|

|
News & Announcements
|
| February, 2005
JVSI and partners launch innovative business
networking organization to increase contacts and referrals.
Coming in Spring, 2005
Investor information and tools cross marketing program.
Check
our jvaction page.
|
|
| JVSI
Products |
JVTeleseminar.
Recorded seminar with several of world's best-known
online marketers on using teleseminar joint ventures.
Partnering Explosion. Audio interview
with Thomas Grifasi, president of Business Growth Partners,
Inc. and Dr. Jim Namaste, Chairman, Enterprise Holdings
System. |
|
|
How
to Create Powerful Strategic Alliance
by Michael
Fortin
I truly
hate networking. Really, I do! I hate it because, in my experience,
it hasn't brought me anything substantial in return. But wait a
minute, hear me out. Networking isn't a bad concept; far from it.
With today's highly competitive environment, networking can be a
fantastic marketing tool. Referral-sources can become potentially
effective in bringing you business.
However, here's the
problem. Having a network and having a networking system are two
entirely separate things. When you're only networking, more often
than not people will want something in return. They will stop sending
you leads if you don't take the time to recognize their efforts
(and, if you're like me, that's if you have any time left at all).
So, how can you reward your network? How can you do so on a consistent
basis? And even better yet, how can you turn your network into a
networking system? The answer is by developing and establishing
a network of strategic marketing alliances.
I'm sure you have
heard of many ways to set up strategic alliances in some form or
another. Essentially, there are as many different forms of systematized
networking opportunities out there as there are businesses, and
I strongly encourage you to vigorously seek them out. But in my
experience, I have found that they mainly fall into three major
categories, namely the info-network, the auto-network, and the intra-network.
Let's take a look at each of these and how you can apply them to
your situation or business.
Info-Networking
The information network
is one in which a strategic alliance is created where information
is exchanged in some form or another between parties. Basically,
that information includes qualified leads that both you and your
alliance share, or information about each other that is promoted
to each other's market. As long as your alliance logically shares
a same target market without directly competing with you, there
is an immense potential for you to consider.
For instance, free
reports and especially newsletters are great marketing tools. Advertising
space within them can be sold at a nominal cost in order to pay
for their distribution, or it can be offered to alliances that might
be happily interested in being directly promoted to your market.
In turn, you should seek out ad space in publications of mutually
beneficial alliances. But if you publish your own newsletter, the
obvious advantage is that it can save you money by "swapping"
ads with another newsletter also catering to your target market.
This also refers
to mailing lists where you and your alliance can exchange each other's
prospect or client lists. Mailing lists seem to have increased in
popularity these days and, if used properly, they can produce pretty
good results. For example, mailing list brokers sell or lease mailing
lists that they've compiled and with which you can use to conduct
direct mail and telemarketing campaigns -- lists of people that
fit into your specific demographics.
A more effective
approach is to use, rent, buy, or exchange a strategic alliance's
list of prospects and clients. Most of them will approve especially
when you trade your lists with them. But if you have to rent or
buy their list, the cost will definitely be far less than that of
one coming from a broker -- they're not cheap! And most strategic
alliances are not accustomed to the idea of sharing their lists
and will therefore be happy with just a few bucks. (Realize that
this segment refers specifically to offline mailing lists, not email.)
Auto-Networking
Auto-networking is
the process of creating referral-sources that automatically supply
you with quality leads without having to lift a finger. Brochures,
posters, flyers, coupons, and business cards can be set up at the
offices of potential referral-sources. However, auto-networking
doesn't mean to simply give out cards or literature and then hoping
it will produce something in return. It means setting up a system
between both of you where, since you are catering to a same market,
you have made an arrangement to constantly and systematically supply
each other with materials and information.
A drycleaner who
discovered that the largest clientele of a busy restaurant near
its location was mostly made up of executives having "power
lunches." The drycleaner, knowing that her greatest clientele
was made up of executives who bring their shirts or dresses to have
drycleaned saw it as an opportunity. Together they formed a strategic
marketing alliance.
