Archive for November, 2009

Promotional Products – Jelly Beans

It doesn’t have to be spring or Easter time for people to love getting and eating jelly beans! Did you know that you can purchase jelly beans with customized packaging as a giveaway for your business? Colored jelly beans come packaged in mini pillow packs with your exclusive label, in cellophane bags from The Jelly Bean Factory or with your label, and even in small, clear attractive plastic containers with a lid personalized for your business with a custom foil sticker.

Both kids and adults love jelly beans, so you’ll have no trouble giving these treats away. And, of course, the more you give away, the more exposure your business or brand will receive. You’ll probably have people approaching you and asking for them before you can even give them away! And then you’ll probably get more requests after they’re all gone, as well.

Depending on the packaging and personalization selected, jelly beans for promotional giveaways vary in pricing. They usually start out between one and two dollars per package. Of course, larger packages of jelly beans will cost a bit more, but the more you order, the lower the price. You’ll get discounts for larger quantities, so you can save money by purchasing more packages at one time.

Everyone loves these colorful candies. In traditional or gourmet flavors, these red, yellow, green, orange, purple, white, green, blue, pink, and let’s not forget black-which you either love or you hate-sweet, sugary, chewy treats are popular with people of every age. But they also make a very bold, eye-catching giveaway that can attract attention to your business or your brand. All those colors are very appealing!

Of course, personalized jelly beans don’t have to be used just for business giveaways. There are dozens of other reasons individuals or organizations might want to purchase customized packages of jelly beans, too. Churches and youth groups could have packages customized and then give them away to kids in the community. Politicians and others who want to get their name in the limelight could give away customized packages of jelly beans at fundraising events, parades, or when conducting meet-and-greets.

Police departments, fire departments, and hospitals could use packages of jelly beans as part of a larger safety campaign and outreach to children, giving them away during a safety presentation for the public or at the schools. Private schools who want to increase their enrolment could give them away as part of an awareness campaign to let parents know more about their schools. Even colleges and high schools could get jelly beans with customized packaging that includes their school and team logos to fire up school spirit!

You could use customized jelly beans as party favors for a wedding, shower, graduation, anniversary, family reunion, or even a birthday party-for children or adults. The possibilities really are quite endless. They are limited only by your own individual imagination.

Yes, there are at least as many different ways you could use personalized jelly beans as there are flavors of jelly beans today. And it seems like they are adding new flavors all the time-especially to the gourmet line. So just as this line of sweet and colorful candies keeps growing, so does the list of ways you can use promotional packages of jelly beans!

Rave On Promotional Products are a proud and leading supplier of printed promotional products in Australia with a vast range of quality items that can be printed or decorated to assist you in your next promotion or marketing program.Article Source:http://www.articlesbase.com/marketing-articles/promotional-products-jelly-beans-1522903.html

Non Stop Advertising with Promotional Calendars

Giving out promotional calendars used to be a normal part of business for holiday marketing purposes. It would serve as a thank you for the customers at the end of the year and was a holiday promotion technique. In the near past this habit has declined amongst different companies, but it is definitely a marketing strategy your business should implement.

The variety of promotional calendars is amazing; there are many sizes and styles in order to customize them to your customers needs. You can order little pocket sizes or wall calendars or a desk variety, this way everyone has a useful tool for their workspace.

These calendars are now done with exciting pictures and very dynamic imagery to capture just about anyone’s fancy. With incredible nature calendars, creatures, children, cars, sports and inspirational sayings, these calendars are just as nice as any you would pay for in the stores, but these are unique because they serve as a long lasting advertisement for your business.

The numbers of times you look at a calendar during a work day or stop to make a note on it is a high number. This is true for your customers also so when they pull out a promotional date book to write something down other people will see your business information. The same issues abound for the desk and wall calendars in an office, people coming and going will view them all the time and see your information.

The promotional calendar is one of the hardest working promotional items as it’s there every day of the year, not all promotional products can claim that type of exposure for your business. You should consider the strength of advertising offered by this product and its useful nature to give as thanks for your customers for the years past business and business to come.

 

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Article Source:http://www.articlesbase.com/marketing-articles/non-stop-advertising-with-promotional-calendars-1522987.html

When Profesionals Have to Sell

Most of the work I do is based around the training and development of sales people and sales managers who have specifically decided that sales is the career for them. Occasionally I am asked to provide sales training for groups whose main role is not to sell but to provide a service in a profession that they have chosen to follow for example law, accountancy or management consultancy – and that’s when the fun starts.

The first rule of training is not to have prisoners in the room – you know the people who just don’t want to be there – well; I now have a room full of professional prisoners. Their body language is particularly striking, if not in the foetal position, they certainly wish they were. So, why is this, why is sales training such an anathema to the professions? As I hand out their copies of the value-based, consultative selling program it is as if I was offering the “Del Boy” manual of dodgy car dealer selling. But this is how many professionals view selling – an arm twisting exercise using barely ethical means to coerce the customer into buying something they never wanted in the first place.

The truth about good consultative sales practice couldn’t be farther from this description.

? Working with the customer to help them solve complex business problems thereby adding value to their businesses.

? Becoming their trusted advisor – an independent business mind to be sought out for advice in challenging situations.

? An engaging and knowledgeable industry professional, regularly keeping them up to date with key developments and competitive information.

