Marketing and Sales Best Practice 1 – Social Media Publication Timing

StrategyDriven Marketing and Sales Best Practice ArticleReaching your audience in today’s hyper-connected world is more difficult than ever. Not only must your content be relevant and engaging, it must capture your audience’s attention through any of a number of platforms while competing with an enormous number of other publishers vying for the same limited reader/viewer attention. Winning this battle may be as much about timing as it is about content.[wcm_restrict plans=”25541, 25542, 25653″]

Numerous studies reveal when it is most optimal to publish on each media channel. While no two studies agree, they tend to collectively triangulate on those days and times when your message is most likely to reach your target audience.

Not surprisingly, each media channel has a unique ‘primetime’ for readers/viewers. Consequently, publication timing of newsletters, videos, blog posts, press releases, and social media outreach can become complex to coordinate for maximum effect.

StrategyDriven’s Social Media Publication Timing schedule (see Figure 1) reveals the optimal publication days and times for all major media outlets including:

  • Newsletters
  • YouTube
  • Blog Posts
  • Press Releases
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest

Social Media Publication Timing

Figure 1: Social Media Publication Timing
(Click here to download as a pdf)

Publication Strategies

Here are three strategies StrategyDriven uses to maximize the value of its publications:

  • Cross-platform Content Development – Content development can be extremely time consuming, therefore, content should be developed so that it can be published via as many communications channels as possible. Not that some editing/adjustments may need to be performed to make the content suitable for each channel.
  • Publish During Overlapping Primetimes – Try to publish content during overlapping peak readership/viewership so content can be published across multiple channels simultaneously.
  • Use Automated Publication Software – Use apps such as Buffer and Hootsuite to time the release of your social media outreach for peak periods.

Regardless of publication timing, your content must always be relevant and engaging. Remember, without great content, timing isn’t anything.[/wcm_restrict][wcm_nonmember plans=”25541, 25542, 25653″]


Hi there! Gain access to this article with a FREE StrategyDriven Insights Library – Sample Subscription. It’s FREE Forever with No Credit Card Required.

Sign-up now for your FREE StrategyDriven Insights Library – Sample Subscription

In addition to receiving access to Marketing and Sales Best Practice 1 – Social Media Publication Timing, you’ll help advance your career and business programs through anytime, anywhere access to:

  • A sampling of dozens of Premium how-to documents across 7 business functions and 28 associated programs
  • 2,500+ Expert Contributor management and leadership articles
  • Expert advice provided via StrategyDriven’s Advisors Corner

Best of all, it’s FREE Forever with No Credit Card Required.

[/wcm_nonmember]


About the Author

Karen Juliano, StrategyDriven Vice PresidentKaren Juliano is StrategyDriven’s Editor-in-Chief and Vice President of Communications and Marketing. Prior to joining the StrategyDriven team, she helped produce weekly programming for a Public Access Television station and served as a production assistant in the public affairs office at United States Naval Base, Philadelphia. To read Karen’s complete biography, click here.

Choose the Best Equipment for Your Business with These Quick Tips

Choose the Best Equipment for Your Business with These Quick Tips
Photo courtesy of MathKnight

Every business needs some kind of equipment to run. For some it might be computers, for others, it could be heavy machinery. Whatever equipment your company needs, you need to take the time to select the right products. There are several factors you need to take into consideration when you’re deciding. The initial and running costs are important to think about, and so is the efficiency of your business. You don’t want your equipment to slow down productiveness or to produce less than desirable results. Before you make any decisions, take these essential factors into account.

Deciding Whether to Lease or Buy

When you have to buy expensive equipment, you should think about whether you want to rent or buy. Cost is obviously the primary factor in choosing which one is best for you. If you want to buy, you’ll have to have a large sum of money up front. If you decide to rent your equipment, you can make smaller payments. However, you may feel that this is money going to waste. In some cases, you might have the option to rent to buy, meaning you will eventually own the equipment. You need to think about other factors too, however. For example, leasing means you can keep up with developing technology more easily.

Consider Your Requirements

Before you settle on what you’re looking for, you have to have a think about your requirements. It’s best not to start by looking at what other companies use and recommend. That can come later, but for now, it could lead you in the wrong direction. Different businesses have varying needs, so you can’t just copy someone else. You need to think about what you need your equipment to do. Which are the most important factors? Is it how fast they can do the job for which they’re intended? Is it their lifespan and how easy they are to maintain and repair?

