Following-up with Prospective Clients and Marketing Contacts
Author: Joe WoodardCreated: Mon Aug 26 09:25:48 2002 Consultant's Corner
Following-up with Prospective Clients and Marketing Contacts
A successful marketing campaign requires strategic follow-up procedures. Many
small business owners will be interested in your services and will call you
for more information, but will not purchase during the initial point of contact.
Use the following guidelines to maximize the value of each contact from a prospective
client:
Use a contact management or database software solution
to note the details of each conversation with a prospective client and to
schedule times to touch base.
Get complete contact information during the initial conversation
with a prospective client. Make sure you have the client's full name, business
name and phone number at the beginning of the conversation. If the prospect
gets distracted and ends the call abruptly, or if you get disconnected for
any reason, you will have at least enough information for a follow-up call.
At some point in the conversation, offer to mail information on your services
(e.g., brochures or a follow-up letter) and obtain a mailing address. As soon
as you have the mailing address, ask the client if they have an email address
and offer to email the information to them. Many small business owners are
inundated with direct mail and email marketing and are very protective of
their contact information. Gathering contact information gradually throughout
the conversation, and offering to send valuable materials to the prospect,
will encourage the client to provide you the information you need.
Send a monthly newsletter. You can create a simple newsletter
each month with information on small business management, QuickBooks tips,
new information from Intuit (e.g., changes made to QuickBooks with the latest
release or new solutions developed or acquired by Intuit), tax alerts, etc.
We recommend emailing the newsletter because doing so will save time and reduce
administrative costs. Include links in the newsletter to sites of possible
interest to small business owners, like press releases from Intuit, frequently
asked questions on the QuickBooks website, online magazine articles, etc.
Build as much value as possible into the newsletter to encourage your clients
and prospects to both read it regularly and to forward it to others.
Send emails to the prospects regularly. In the email,
re-state your understanding of their need and list the services you provide
to meet that need. Encourage them to read the email by keeping it short and
to the point and include a link to your website where they can read about
your services in more detail. If possible, include their first name in both
the text and the memo field to differentiate the follow-up emails from emailed
newsletters or broadcast email marketing.
Follow-up with existing clients once each quarter to offer
additional services. Classify your existing QuickBooks clients according to
the type of services performed and tailor follow-up mail or email accordingly.
Add the prospect to your mailing list so they will
receive any direct mail advertising you send.