Coupons were handed
out by the restaurant's waiters and waitresses along with their
clients' food tabs offering a 5% percent discount on dry-cleaning
services. The coupons could be accumulated up to a maximum of 25%
-- of course, they were valid for a limited time only. In return,
the dry-cleaner handed out coupons (clipped to the garment bags
of their clients' dry-cleaning) offering a free appetizer or dessert
at that particular restaurant -- good for one per person per lunch
-- with every load of $30 worth of dry-cleaning.
Another form of auto-networking
is, as the saying goes, "You can't teach an old dog a new trick
but you can surely teach a new dog to cook you breakfast!"
Trying to create networking systems with referral-sources who either
have been approached by competitors or are implicated in other commitments
may be a difficult task. So what can you do? You get them while
they're starting out. Since, in this highly competitive age, many
potential referral-sources may have already been the target of a
competitor,. the key, therefore, is to approach them before they
do become potential targets.
Here's an example.
I teach hair transplant doctors to become known among the hairdressing
community and possibly set up strategic alliances with them by,
among other things, setting up brochure stands in their salons.
Many of these hairstylists may have already been approached by other
doctors or have a fixed idea in their minds of a doctor to whom
they would refer their clients for cosmetic surgery. Consequently,
I help doctors to set up presentations or to become guest lecturers
at local hairstyling and beauty schools.
Schools love it since
it's part of their curriculum to teach future hairstylists the mechanics
of hair and hair replacement. Some provinces or states also make
it an essential part of their licensing requirements. However, the
effectiveness is this approach is the fact that, by giving a lecture
or presentation, the doctor not only gets his name inculcated into
the minds of these future hairstylists but also created an almost
impenetrable barrier against competitors. By being part of their
schooling, doctors naturally became a part of their minds!
This technique can
be applied in almost every industry, with trade schools, business
schools, community colleges, government services, unemployment insurance
subsidized courses, and so on. A government software programmer
can give a small computer presentation during courses that the government
provides to recently-hired purchasing agents. A wedding planning
consultant can give small courses to church groups offering prenuptial
courses (often referred to as "marriage preparation courses")
for engaged couples in their parish or community. An accountant
specializing in corporate taxation can give small seminars to young
entrepreneur workshops (most chambers of commerce offer this type
of service). And the list goes on.
Intra-Networking
An intra-networking
system simply means two or more parts of a whole that are independent
but at the same time interdependent. This is the old bartering system
that goes back since the beginning of time. But in the context of
intra-networking though, it is not a direct exchange of service
for service or product for product (or even product for service),
but an exchange of a service or product for information, clients,
referrals, or promotions.
For instance, a restaurant
owner makes an arrangement with a local gas station to offer coupons
to each client that comes to pump gas. They were given the permission
to hang posters in the station, leave menus at the counter and place
fridge magnets on the pumps. For every ten coupons the restaurant
received, the employees at the station were given a free meal. A
freelance writer edits trade association newsletters that target
her market as well (corporations). In exchange for her editing services
she will have her articles and ads published for free in the newsletter.
What kind of product
do you offer from which a potential referral-source may benefit?
Think of ways of being able to offer your services for free in exchange
for free promotion, pre-qualified leads, or, as mentioned in info-networking,
promotional efforts. Intra-networking can also become powerfully
effective if you were lucky enough to stumble onto another company
that offers products or services that complement your products or
services well, while at the same time sharing costs, leads, and
clients as well as referral-sources.
Altogether, info-networking,
auto-networking, and intra-networking are powerful tools to help
make you create good referral-sources that work and never stop working.
The idea is nonetheless to network but to do so wisely as to be
able to create as many leads and clients as possible with the least
amount of effort. Don't network. Make your net work for you!
Michel Fortin is
a master copywriter and consultant dedicated to turning businesses
into powerful magnets. Get a FREE copy of his book, "The 10
Commandments of Power Positioning," and subscribe to his FREE
monthly ezine, "The Profit Pill," by visiting http://SuccessDoctor.com/
now!
|