Choose the Best Equipment for Your Business with These Quick Tips
Photo courtesy of Mixabest

Think Beyond the Purchase Cost

If cost is important to you, don’t just consider the initial price of your equipment. There is rarely a piece of equipment that won’t also cost you money to run and maintain. It’s essential to look beyond the base price and work out a lifetime cost of using something. For example, fuel efficiency is critical for heavy plant operations. It wouldn’t be much use if you saved on machinery but then had to spend a lot of money on fuel. A cheaper option could require repairs more often too, which would raise the lifetime cost of the equipment.

Comparing Your Options

Once you know what you’re looking for, you can start comparing what’s available. One of the best ways to make it easier is to look for comparison sites. You can also go to manufacturer and supplier websites, where they often have a product comparison function. Choose your most important factors to consider so you can weigh your options against each other.

Choosing the right equipment is essential for your business’s efficiency and bottom line. Make sure you put some time into your decisions.

What stops business professionals from acquiring new clients?

When business professionals don’t have the ability to bring in new clients, they have to rely on others to cultivate leads. While this model can be effective, it is obviously in your best interest to be skilled at bringing in new business on your own.

The Problem:

But the path to successful selling is blocked for many by one primary obstacle: the fear of humiliation. It is based on the misconception that selling requires that you be pushy or manipulative, and by doing so, you’re faced with the humiliation of being flatly rejected. This thought process is based on our own experiences and reactions to pushy and manipulative salespeople trying to sell us things. It reinforces our own discomfort of being rejected. Faced with the apparent obligation to engage in distasteful, aggressive sales behavior, it’s hard to imagine even giving it a try. The good news is there is a way of eliminating these undesirable sales outcomes and thus avoid the risk of uncomfortable rejection.

The Solution:

[wcm_restrict]The key to overcoming the fear of humiliation is to sell by being a “person of value.” That means every interaction you have with prospects is a beneficial experience for them. Keep offering value (i.e., connect them with others who could help solve a business issue, support their nonprofit endeavors, provide advice in your area of expertise at no cost) until your prospect sees the wisdom of hiring you. No high-pressure sales tactics, no constant hounding. Since prospects don’t feel compelled to duck for cover every time they see you coming, there is no moment when you feel rejection.

When every interaction is valuable, no one feels pushed or manipulated. When you are seen as a person of value, your prospects will welcome hearing from you. And, when you are confident about your ability to provide value without expectations, you will feel good about your outreach and be excited about connecting with others.

As you continue to offer value, you will find that your ability to identify more and better ways to be valuable increases. Your “selling” efforts will be constantly reenergized. Eventually, these interactions will result in new business. This strategy, of course, takes time but the quality of these connections will lead to stronger, longer lasting relationships than those created using the “pushy” approach.[/wcm_restrict][wcm_nonmember]


Hi there! This article is available for free. Login or register as a StrategyDriven Personal Business Advisor Self-Guided Client by:

[reveal_quick_checkout id=”25489″ checkout_text=”Subscribing to the Self Guided Program – It’s Free!”]
 
[/wcm_nonmember]


About the Author

Larry KohnLarry Kohn has been helping professionals with their business development since 1983. He has conducted over 33,000 coaching consultations with professionals in real estate, law, accounting, financial planning, architecture, engineering, consulting and a myriad of other professions. He has coached professionals in over 1,000 firms – all designed to make their marketing efforts more targeted, successful and enjoyable. He is the developer of the newly release BizDevCoach web app, www.bizdevcoach.com. Reach him at larry@kohncommunications.com.

5 Ways Predictive Analytics Make or Break a CRM System

Size doesn’t matter: why predictive analytics prove your customer relationship management methods are likely falling short

 
For a sales-driven organization, it isn’t the size of your data that matters, it’s what you do with it. No longer a discretionary luxury, predictive analytics are now the name of the game for those who seek to utilize customer metrics in a meaningful way to establish a tremendous competitive advantage, gain notable market share and significantly boost bottom lines. In fact, according to the 2015 State of Sales Report published by Salesforce Research, “smart selling fueled by predictive analysis is expected to jump 77% among high performers,” throughout 2016. Not only that but high performers are also four times more likely to use predictive analytics.

