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	<title>Production Blog Reviews &#187; referral marketing</title>
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		<title>How to Thank Your Administrative Professional</title>
		<link>http://www.productionsencart.com/social-media/how-to-thank-your-administrative-professional</link>
		<comments>http://www.productionsencart.com/social-media/how-to-thank-your-administrative-professional#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 19 Apr 2010 18:03:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>cgseo</dc:creator>
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		<category><![CDATA[nyc]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[referral marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[related]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[support-staffer]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[ How to Thank Your Administrative Professional This content from: Duct Tape Marketing Read to the end because I&#8217;m offering a way for you to win $100 AMEX gift card for an administrative professional in your life. I bet you didn&#8217;t even know that this week, April 18-24 is Administrative Professionals Week . Well, frankly I didn&#8217;t either until I ran across a virtual thank you card site at www.ForEverythingYouDo.com that American Express put together. It&#8217;s a way a to create a “Thank You” heard around the nation for an assistant (virtual or otherwise), an office coordinator, a scheduler, and others—those people who keep the workplace running. Everyone who participates – besides expressing their gratitude – will also be entered to win a $50 American Express Gift Card as part of the “For Everything You Do” sweepstakes. (Two winners will be chosen at random every day, now through April 21st.) To spread the appreciation, American Express also asked me to give my readers an opportunity to win a $100 American Express Gift Card each business day of Administrative Professionals Week (Monday 4/19 – Friday 4/23). All you have to do to enter is write leave a comment about why the administrative professional or support staffer in your work life deserves a BIG thank you. Tell us who they are and how great they are and I&#8217;ll pick one winner from each day. Don&#8217;t wait, do it today and you&#8217;ll have more shots at a winner! Disclosure: American Express Open is a business partner of Duct Tape Marketing Related Posts: The Plum Card from American Express OPEN Personalized Cash Always Fits What Does American Express Hope to Accomplish? Chillin with Blue Man Group in NYC Speaking of Kate Spade Powered by Contextual Related Posts Like this post? Share it with others ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> How to Thank Your Administrative Professional This content from: Duct Tape Marketing Read to the end because I&#8217;m offering a way for you to win $100 AMEX gift card for an administrative professional in your life. I bet you didn&#8217;t even know that this week, April 18-24 is Administrative Professionals Week . Well, frankly I didn&#8217;t either until I ran across a virtual thank you card site at www.ForEverythingYouDo.com that American Express put together. It&#8217;s a way a to create a “Thank You” heard around the nation for an assistant (virtual or otherwise), an office coordinator, a scheduler, and others—those people who keep the workplace running. Everyone who participates – besides expressing their gratitude – will also be entered to win a $50 American Express Gift Card as part of the “For Everything You Do” sweepstakes. (Two winners will be chosen at random every day, now through April 21st.) To spread the appreciation, American Express also asked me to give my readers an opportunity to win a $100 American Express Gift Card each business day of Administrative Professionals Week (Monday 4/19 – Friday 4/23). All you have to do to enter is write leave a comment about why the administrative professional or support staffer in your work life deserves a BIG thank you. Tell us who they are and how great they are and I&#8217;ll pick one winner from each day. Don&#8217;t wait, do it today and you&#8217;ll have more shots at a winner! Disclosure: American Express Open is a business partner of Duct Tape Marketing Related Posts: The Plum Card from American Express OPEN Personalized Cash Always Fits What Does American Express Hope to Accomplish? Chillin with Blue Man Group in NYC Speaking of Kate Spade Powered by Contextual Related Posts Like this post? Share it with others </p>
<p><img src="http://www.productionsencart.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/3c3b757d57button.gif.gif" title="How to Thank Your Administrative Professional" alt="3c3b757d57button.gif How to Thank Your Administrative Professional" /></p>
<p>Continue reading here:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ducttapemarketing/nRUD/~3/RujUFlT3YNQ/" title="How to Thank Your Administrative Professional">How to Thank Your Administrative Professional</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Come Meet Me on the Road</title>
		<link>http://www.productionsencart.com/social-media/come-meet-me-on-the-road</link>
		<comments>http://www.productionsencart.com/social-media/come-meet-me-on-the-road#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 15 Apr 2010 12:25:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>cgseo</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Social Media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dallas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[follower]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[follower-winner]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[online]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[random]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[referral marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[road]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[small-business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.productionsencart.com/uncategorized/come-meet-me-on-the-road/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ Come Meet Me on the Road This content from: Duct Tape Marketing I read Jack Kerouac&#8217;s On The Road back in high school and I like it so much I&#8217;ve got a copy on my Kindle, er, iPad, just so I can grab a few pages any time I get a hankering for the road. I&#8217;ve got quite a few live, public and on the road events coming up over the next few months so I thought I would share some here in hopes that I can meet a few of my readers. (Some of the attendees at these events are getting advance copies of my new book The Referral Engine , out May 13th, but don&#8217;t tell anyone.) April 27th &#8211; Vancouver BC &#8211; Duct Tape Marketing Coach Live Discovery Session &#8211; http://bit.ly/dtmvancouver April 29th &#8211; Seattle WA &#8211; Master Builder&#8217;s Association Marketing Bootcamp &#8211; http://www.dtmwashington.com May 5th &#8211; Austin TX &#8211; Moxie Marketing and St Edward&#8217;s U &#8211; http://www.smallbizmarketingpro.com/ May 6th &#8211; Online &#8211; Marketing Profs &#8211; Social Goes Local Seminar &#8211; http://www.marketingprofs.com/marketing/online-seminars May 6th &#8211; Dallas TX &#8211; Social Media Club of Dallas &#8211; http://smcdallas08.eventbrite.com/ May 7th &#8211; Dallas TX &#8211; Duct Tape Marketing Coach Live Discover Session &#8211; http://bit.ly/dtmdallas May 8th &#8211; Dallas TX &#8211; eBay on Location &#8211; http://www.ebayonlocationevents.com/events/dallas &#8220;The air was soft, the stars so fine, the promise of every cobbled alley so great, that I thought I was in a dream.