So, there is obviously a psychological aspect to the professions distaste for sale, and this does permeate throughout the activities that go with selling. As an aside, if you think you can avoid selling, think again. Most professionals have to do more and more selling as they rise up the organization and an inability to be proficient in this element of the role will become a serious block to further progress. So any sales training for professionals must include some work on beliefs and values as related to selling. Without this work, what follows next – up skilling in sales competence – will never be implemented, there will be no behavioural change. And without a behavioural change, there is nothing to show after the sales workshop.

Assuming we have laid the foundations for the behavioural change, how can we make the actual sales skills parts more relevant and acceptable to professional people? Well, as a mathematician, I am probably not from a background of your normal sales person and I certainly struggled with some of the techniques used by sale trainers to get me to sell. Especially excruciating is the role play done at the front of the class in plain view of all your peers. Think Christians, lions and Rome – you get the picture – I have seen grown men reduced to tears by aggressive sales trainers looking for blood.

So the approach I take is based on a logical flow, with plenty of discussion and reflection with the aim of each participant building their own personal action plan to succeed. And what does success look like? Firstly, there has to be a financial benefit, otherwise organizations wouldn’t pay for the training. But there are other ways that success can be measured for instance new client contacts, new areas of business and more opportunities to bid for work. Being able to set milestones and monitor progress towards more business is an important part of ensuring success in the training program. And what happens if some people are succeeding and some just cannot seem to drive additional business? What is the organizational response to the problem – more training, a stern warning or are there better ways to drive success (more of this later).

Back to the logical flow and the types topics that need to be covered in any selling skills program. The basics tend to be customer contact and building rapport, questioning and listening skills, presenting a proposal for change, objection handling, negotiating and closing. But here’s a piece of good news, closing is just part of the logical progression of a sale and doesn’t need too much work if the building blocks are in place earlier in the discussions.

The parts of sales training, often ignored, are around planning and really understanding the value you bring to your customers. In terms of planning, I like to think of it in four levels:

? Portfolio planning – looking at all your potential customers, how do you decide where to spend your time? Since as professionals we can only sell an hour of our time once (in theory, but I do understand that some professionals are Time Lords and can create multiple hours from a single hour!)

? At an account or individual customer level – what knowledge do you need to approach them, what areas of potential business could you expect and who do you contact?

? Opportunity level – so you have found a specific opportunity for your services, how do you manage this through to a successful conclusion, what strategy and tactics can you use?

? Call level – yes, even professional need to pick up the phone! How can you structure the call and how do you measure success when you put the phone down?

Most professionals I have spoken to don’t think like this, but at this point sales skills are as important as your professional skills, maybe more so.

Looking at the question of what value you bring to your customers, try answering these questions:

? Why you (you/your practice) – why should the customer use your services or not those of the competition.

? What’s your USP (Unique Selling Proposition) – can you crispy and clearly define this to your potential customers. How does this differ to the USP of your main competitors?

? How does your customer buy professional services – what parameters do they use to measure your offer?

? What value do your professional services give the customer’s business – all business purchases are driven by a business initiative created by a business need/problem. How clearly can you articulate the value you offering and the problem you are solving?

The question of value often comes back to the whole distaste for selling, normally covered by two approaches under the heading of marketing:

? If we get our branding right, and ensure all the literature has consistent colours, logos and messages, the customer will come to us.

? We don’t need to sell, we network at events and hand our business cards out.

Both ideas are fine, but at the end of the day someone still has to pick up the phone and talk to people. There is no getting away from this painful truth. And by the way, when you are on the phone or face to face with the customer, you will need to be selling!

The whole question of selling also encompasses the way practices are often organized in silos, with specific practice areas/individual professionals owning the customer. In presentations to groups of partners, I often ask “Who owns your customers”. Interestingly, they will often claim it is the practice, but actually this isn’t the case and leads to many problems around cross selling services into companies. I have often heard an individual in, say, litigation state that they won’t let their Intellectual Property people into their customers. Furthermore, what happens when someone leaves (where does the customer go?) and when recruiting are you expecting people to bring customers with them? This then opens into how CRM (Customer Relationship management) tools are use, if at all, to track potential customers over time.

In summary, professionals certainly have to sell, especially as they rise up the organization but they themselves are not well served by most sales training. Earlier in the article, I posed the question “what happens if some people are succeeding and some just cannot seem to drive additional business? What is the organizational response to the problem – more training, a stern warning or are there better ways to drive success.” My belief is that different professionals need to be treated as individuals and “one size fits all training is not appropriate”. IT is absolutely fine to cover the basics of the sales approach in a workshop, but the fine tuning of an individual’s approach has to take place in one-to-one coaching sessions following the training workshop. If professional practices are serious about developing their people (and hence their revenue streams), money spent on coaching is money well spent.

If you would like to discuss a different approach to the problem then please contact me, John Fowler, john@executive-coaching-services.co.uk for further details.

John is an executive coach, sales and management trainer who has worked with many companies in the field of selling services and solutions to corporate clients. John can be contacted at john@executive-coaching-services.co.uk and his site is <a rel="nofollow" href=Executive”>http://www.executive-coaching-services.co.uk>Executive Coaching Services.Article Source:http://www.articlesbase.com/marketing-articles/when-profesionals-have-to-sell-1519849.html

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