[wcm_restrict]Just what exactly is predictive analysis? Simply put, it’s the ability to more precisely predict a customer’s future spending based on their past behaviors. Of course, there’s no way to actually predict the future but predictive analysis can give companies invaluable insight that can make or break a CRM system.

If you’re not using predictive analytics, your current CRM system is likely falling short in several areas. Here’s how predictive analytics can help:

1. Forecasting Likely Customer Behaviors
There’s an old saying in sales: “buyers are liars.” Unfortunately, salespeople are forced to enter notes based on what the customer tells them. Besides these basic notes that are often unreliable, it’s almost impossible for a CRM system to determine a consumer’s actual behavior.

However, predictive analytics software comes with a certain level of assumptions. In this case, the assumption is the future will continue to be like the past. Often, however, behaviors change. That’s why it’s critical to have a system that can not only change with your customers but also learn and adapt to their new actions to make predictive calculations based on the past, present and future behaviors.

2. Enhancing Customer Relationships
It’s very difficult to build a true customer relationship if you have no way of accessing and analyzing their prior behavior with your company. Unfortunately, a CRM system cannot automatically track customer actions. It relies heavily on manual human interaction and cultivation relying heavily on the accuracy of a salesperson’s notes, which are often less than desirable.

The most common use of predictive analytics is, in fact, to increase and improve customer relationships. The better you know your customer, the more sales you can ultimately make. Using sophisticated algorithms to reveal how your customer behaves allows you to also better communicate with your customer. For instance, isn’t it nice to hear your name when you walk in to your local coffee shop? Isn’t it nice that they already know what you’re drinking without you saying anything? On a larger scale, this is how predictive analytics enhance a company’s sales efforts. Many direct marketers have it figured it out, sending you offers in the mail that you are likely to actually want as opposed to the ones you consider junk. This is all done with predictive analytics. And, another great thing about predictive analytics data is that it doesn’t have to be “big” at all. In fact, sometimes the data can be just a small concentrated section of just a few hundred actions.

3. Maximizing Marketing Budget ROI
If you’re like most companies and have an actual marketing budget, however big or small, it’s best to first make sure the audience you’re targeting actually wants what you’re selling. On its best day, a CRM system can only give you an educated guess. If you want to maximize your marketing dollars, solely using a CRM platform to determine the best suited marketing audience is not the best direction. But, with predictive analytics, you can maximize your return on investment no matter the budget. For example, if you seek to spend $10,000 on a campaign for delivery to 10,000 customers or prospects, predictive analytics will curate that audience to deliver your message to 10,000 consumers that specifically want what you’re offering at the time. Conversely, CRM solutions alone have very limited filters that prevent a business owner from drill-down targeting the correct audience and, as a result, are undermining their ROI with opportunity loss.

4. Allowing Data-Driven Decisions
The core success benchmark of any company is its numbers. A CRM system cannot show you exact sales numbers broken down by each individual customer over time with any ease. A significant amount of training is usually involved in trying to properly access and formulate these tasks. This often requires a lot of time, which means less time spent making actual sales.

Fortunately, good predictive analytics software will allow you to specifically identify where all your money is being made and where the areas of your business are lacking. It should also be able to provide you with a specific customer spending list based on what you’re asking for. Adept systems can actually categorize all your customer spending and break it down for you in an easy to read format that allows you to properly make future predictions.

5. Formulating Offer Intelligence
Unlike a predictive analytics platform, CRM systems cannot recommend specific offers that are unique to customer spending habits. This is a huge downside in my opinion. It is very difficult to maintain and engage repeat customers without knowing what they want. CRM solutions are mainly a lead management system but, let’s be honest, who wants leads when you can have buyers?

Predictive analytics not only analyze customer actions and habits but also “learns” as it goes. For instance, when an online offer is sent out to customers, or even different offers sent to varying customer segments, a predictive analytics platform can tell you who opened a particular offer, who clicked through on that offer, who redeemed that offer and, when they did, how much that customer spent—including any upsells. The data can also be finely filtered down further to key metrics like which date and day of the week a customer redeemed a particular offer. With the rich data predictive analytics provides, customers can be sent highly meaningful offers tailored specifically to their needs and, as a result, companies can more readily build stronger customer relationships that bolster the bottom line.