&#8221; &#8211; Jack Kerouac, On the Road Related Posts: Duct Tape Road Trips Duct Tape Marketing Authorized Coach Ranks Grow Again Is eBay a Small Business Marketing Tool? On the Road with Duct Tape Marketing Free Random Twitter Follower Winner Powered by Contextual Related Posts Like this post? Share it with others ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> Come Meet Me on the Road This content from: Duct Tape Marketing I read Jack Kerouac&#8217;s On The Road back in high school and I like it so much I&#8217;ve got a copy on my Kindle, er, iPad, just so I can grab a few pages any time I get a hankering for the road. I&#8217;ve got quite a few live, public and on the road events coming up over the next few months so I thought I would share some here in hopes that I can meet a few of my readers. (Some of the attendees at these events are getting advance copies of my new book The Referral Engine , out May 13th, but don&#8217;t tell anyone.) April 27th &#8211; Vancouver BC &#8211; Duct Tape Marketing Coach Live Discovery Session &#8211; http://bit.ly/dtmvancouver April 29th &#8211; Seattle WA &#8211; Master Builder&#8217;s Association Marketing Bootcamp &#8211; http://www.dtmwashington.com May 5th &#8211; Austin TX &#8211; Moxie Marketing and St Edward&#8217;s U &#8211; http://www.smallbizmarketingpro.com/ May 6th &#8211; Online &#8211; Marketing Profs &#8211; Social Goes Local Seminar &#8211; http://www.marketingprofs.com/marketing/online-seminars May 6th &#8211; Dallas TX &#8211; Social Media Club of Dallas &#8211; http://smcdallas08.eventbrite.com/ May 7th &#8211; Dallas TX &#8211; Duct Tape Marketing Coach Live Discover Session &#8211; http://bit.ly/dtmdallas May 8th &#8211; Dallas TX &#8211; eBay on Location &#8211; http://www.ebayonlocationevents.com/events/dallas &#8220;The air was soft, the stars so fine, the promise of every cobbled alley so great, that I thought I was in a dream.&#8221; &#8211; Jack Kerouac, On the Road Related Posts: Duct Tape Road Trips Duct Tape Marketing Authorized Coach Ranks Grow Again Is eBay a Small Business Marketing Tool? On the Road with Duct Tape Marketing Free Random Twitter Follower Winner Powered by Contextual Related Posts Like this post? Share it with others </p>
<p><img src="http://www.productionsencart.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/3c3b757d57button.gif.gif" title="Come Meet Me on the Road" alt="3c3b757d57button.gif Come Meet Me on the Road" /></p>
<p>Excerpt from:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ducttapemarketing/nRUD/~3/PCX5xz-kYvc/" title="Come Meet Me on the Road">Come Meet Me on the Road</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
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		<title>I Am Giving Away 250 Copies of My New Book for My 50th</title>
		<link>http://www.productionsencart.com/social-media/i-am-giving-away-250-copies-of-my-new-book-for-my-50th</link>
		<comments>http://www.productionsencart.com/social-media/i-am-giving-away-250-copies-of-my-new-book-for-my-50th#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Mar 2010 12:39:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>cgseo</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Social Media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[book]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Power]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[random]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[random-referral]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[referral marketing]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[ I Am Giving Away 250 Copies of My New Book for My 50th This content from: Duct Tape Marketing Want to help me celebrate my 50th birthday? As you may know, I have a new book coming out in May. The title of my new book is The Referral Engine &#8211; Teaching Your Business To Market Itself and it&#8217;s officially on pre-sale today. I wrote this book because the power of advertising and elaborate marketing campaigns is on the wane; word- of-mouth referrals are what drive business today. People trust the recommendation of a friend, family member, colleague, or even stranger with similar tastes over anything thrust at them by a faceless company. As a Duct Tape Marketing reader and follower I want to let you in on my special 50th birthday celebration. (I know that&#8217;s pretty lame, but I thought why not, you only turn 50 once.) Here&#8217;s the deal. The first 250 people that pre-order a copy of my new book will get a second copy, perhaps to refer to a friend, free. And, you&#8217;ll get that copy about two weeks before anyone else can buy it. So, you give me a gift by purchasing a book and I give you a gift in return. Let&#8217;s call it a party! All you have to do to join the party is: a) Visit The Referral Engine web site at http://referralenginebook.com and choose your favorite online retailer and pre-order the book. (free book can only be shipped to US addresses and does not include Kindle orders.) You can buy your book directly from one of the following retailers &#8211; Barnes &#038; Noble , Amazon , 800-CEO-READ or Indie Bound b) Send a copy of your receipt to &#8211; ReferralEngineBook@gmail.com c) Once you do you will receive a URL to fill in the shipping details for your free book (Should arrive around April 30th or so) d) Feel free to spread the word to friends, colleagues, Facebook fans and Twitter followers The early reviews for the book are very positive (I have a free chapter on the site if you would like to review before pre-ordering) and I think this topic is timeless and very important for marketers and birthday partiers alike! &#8220;Who knew that there&#8217;s a science to referrals? Not I&#8211;but now that I know, I want you to benefit from John&#8217;s expertise. In a sense, a cover blurb is the ultimate referral, and I&#8217;m here to blurb this book because it will help you succeed in business.