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Forget the Little Mistakes

Guest post by: Robert Middleton

Article Overview: One thing you need to learn upfront is that making mistakes aren't going to sink your business. However, sitting in your living room making a million preparations to prevent mistakes, collapses businesses every day. So get out there. Try your idea. Mess up here and there. And read about others who admit their mistakes, here.

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Forget the Little Mistakes

In the most recent issue of Sun Magazine (my favorite magazine - great writing, no ads) was an interview with Studs Terkel. Terkel has written several books that are essentially an oral history of the United states in the last half of the 20th century.

His famous book, "Working," chronicled the daily work lives of ordinary people. And his 1984 book, "The Good War," won the Pulitzer Prize. Terkel is an American icon who has put his heart and soul into his life's work.

And Studs Terkel also makes mistakes.

For me, the most refreshing part of the interview was him admitting the technical mistakes he's made in taping the interviews:

Sun: Have you ever lost an interview because of a technical problem?

Terkel: Sure. I'm known for my ineptitude. That's the irony of the whole thing; they call me the "master of the tape recorder," but I haven't the faintest idea of what I'm doing. I'm just learning the electric typewriter. And I don't know what a computer is. You've got neocons and neoliberals: I'm a neo-Neanderthal.

That cracked me up.

When I think of all the technical mistakes I've made in my business, not to mention a zillion other small and not-so-small mistakes, it's nice to be reminded that you don't have to be perfect to be successful and to make a difference.

I've noticed that one of the biggest things stopping people from marketing themselves is obsessing about "doing it right." But I have the opposite advice: Do it wrong. Just try something and, like Studs Terkel, sooner or later you'll figure it out.

These imperfections or small mistakes will rarely sink a business. But getting so stuck in preparation that you never get started kills businesses every single day.

A recent Time Magazine cover story asserted that we worry about the wrong things. For instance, only one or two people are killed in the US each year by sharks. But hundreds are killed by deer (when we hit them in our cars). But did you ever see a TV show about "Beware the Killer Deer?"

In my Fast Track Marketing Model, I emphasize seven big things you need to focus on in order to market effectively.

Miss doing these and you're in deep trouble. And miss them we do, because we're too focused on the sharks.

Do you fall into any of the following mistake traps:

1. Not Having the Right Marketing Mindset

In our marketing we worry about trivial things when we need to focus on the bigger picture. We need to develop a marketing mindset that is focused on making a difference instead of worrying about rejection.

Instead of complaining how we can't find time to market or how our services are hard to explain, we need to adopt the mindset of the master marketers.

Their mindset is: My services are valuable. I will do what it takes to get the attention and interest of my prospects until they see the value as well.

2. Not Making Marketing a Game

Whenever you play a game you make mistakes. That's just part of the game. You drop the ball. You miss the goal. It's not a big deal, you just keep playing the best you can.

The big mistake we make in marketing is either not playing the game at all or not realizing that there even is a game. I see a lot of Independent Professionals running around the field with no idea who has the ball or where the goal is.

You need to understand the rules of the game and then commit to playing it to win. It becomes a lot more fun when you do.

3. Not Speaking the Language of Marketing

The bottom line of marketing is communication. It's saying the right things at the right time to the right people. But obsessing about the perfect word is not very productive.

Like the game of marketing, many of us don't even realize that there's a language or syntax you need to employ to get attention and interest from prospects.

Talk about who you work with, the problems they have and the solutions you offer and the words will take care of themselves.

4. Not Having a Powerful Marketing Message

One thing that still amazes me is how people obsess about their marketing message or "Audio Logo" but never try it out on real, live prospects.

A marketing message only makes sense in the context of an interaction or written communication with a prospect. Did they show interest? Did they respond?

Try out your marketing message on 50 people and you'll know if your message is working or not. Then fine tune.

5. Not Using Persuasive "Marketing Currency"

If people obsess about marketing messages, they agonize over written marketing communications. Is that the perfect word? What if there's a typo? What if I say if wrong?

But what we miss is the big picture of marketing communications - getting something out on a regular basis to prospects on your list. That builds credibility through visibility, even if you make a typo here and there.

Just ask yourself: What information would help my prospects? And then make it a priority to get it to them.

6. Not Implementing Effective Marketing Tactics

There are probably hundreds of different marketing tactics you could use to market yourself. From networking to television ads. What's the perfect tactic for your business? How can you know?

Guess what? There is no perfect tactic. So don't get caught in paralysis by analysis. Pick a tactic that you would actually enjoy doing and jump in with both feet.

My favorite tactics involve very direct communication with my prospects. I get them interested; I offer something of value; I ask for a response; I follow up and ask for the business.

7. Not Following a Marketing Action Plan

Ever notice how the same ideas tend to re-circulate in your brain over and over again? We don't take action because our plan never becomes real. Again, worried about making a mistake, we do nothing.

You don't figure out your whole plan and then write it down. In the process of writing it down, the plan becomes clearer and clearer. What's your goal, what are you going to do, when are you going to do it and what resources to you need? Then start.

Remember Goethe's famous couplet:

Whatever you can do or dream you can, begin it.

Boldness has genius, power and magic in it.

The More Clients Bottom Line: Don't let yourself be stopped by worrying about little mistakes. They'll happen despite our best efforts. Put your focus on avoiding the big mistakes and your marketing effectiveness will expand dramatically.

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Home > Marketing > Robert Middleton > Forget the Little Mistakes >
Article Tags: marketing mistakes, marketing plan, marketing plans, marketing strategies, marketing strategy, small business marketing

About the Author: Robert Middleton
RSS for Robert's articles - Visit Robert's website

Robert Middleton of Action Plan Marketing has been helping Independent Professionals attract more clients since 1984. Robert is the author of the online bestsellers, the InfoGuru Marketing Manual and the WebSite ToolKit. Publisher of the weekly More Clients eZine and blog, and host of the Fast Track Marketing Club, Robert has a subscriber of over 40,000 that get His More Clients weekly eZine. Get a copy of his Marketing Report: "The 5 Keys Strategies for Attracting More High-End Clients."



Click here to visit Robert's website
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More from Robert Middleton
The Questions Behind the Questions
Fire Ready Aim Marketing
Risking by Not Risking
The Secrets of Value Pricing
Forget the Little Mistakes


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