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  • Successful Marketing Requires Behavior Change

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    changeMondays are good days to think about change, establish new habits, and embrace chaos. And, all of those things come with successful marketing – it’s just part of the deal. You can’t not like marketing, not do marketing, or concede you’re no good at it – marketing must become a habit you come to love.

    It’s tough to get around to marketing, I get it. You didn’t start your business because you were dying to get your hands dirty with blogging, copywriting, and selling, but you soon found out that your business would die if you did not. So, what to do?

    The secret to getting marketing done is to make it a habit. Or, if I may roughly paraphrase Aristotle - “We are what we repeatedly do. Marketing, then, is not an act, but a habit.”

    Most of us, I think, have more experience trying to break a bad habit than establish a good one, the secret is to create a system and process you can focus your attention on while establishing the behavior that eventually becomes second nature.

    When it comes to marketing I’ve learned that small business owners can move towards making marketing a habit by doing these three things.

    1) Monthly themes – choose one big marketing need – redo your website, write your marketing kit, create a new customer process – and make it the theme for that month – you can even plan out the next 6 months this way and you’ll stand a better chance of actually getting these done. This is a great idea when it comes to getting your entire staff focused on one thing. The problem is that when we try to do it all at once, we go into overwhelm and don’t get anything done. Make it simple, take the long view, and watch what happens.

    2) Weekly reviews – When it comes right down to it, once you’re clear on your marketing strategy, marketing itself becomes a set of projects. When you start to look at marketing as the habit of focusing on a group of projects, you can begin to break those projects down into action steps or tasks. Your weekly marketing review should include everyone in your organization and pose the simple question – “what needs be done next” to each project on your plate.

    3) Daily appointments – While you may have many things on your daily calendar, make it a habit to schedule one marketing time slot with yourself or someone working on marketing each day. This is the only way to keep the focus where it belongs – on constant advancement and improvement.

    When it comes to establishing a system for getting marketing done, few compare, in my mind, to David Allen’s very simple, yet powerful, Getting Things Done. You should read this book and make it a gift to your entire staff. His latest book, Getting It All Done, is a great read as well.

    You might also want to become of fan of Zen Habit’s Change Cheatsheet: 29 ways to ingrain a new behavior.

    I happen to believe that owning a business is the true ticket to getting what you want out of life and that the successful marketing of said business is the only way to realize that possibility.

    Image credit: David Reece

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    Posted by: John Jantsch on Oct 05, 09 | 5:05 am
    Category: Duct Tape Marketing, Marketing Plans, Marketing Strategy, Vision | Tags: , , ,

    View Comments
    • Well change is necessary for everyone and brings toward progress but most of the people really resist to change and at the stage of rejection in the change cycle you need a strong strategy to convert it in the acceptance ...
    • Excellent points. I recently started scheduling it in daily and that has been the biggest help! My hour of daily marketing is programmed into my calendar and I get a little reminder each day. This ensures it is constantly being worked on and improved.
    • This is such a delight to read because just last month I started something on very similar lines..
      I use Freemind to plan out the monthly marketing plans..
      The theme is the root node, then I have 4 nodes one for each week and the tasks listed out for each of the weeks. Every weekend I review whats been done and drag the incomplete tasks to the next week. This helps me get an overall view as to where things are going versus my original plan. Thanks to your post I know I'm on the right track :-)
    • tessacarroll
      Any company can create a successful marketing strategy as long as they are consistent with it. Even if you don't have the funds to hire on an agency or a full-time marketing person, taking a portion of each day/week/month and devoting it to marketing will eventually have an impact.

      Thank you for the reminder that small businesses do in fact have the ability to market successfully on their own. All it takes is a little commitment and a little bit of creative organization.

      Tessa Carroll
      VBP OutSourcing
      www.blogs.vbpoutsourcing.com
    • Creative organization - now that's something we could all benefit from!
    • Language Police
      If you're in the process of death you are DYING (not dieing)
    • Yes, aren't we all
    • christineadams
      These are excellent tips! It surprises me how small businesses struggle with Marketing. For me that is the most fun part of business. But truth be told if we practice long enough things have a tendency to become habit. Keep preaching, keep helping, you are doing an incredible job! Thanks for the post. ~Christine
    • With so much to do each day, getting overwhelmed can happen easily. Great advice on how to break it up into bite-size tasks to keep you motivated.
    • Yes Robert and even then it's sooooo easy to get side tracked
    • Great reminders, John. As a part of my daily habits I've installed a Firefox plug-in called "Daily Coffee". This plug-in can be configured to open specific sites (in multiple tabs) for a given day of the week. So, for example, you can open your Gmail every day, your Linkedin profile on Mondays and Thursdays, and your Aweber account on Friday. Then when I sit down at my computer in the morning, I open my daily coffee and work through the open tabs. Keeps me on track and I know when I'm done for the day.
    • Great reminders, John. As a part of my daily habits I've installed a Firefox plug-in called "Morning Coffee". This plug-in can be configured to open specific sites (in multiple tabs) for a given day of the week. So, for example, you can open your Gmail every day, your Linkedin profile on Mondays and Thursdays, and your Aweber account on Friday. Then when I sit down at my computer in the morning, I open my morning coffee and work through the open tabs. Keeps me on track and I know when I'm done for the day.
    • Hey Joe, I'll have to take a look at Morning Coffee - I like the sound of it!
    • A nice little reminder, especially for very small businesses and solopreneurs. It can sometimes be hard to get out of the general routine of working to develop marketing pieces when your company is very small. Freelance web designers especially often have the worst web sites which are not exactly the best way to impress prospective clients!
    • Ah, the shoemaker's kids story rears its ugly head - so true, so sad!
    • Creating a monthly theme sounds like a great idea.
    • It becomes a really good idea after you've done it for 6 months
    • This is a fabulous way to break it down for small businesses. The worst thing they can do is not have a marketing routine. Focused consistency wins the game :-) Great tips!
    • Amen - you've got to find a way to push out the urgent so you can focus on the important!
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