&#8221; Guy Kawasaki co-founder Alltop Thanks for all of your past and future support Related Posts: Duct Tape Book Review - Shipping Now Free Friday Follow Giveaway #dtmfff Random Twitter Follower to Get Book and T-shirt The Referral Multiplier Effect A Couple of Random Referral Ideas Powered by Contextual Related Posts Like this post? Share it with others ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> I Am Giving Away 250 Copies of My New Book for My 50th This content from: Duct Tape Marketing Want to help me celebrate my 50th birthday? As you may know, I have a new book coming out in May. The title of my new book is The Referral Engine &#8211; Teaching Your Business To Market Itself and it&#8217;s officially on pre-sale today. I wrote this book because the power of advertising and elaborate marketing campaigns is on the wane; word- of-mouth referrals are what drive business today. People trust the recommendation of a friend, family member, colleague, or even stranger with similar tastes over anything thrust at them by a faceless company. As a Duct Tape Marketing reader and follower I want to let you in on my special 50th birthday celebration. (I know that&#8217;s pretty lame, but I thought why not, you only turn 50 once.) Here&#8217;s the deal. The first 250 people that pre-order a copy of my new book will get a second copy, perhaps to refer to a friend, free. And, you&#8217;ll get that copy about two weeks before anyone else can buy it. So, you give me a gift by purchasing a book and I give you a gift in return. Let&#8217;s call it a party! All you have to do to join the party is: a) Visit The Referral Engine web site at http://referralenginebook.com and choose your favorite online retailer and pre-order the book. (free book can only be shipped to US addresses and does not include Kindle orders.) You can buy your book directly from one of the following retailers &#8211; Barnes &#038; Noble , Amazon , 800-CEO-READ or Indie Bound b) Send a copy of your receipt to &#8211; ReferralEngineBook@gmail.com c) Once you do you will receive a URL to fill in the shipping details for your free book (Should arrive around April 30th or so) d) Feel free to spread the word to friends, colleagues, Facebook fans and Twitter followers The early reviews for the book are very positive (I have a free chapter on the site if you would like to review before pre-ordering) and I think this topic is timeless and very important for marketers and birthday partiers alike! &#8220;Who knew that there&#8217;s a science to referrals? Not I&#8211;but now that I know, I want you to benefit from John&#8217;s expertise. In a sense, a cover blurb is the ultimate referral, and I&#8217;m here to blurb this book because it will help you succeed in business.&#8221; Guy Kawasaki co-founder Alltop Thanks for all of your past and future support Related Posts: Duct Tape Book Review - Shipping Now Free Friday Follow Giveaway #dtmfff Random Twitter Follower to Get Book and T-shirt The Referral Multiplier Effect A Couple of Random Referral Ideas Powered by Contextual Related Posts Like this post? Share it with others </p>
<p><img src="http://www.productionsencart.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/3c3b757d57button.gif.gif" title="I Am Giving Away 250 Copies of My New Book for My 50th" alt="3c3b757d57button.gif I Am Giving Away 250 Copies of My New Book for My 50th" /></p>
<p>Go here to read the rest:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ducttapemarketing/nRUD/~3/jWhz3G5GR1E/" title="I Am Giving Away 250 Copies of My New Book for My 50th">I Am Giving Away 250 Copies of My New Book for My 50th</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Use Your Neighbors and Partners to Build Your List</title>
		<link>http://www.productionsencart.com/social-media/use-your-neighbors-and-partners-to-build-your-list</link>
		<comments>http://www.productionsencart.com/social-media/use-your-neighbors-and-partners-to-build-your-list#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 15 Mar 2010 17:08:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>cgseo</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Social Media]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[referral marketing]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[ Use Your Neighbors and Partners to Build Your List This content from: Duct Tape Marketing From the WikiPedia: Referral marketing is a structured and systematic process that maximizes word of mouth potential. Referral marketing does this by encouraging, informing, promoting and rewarding customers and contacts to think and talk as much as possible about their supplier, their company, product and service and the value and benefit the supplier brings to them and people they know. So referral marketing is really all about relationships you foster with people, and how those people remember you when they talk to anyone that might need your products or services. If you’ve got a storefront or business that serves a certain location (even if you don’t, read on this applies to you as well), your number one goal is to get traffic to that location, right? And hopefully you’ve built good relationships with the business owners around you, or are willing to. So today, I’m going to talk about how your neighboring businesses can use their email list to refer business to you, and how you can do the same for them. Here is a great example of how 4 local businesses can collectively refer customers to each other : You have a retail business in a neighborhood where there are other retailers, service businesses or restaurants where people visit. In this case a restaurant called Nova Bar. The product or service that you sell has complementary (maybe even competitive) products offered by other businesses in the area. In this example this particular restaurant also included another restaurant in their email campaign. You can’t eat at the same restaurant every day, right? You’ve been collecting email addresses and communicating to your recipients on a regular basis. Here’s one way to make it happen: Step 1. Approach your neighboring businesses and tell them that you’ve got an idea that will collectively help all of you get more business. Step 2. Find out how many email addresses each business has. You’ll want them to be close to the same because if one is 10x bigger than the others everyone else will benefit from the big guy but they might not benefit in the same way. That said, if this does happen, maybe the businesses with smaller lists can make up for it by mailing a few more times. Step 3. Create separate email campaigns where the FROM LABEL is from each list owner. If you are doing the mailing to your list it should come FROM your business, if your neighbor is doing the mailing to her list it should come FROM her business. Step 4. Your message should include a paragraph explaining why you’re sending this email. For example: “The merchants of South Beach all got together and decided that you need to know about everything that’s going on. So opt-in to all of these lists and be the first to know. Try giving an incentive or coupon to any new people who signed up to each list to motivate them even more to join! Step 5. In this example you can see that there are links to each of the business’s opt-in forms. Avoid sending them directly to a home page unless the opt-in form is easy to spot. Make sure you also tell your recipients what new registrants can expect, like weekly specials or “email only” discounts. Also