Lack of quality data is usually the greatest barrier a sales-driven organization can face when deciding to implement predictive analytics. Getting the most out of a predictive analytics platform requires there is actually available data on customer spending habits, the attributes of the products or services they’re buying (other than the “people who buy this also but this” type of model), date ranges of their spending, and how much they spend on an average. Some demographic information wouldn’t hurt, either. If it’s really good, the predictive analytics platform will automatically track all your customer actions from start to finish. And, although it can be very difficult to find in current predictive analytics software, a really good system will also automatically capture this data for you to automatically create unique profiles of your individual customers. With this weapon in your proverbial sales arsenal, prepare to grow your sales revenue and overall company profitability in kind.[/wcm_restrict][wcm_nonmember]


Hi there! This article is available for free. Login or register as a StrategyDriven Personal Business Advisor Self-Guided Client by:

[reveal_quick_checkout id=”25489″ checkout_text=”Subscribing to the Self Guided Program – It’s Free!”]
 
[/wcm_nonmember]


About the Author

Lang SmithLang Smith is the founder of Cloud Signalytics – a first-of-its-kind predictive intelligence software platform helping major franchise auto dealerships create highly precise, individualized customer profiles to maximize sales. He may be reached online at www.cloudsignalytics.com.

Source: https://secure2.sfdcstatic.com/assets/pdf/misc/state-of-sales-report-salesforce.pdf

Leadership Lessons from the United States Naval Academy – Don’t Bilge Your Teammates

StrategyDriven Leadership Lessons from the United States Naval AcademyBilge (n): nonsense; worthless and vain matter
Bilge (v): to damage, to fail or expel a student

Dictionary.com

Effective teamwork demands that each team member value and respect the others with whom they are working. Nothing diminishes this more than when one team member openly attacks or in some way seeks to diminish the value and respect of another.[wcm_restrict plans=”25541, 25542, 25653″]

Bilging your teammate

How do people bilge their teammates? Bilging takes place in several forms and fashions some of which include:

  • publically airing out the shortcoming of a teammate
  • blaming others for team shortfalls
  • one upping a teammate publicly
  • taking credit for the actions of others
  • being a tattle tale especially if unsolicited

The team is only as strong as its weakest link

A team’s performance can only be as good as its lowest performing member. While one might feel some justification or gain a sense of personal importance by putting others down, the act itself only serves to disenfranchise the targeted individuals; diminishing their performance and risking the same of other team members who now fear that they will be subject to similar putdowns.

Be a leader

Teams succeed when team members value and respect each other. Value and respect is gained not by covering up for an individual’s shortcomings but by constructively helping them to recognize and overcome these challenges. As their performance improves, so too does that of the team. The weakest link is strengthened.

Not bilging a teammate is about being a team player and owning the team’s results as though they were your own. By coaching instead of bilging, you forfeit a momentary sense of personal satisfaction, importance, or superiority and instead embraces team-centric accountability that serves to strengthen the team and enhance its performance.

Final Thought…

Every team has stronger and weaker members. Regardless, all team members should help their teammates improve their performance using the appropriate feedback mechanisms that include the private, constructive correction of undesired behaviors as well as the public, positive reinforcement of desired behaviors.[/wcm_restrict][wcm_nonmember plans=”25541, 25542, 25653″]


Hi there! Gain access to this article with a FREE StrategyDriven Insights Library – Sample Subscription. It’s FREE Forever with No Credit Card Required.

Sign-up now for your FREE StrategyDriven Insights Library – Sample Subscription

In addition to receiving access to Leadership Lessons from the United States Naval Academy – Don’t Bilge Your Teammates, you’ll help advance your career and business programs through anytime, anywhere access to:

  • A sampling of dozens of Premium how-to documents across 7 business functions and 28 associated programs
  • 2,500+ Expert Contributor management and leadership articles
  • Expert advice provided via StrategyDriven’s Advisors Corner

Best of all, it’s FREE Forever with No Credit Card Required.

[/wcm_nonmember]


About the Author

is a StrategyDriven Principal and Class of 1992 graduate from the United States Naval Academy. For over twenty years, he has served as trusted advisor to executives and managers at dozens of Fortune 500 and smaller companies in the areas of management effectiveness, organizational development, and process improvement. To read Nathan’s complete biography, click here.