  • http://www.hsbc.co.uk/1/2/personal/savings/cash-e-isa isa savings

    @Carlo . And yes I got the text. BTW this is another top notch post. Referral is an area which is not written or discussed about on most posts but you’ve made it clear with the tips above.