include an image or logo for each business. Other ideas for using email marketing as a referral tool: If you don’t want to use this as a “list building” tool and each local business just wants to give a great offer, go for it! Make sure you send them directly to a page where the offer is displayed prominently. If you’re business isn’t “locally oriented” but you have complementary business partners, you can still follow the same general steps. Partner up with them and send emails to your respective email lists about your partners, ask them to do the same. You can also use the page that you send people after they opt-in to your list, and include your partners/neighbors offers or links, and they can do the same for you. Bottom line: keep each other honest. Join each other’s lists and make sure all of you are participating. Agreeing to help businesses build their lists is going to help traffic to everyone’s business. And that’s what referral marketing is all about in the long run. Janine Popick is the CEO and co-founder of VerticalResponse (Inc. 5000 2006-2009). She also is VerticalResponse&#8217;s CEB ( Chief Executive Blogger ) and won the 2006 ClickZ Best Marketing Blog Award, the 2007 Stevie Award for Best Blog, a 2008 SIIA Codie Finalist for best blog and 2009 Stevie Finalist for Best Blog. Related Posts: Track Your Email Marketing Efforts with Swiftpage The right list is a big piece of the puzzle Email Marketing Still a Great Small Business Tool How to Boost Your Customer Referrals in 7 Simple Steps Vertical Response adds multi channel tool Powered by Contextual Related Posts Like this post? Share it with others ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> Use Your Neighbors and Partners to Build Your List This content from: Duct Tape Marketing From the WikiPedia: Referral marketing is a structured and systematic process that maximizes word of mouth potential. Referral marketing does this by encouraging, informing, promoting and rewarding customers and contacts to think and talk as much as possible about their supplier, their company, product and service and the value and benefit the supplier brings to them and people they know. So referral marketing is really all about relationships you foster with people, and how those people remember you when they talk to anyone that might need your products or services. If you’ve got a storefront or business that serves a certain location (even if you don’t, read on this applies to you as well), your number one goal is to get traffic to that location, right? And hopefully you’ve built good relationships with the business owners around you, or are willing to. So today, I’m going to talk about how your neighboring businesses can use their email list to refer business to you, and how you can do the same for them. Here is a great example of how 4 local businesses can collectively refer customers to each other : You have a retail business in a neighborhood where there are other retailers, service businesses or restaurants where people visit. In this case a restaurant called Nova Bar. The product or service that you sell has complementary (maybe even competitive) products offered by other businesses in the area. In this example this particular restaurant also included another restaurant in their email campaign. You can’t eat at the same restaurant every day, right? You’ve been collecting email addresses and communicating to your recipients on a regular basis. Here’s one way to make it happen: Step 1. Approach your neighboring businesses and tell them that you’ve got an idea that will collectively help all of you get more business. Step 2. Find out how many email addresses each business has. You’ll want them to be close to the same because if one is 10x bigger than the others everyone else will benefit from the big guy but they might not benefit in the same way. That said, if this does happen, maybe the businesses with smaller lists can make up for it by mailing a few more times. Step 3. Create separate email campaigns where the FROM LABEL is from each list owner. If you are doing the mailing to your list it should come FROM your business, if your neighbor is doing the mailing to her list it should come FROM her business. Step 4. Your message should include a paragraph explaining why you’re sending this email. For example: “The merchants of South Beach all got together and decided that you need to know about everything that’s going on. So opt-in to all of these lists and be the first to know. Try giving an incentive or coupon to any new people who signed up to each list to motivate them even more to join! Step 5. In this example you can see that there are links to each of the business’s opt-in forms. Avoid sending them directly to a home page unless the opt-in form is easy to spot. Make sure you also tell your recipients what new registrants can expect, like weekly specials or “email only” discounts. Also include an image or logo for each business. Other ideas for using email marketing as a referral tool: If you don’t want to use this as a “list building” tool and each local business just wants to give a great offer, go for it! Make sure you send them directly to a page where the offer is displayed prominently. If you’re business isn’t “locally oriented” but you have complementary business partners, you can still follow the same general steps. Partner up with them and send emails to your respective email lists about your partners, ask them to do the same. You can also use the page that you send people after they opt-in to your list, and include your partners/neighbors offers or links, and they can do the same for you. Bottom line: keep each other honest. Join each other’s lists and make sure all of you are participating. Agreeing to help businesses build their lists is going to help traffic to everyone’s business. And that’s what referral marketing is all about in the long run. Janine Popick is the CEO and co-founder of VerticalResponse (Inc. 5000 2006-2009). She also is VerticalResponse&#8217;s CEB ( Chief Executive Blogger ) and won the 2006 ClickZ Best Marketing Blog Award, the 2007 Stevie Award for Best Blog, a 2008 SIIA Codie Finalist for best blog and 2009 Stevie Finalist for Best Blog. Related Posts: Track Your Email Marketing Efforts with Swiftpage The right list is a big piece of the puzzle Email Marketing Still a Great Small Business Tool How to Boost Your Customer Referrals in 7 Simple Steps Vertical Response adds multi channel tool Powered by Contextual Related Posts Like this post? Share it with others </p>
<p><img src="http://www.productionsencart.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/3c3b757d57button.gif.gif" title="Use Your Neighbors and Partners to Build Your List" alt="3c3b757d57button.gif Use Your Neighbors and Partners to Build Your List" /></p>
<p>Read more here:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ducttapemarketing/nRUD/~3/8dBu7VSH2mg/" title="Use Your Neighbors and Partners to Build Your List">Use Your Neighbors and Partners to Build Your List</a></p>
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		<title>What is Make A Referral Monday?</title>
		<link>http://www.productionsencart.com/social-media/what-is-make-a-referral-monday</link>
		<comments>http://www.productionsencart.com/social-media/what-is-make-a-referral-monday#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 15 Mar 2010 12:42:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>cgseo</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Social Media]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[make a referral week]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[related]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[ Share What is Make A Referral Monday? This content from: Duct Tape Marketing Last week&#8217;s Make a Referral Week , an event designed to generate over 1000 referrals for 1000 small businesses, was a big success in terms of bringing a focus on the act of making referrals, but why stop at a week. Making referrals is a great practice all year long. Please join me in kicking off something I call Make a Referral Monday . The idea is to bring the practice of making referrals into focus every week, all year long. One of the ways to keep this idea alive and top of mind is to use the awesome reach of Twitter as a weekly reminder and accountability tool. If you participate on Twitter you are probably aware of something called Follow Friday. Follow Friday asks folks to share the names of people on Twitter that they like to follow, with the idea that other might as well. Follow Friday participants use what’s called a hashtag to designate their Follow Friday listing – #FF ( More on Twitter hashtag use here ) To participate in Make a Referral Monday (#marm) I would like ask you to a) make a referral and b) tell the Twitter world about it using #marm as a hashtag each and every Monday. Something like: I just referred @AcmePrinting to my BFFs at @ZetaGraphics both do awesome work #marm I think we have the ability to create a bit of a movement out of the act of making referrals. Spread the word, retweet this post and make those referrals! Related Posts: It Is Make a Referral Week! Making Referrals As a Job Creation Engine Rosy Monday is Strategic Planning Day Have You Made Your Referral? Free Friday Follow Winner 2-20 Powered by Contextual Related Posts Like this post? Share it with others ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> Share What is Make A Referral Monday? This content from: Duct Tape Marketing Last week&#8217;s Make a Referral Week , an event designed to generate over 1000 referrals for 1000 small businesses, was a big success in terms of bringing a focus on the act of making referrals, but why stop at a week. Making referrals is a great practice all year long. Please join me in kicking off something I call Make a Referral Monday . The idea is to bring the practice of making referrals into focus every week, all year long. One of the ways to keep this idea alive and top of mind is to use the awesome reach of Twitter as a weekly reminder and accountability tool. If you participate on Twitter you are probably aware of something called Follow Friday. Follow Friday asks folks to share the names of people on Twitter that they like to follow, with the idea that other might as well. Follow Friday participants use what’s called a hashtag to designate their Follow Friday listing – #FF ( More on Twitter hashtag use here ) To participate in Make a Referral Monday (#marm) I would like ask you to a) make a referral and b) tell the Twitter world about it using #marm as a hashtag each and every Monday. Something like: I just referred @AcmePrinting to my BFFs at @ZetaGraphics both do awesome work #marm I think we have the ability to create a bit of a movement out of the act of making referrals. Spread the word, retweet this post and make those referrals! Related Posts: It Is Make a Referral Week! Making Referrals As a Job Creation Engine Rosy Monday is Strategic Planning Day Have You Made Your Referral? Free Friday Follow Winner 2-20 Powered by Contextual Related Posts Like this post? Share it with others </p>
<p><img src="http://www.productionsencart.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/3c3b757d57button.gif.gif" title="What is Make A Referral Monday?" alt="3c3b757d57button.gif What is Make A Referral Monday?" /></p>
<p>Read more here:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ducttapemarketing/nRUD/~3/_zScnOfqvys/" title="What is Make A Referral Monday?">What is Make A Referral Monday?</a></p>
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		<title>How to Boost Your Customer Referrals in 7 Simple Steps</title>
		<link>http://www.productionsencart.com/social-media/how-to-boost-your-customer-referrals-in-7-simple-steps</link>
		<comments>http://www.productionsencart.com/social-media/how-to-boost-your-customer-referrals-in-7-simple-steps#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 12 Mar 2010 13:33:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>cgseo</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Social Media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[business.com]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[daniel kehrer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fitness]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[percentage]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Referral]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[referrals]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[relationships]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[ How to Boost Your Customer Referrals in 7 Simple Steps This content from: Duct Tape Marketing This post is a special Make a Referral Week guest post featuring education on the subject of referrals and word of mouth marketing and making 1000 referrals to 1000 small businesses &#8211; check it out at Make a Referral Week 2010 Customer referrals really rock as a cost-effective way to gain new business and regain old customers. But how do you generate more referrals…higher quality referrals? And how can you squeeze more mileage out of the referrals that you’ve got? The folks who run my fitness club are masters at referral marketing. They’re constantly running a promotion for referring new members with discounts, free training or free stuff. Whether I’m walking in the door, opening my mail or looking online, I’m barraged with signs, banners, stickers and mailers encouraging referrals with free passes, discounts, goodies and even cash. We all know the magic of referrals, which offer instant credibility. So why don’t more small business owners use referrals effectively? Mainly because it’s harder than it looks. For one thing, referrals come in different forms and flavors. If someone merely provides you a name and email address, that’s low-grade referral. But if a customer actively talks up your product or service, sets up a meeting or brings the prospect in the door, that’s a Grade A referral. At www.business.com we see big companies taking customer referrals very seriously. Many have turned it into a science of modeling, calculating and tracking a Net Promoter Score (NPS). At its most basic, the NPS attempts to measure how likely it is that a customer would recommend a business, product or service to a friend or colleague. “Promoters” are your most loyally enthusiastic customers – the regulars who also refer others to help fuel your business growth. “Passives” are happy, but not enthusiastic and are easily attracted to a better deal elsewhere. “Detractors” are unhappy customers who can hurt your sales with negative word-of-mouth. The NPS is determined by taking the percentage of customers who are promoters and subtracting the percentage who are detractors. An equal amount of each gets you an NPS of zero. Here are seven steps to getting more and better referrals, and raising your net promoter score: Step 1 – Create a referral-generation plan: Referrals are not automatic. Some “just happen,” but most occur because you do something to trigger it. Some business owners assume that a great product or terrific customer service will generate referrals by default. Not so. You have to learn to ask, and make sure employees are on board as well. Most customers are open to being asked for referrals. Some even appreciate the opportunity to tell friends, family and associates about something good they’ve discovered. Referral tip: The worst time to ask for a referral is at the cash register or when you present a bill. Look for opportunities earlier or later in the process when customers are more receptive. Step 2 – Provide support: Don’t ask customers to recommend you to others without offering them some backup. It can be as simple as a supply of your business cards, or a link to a special page on your website. Or it could be a brochure, your latest newsletter or some other type of printed material that describes what you do and can reinforce the referral. Step 3 – Offer incentives: But incentives can be tricky. The type of incentive you offer must fit with the kind of business you run. It could be a discount, service credits, an upgrade, a free item or some other trigger that will entice clients to provide referrals. Don’t be afraid to test offers to find out what works best. Communicate details of your referral program to your best customers through whatever means you have available, including a blog, newsletter, email or customer mailings. And be sure to thank customers when they make referrals. Step 4 – Ask for the right information: Getting a name and number isn’t really a referral at all. It’s just a lead. Use a referral form, checklist or web-based system to capture details that will make the referral more valuable. The best referrals are where a customer actually facilitates a meeting, visit or purchase by the referred person, in person, by email or otherwise. This makes the customer an active agent on your behalf. Step 5 – Target your most influential customers: Seek referrals first from your most influential customers, especially if your resources are limited. These might not actually be your best customers, but they are the people whose opinions would carry the most weight with others in your industry, community or customer base. By targeting these customers, you have a highly focused effort with a good chance to generate the highest quality referrals. Step 6 – Target related businesses: The health care profession is one of the most adept at fostering referrals between complementary disciplines – specialists, imaging services, physical therapists, medical equipment suppliers and others. Consider the same strategy yourself. Contact businesses that provide complementary services to your own and ask for referrals. Step 7 – Build your relationships: This takes time, but it’s critical because many of your most influential customers won’t provide referrals until you gain their complete trust. You’ll want to treat each customer contact as if it’s critical to your next referral. Through each sales, marketing or customer service “touch” you are building a foundation of trust that that will one day lead to a valuable referral. Daniel Kehrer is Editor and Director of Content Development for Business.com , the world’s leading B2B search engine and knowledge site, and writes the What Works for Business blog on Business.com Related Posts: Design and Operate a Referral System Cultivate a Culture For Referrals Getting Referrals is only 1/2 of the game Educate Your Referral Sources The Ultimate Referral System in 7 Steps Powered by Contextual Related Posts Like this post? Share it with others ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> How to Boost Your Customer Referrals in 7 Simple Steps This content from: Duct Tape Marketing This post is a special Make a Referral Week guest post featuring education on the subject of referrals and word of mouth marketing and making 1000 referrals to 1000 small businesses &#8211; check it out at Make a Referral Week 2010 Customer referrals really rock as a cost-effective way to gain new business and regain old customers. But how do you generate more referrals…higher quality referrals? And how can you squeeze more mileage out of the referrals that you’ve got? The folks who run my fitness club are masters at referral marketing. They’re constantly running a promotion for referring new members with discounts, free training or free stuff. Whether I’m walking in the door, opening my mail or looking online, I’m barraged with signs, banners, stickers and mailers encouraging referrals with free passes, discounts, goodies and even cash. We all know the magic of referrals, which offer instant credibility. So why don’t more small business owners use referrals effectively? Mainly because it’s harder than it looks. For one thing, referrals come in different forms and flavors. If someone merely provides you a name and email address, that’s low-grade referral. But if a customer actively talks up your product or service, sets up a meeting or brings the prospect in the door, that’s a Grade A referral. At www.business.com we see big companies taking customer referrals very seriously. Many have turned it into a science of modeling, calculating and tracking a Net Promoter Score (NPS). At its most basic, the NPS attempts to measure how likely it is that a customer would recommend a business, product or service to a friend or colleague. “Promoters” are your most loyally enthusiastic customers – the regulars who also refer others to help fuel your business growth. “Passives” are happy, but not enthusiastic and are easily attracted to a better deal elsewhere. “Detractors” are unhappy customers who can hurt your sales with negative word-of-mouth. The NPS is determined by taking the percentage of customers who are promoters and subtracting the percentage who are detractors. An equal amount of each gets you an NPS of zero. Here are seven steps to getting more and better referrals, and raising your net promoter score: Step 1 – Create a referral-generation plan: Referrals are not automatic. Some “just happen,” but most occur because you do something to trigger it. Some business owners assume that a great product or terrific customer service will generate referrals by default. Not so. You have to learn to ask, and make sure employees are on board as well. Most customers are open to being asked for referrals. Some even appreciate the opportunity to tell friends, family and associates about something good they’ve discovered. Referral tip: The worst time to ask for a referral is at the cash register or when you present a bill. Look for opportunities earlier or later in the process when customers are more receptive. Step 2 – Provide support: Don’t ask customers to recommend you to others without offering them some backup. It can be as simple as a supply of your business cards, or a link to a special page on your website. Or it could be a brochure, your latest newsletter or some other type of printed material that describes what you do and can reinforce the referral. Step 3 – Offer incentives: But incentives can be tricky. The type of incentive you offer must fit with the kind of business you run. It could be a discount, service credits, an upgrade, a free item or some other trigger that will entice clients to provide referrals. Don’t be afraid to test offers to find out what works best. Communicate details of your referral program to your best customers through whatever means you have available, including a blog, newsletter, email or customer mailings. And be sure to thank customers when they make referrals. Step 4 – Ask for the right information: Getting a name and number isn’t really a referral at all. It’s just a lead. Use a referral form, checklist or web-based system to capture details that will make the referral more valuable. The best referrals are where a customer actually facilitates a meeting, visit or purchase by the referred person, in person, by email or otherwise. This makes the customer an active agent on your behalf. Step 5 – Target your most influential customers: Seek referrals first from your most influential customers, especially if your resources are limited. These might not actually be your best customers, but they are the people whose opinions would carry the most weight with others in your industry, community or customer base. By targeting these customers, you have a highly focused effort with a good chance to generate the highest quality referrals. Step 6 – Target related businesses: The health care profession is one of the most adept at fostering referrals between complementary disciplines – specialists, imaging services, physical therapists, medical equipment suppliers and others. Consider the same strategy yourself. Contact businesses that provide complementary services to your own and ask for referrals. Step 7 – Build your relationships: This takes time, but it’s critical because many of your most influential customers won’t provide referrals until you gain their complete trust. You’ll want to treat each customer contact as if it’s critical to your next referral. Through each sales, marketing or customer service “touch” you are building a foundation of trust that that will one day lead to a valuable referral. Daniel Kehrer is Editor and Director of Content Development for Business.com , the world’s leading B2B search engine and knowledge site, and writes the What Works for Business blog on Business.com Related Posts: Design and Operate a Referral System Cultivate a Culture For Referrals Getting Referrals is only 1/2 of the game Educate Your Referral Sources The Ultimate Referral System in 7 Steps Powered by Contextual Related Posts Like this post? Share it with others </p>
<p><img src="http://www.productionsencart.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/3c3b757d57button.gif.gif" title="How to Boost Your Customer Referrals in 7 Simple Steps" alt="3c3b757d57button.gif How to Boost Your Customer Referrals in 7 Simple Steps" /></p>
<p>Read more:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ducttapemarketing/nRUD/~3/zmtlEtsZy50/" title="How to Boost Your Customer Referrals in 7 Simple Steps">How to Boost Your Customer Referrals in 7 Simple Steps</a></p>
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		<title>Is It Time To Practice a Little Selfish Networking</title>
		<link>http://www.productionsencart.com/social-media/is-it-time-to-practice-a-little-selfish-networking</link>
		<comments>http://www.productionsencart.com/social-media/is-it-time-to-practice-a-little-selfish-networking#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 12 Mar 2010 13:29:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>cgseo</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Social Media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[attention]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[facebook]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[neighbor]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[network]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[networking]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[people]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[referral marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[virtual]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[ Is It Time To Practice a Little Selfish Networking This content from: Duct Tape Marketing This post is a special Make a Referral Week guest post featuring education on the subject of referrals and word of mouth marketing and making 1000 referrals to 1000 small businesses &#8211; check it out at Make a Referral Week 2010 You know him. He&#8217;s the perfect networker. He&#8217;s at every event. He&#8217;s a brilliant conversationalist. He&#8217;d give you the shirt off his back. He follows up. He keeps his commitments. He&#8217;s always happy to make an introduction. And yet he&#8217;s always broke. He drinks water at every event. He skips the meal if that&#8217;s an option. He&#8217;ll spend hours on Twitter doing essentially nothing, but won&#8217;t spend $50 for a tool that will actually help his business. There&#8217;s always a hint of desperation hidden in his voice (or his blog posts) because his business really isn&#8217;t doing that well. He&#8217;s drunk the networking &#038; social media Kool-Aid. It&#8217;s a poison, and if you&#8217;re not careful, you might easily fall victim to it too. Networking is fun. Furthermore, there&#8217;s generally no rejection in networking. People can succeed at networking even if they&#8217;re not succeeding in their business. And if you&#8217;re any good at it at all, occasionally it will work and actually generate you some business. &#8220;See? Networking works!&#8221; That becomes a validation of whatever you&#8217;ve been doing. It doesn&#8217;t matter that if you did things a little differently, you could have had ten times the results with the same amount of effort – what you&#8217;re doing &#8220;works&#8221;. It&#8217;s an addiction. And it&#8217;s an insidious one at that. Why? Because… More networking is not necessarily a good thing. First off, it can pull your attention and financial resources away from other, more important things. Secondly, more networking means more exposure of anything in your business or relationship management practices that&#8217;s not absolutely rock solid. Now I know you&#8217;ve all heard that &#8220;givers gain&#8221; – that you should give first in a networking context, without thinking about what&#8217;s in it for you. I&#8217;m not going to disagree with that…I&#8217;m going to qualify that, and I&#8217;m going to tell you that&#8230; It&#8217;s OK to be selfish sometimes when it comes to networking, or at least to appear that way. Let&#8217;s look at a few facts: · In order to take care of others, you must take care of yourself. On a plane, they tell you to put your mask on first – you can&#8217;t help your child if you&#8217;re unconscious. The more resources you have at your disposal – money, time, connections, etc. – the better you can be of service to the people you know. &#8220;Love your neighbor as yourself&#8221; requires you to first love yourself. Perhaps spend less time networking and more time becoming someone that people would want to network with. · Time is a zero-sum game. 24 hours, 7 days…that&#8217;s it…same as everybody else. An hour you&#8217;re spending networking is an hour you&#8217;re not spending with your current clients, your employees, your close friends, your family, or personal development. Sure, networking is rewarding, but really think about this when you consider attending a particular event or whether to spend an hour on Facebook – is it more rewarding in the long run than all of the other things you could be doing with your time? You can&#8217;t help everybody. · Your networking contacts are not the most important people in your life or your business, even for referrals. Who really gives you the most referrals (or at least the best ones)? New networking contacts? Or your current happy customers? If it&#8217;s not your current customers, &#8220;you&#8217;re doing it wrong.&#8221; The single most important thing you can do to drive referrals is to make sure your current customers are not just satisfied, but RAVING FANS. And your employees are what make your business possible. In most cases, clients are more easily replaced than good employees. And your family and close friends? They&#8217;re what make it all worthwhile. Don&#8217;t ever sacrifice those relationships on the altar of networking. · If your business isn&#8217;t solid, your network is a house of cards. More exposure means exposing the weaknesses as well as the strengths. If you&#8217;re stretched so thin that you can&#8217;t even begin to keep up with all the little commitments you make &#8212; &#8220;Sure , I&#8217;ll get that over to you&#8221; or that stack of &#8220;let&#8217;s talk next month&#8221; people – then why are you spending your time meeting a lot of new people? Do you really think all those new people will create more value for you (or that you&#8217;ll be able to create value for them) greater than those opportunities that are already in front of you? I&#8217;ll be the first to admit – I&#8217;m terrible about this. I get massively over-extended, because I have a really hard time saying &#8220;no&#8221; to people. That&#8217;s why I frequently disappear from social media for days or even weeks at a time – I&#8217;m taking care of business that&#8217;s more important. · People who don&#8217;t understand the items above are not your friends. If a networking contact can&#8217;t understand that in the event of a commitment conflict, you&#8217;re going to take care of your customer over them, do really even want them as a customer? Now I&#8217;m not suggesting that people start thinking &#8220;what&#8217;s in it for me&#8221; about every interaction. What I am saying is that you need to be selective with your time. You are going to have to make some choices. And sometimes the choices suck. Once I was scheduled to do a teleclass and cancelled the day of the event. There were a couple of hundred people registered and a very good networking contact of mine had arranged for the event. I knew it would damage my reputation to cancel and put a dent in my relationship with the friend who set it up. Why did I cancel? Because a client of mine had a meeting for a $2 million funding deal the next day, and we weren&#8217;t done with the presentation and prospectus. Taking even a couple of hours out for the teleclass could have meant a botched meeting for him. Maybe not, but I also had to be able to give reasonable notice to the teleclass organizer and attendees, so I made the call. Sure…in hindsight, I didn&#8217;t plan it all well. But as of the morning of the event, I had to make a very difficult decision. If I had it to do over again, I&#8217;d make the same decision. I&#8217;d risk my reputation with a couple of hundred people I don&#8217;t know and have never worked with to make sure that my current client knew I would do whatever it takes to keep the commitment I made to them. So go ahead…put yourself first. Take care of your business. Develop yourself. Stay healthy. Spend time with your friends and family. Put your customers ahead of your networking contacts. Don&#8217;t be afraid to ask yourself &#8220;What&#8217;s in it for me?&#8221; about your overall networking activities. If you&#8217;re not getting the returns you want, maybe it&#8217;s time to push away from the networking buffet table, go on a networking diet, and spend more time getting your business into shape. A 20-year veteran technology entrepreneur, executive and consultant, Scott Allen is the Entrepreneurs Guide for About.com, one of the top ten websites in the world with over 37 million readers, and a subsidiary of the New York Times. He is also the coauthor of The Virtual Handshake : Opening Doors and Closing Deals Online, published by the American Management Association. Related Posts: Online Social Networking is Really Neither Social or Networking International Networking Week is Coming Is networking online really that different? Does Anyone Know What Networking Really Means Anymore? Build Your Brand So People Will Refer You Powered by Contextual Related Posts Like this post? Share it with others ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> Is It Time To Practice a Little Selfish Networking This content from: Duct Tape Marketing This post is a special Make a Referral Week guest post featuring education on the subject of referrals and word of mouth marketing and making 1000 referrals to 1000 small businesses &#8211; check it out at Make a Referral Week 2010 You know him. He&#8217;s the perfect networker. He&#8217;s at every event. He&#8217;s a brilliant conversationalist. He&#8217;d give you the shirt off his back. He follows up. He keeps his commitments. He&#8217;s always happy to make an introduction. And yet he&#8217;s always broke. He drinks water at every event. He skips the meal if that&#8217;s an option. He&#8217;ll spend hours on Twitter doing essentially nothing, but won&#8217;t spend $50 for a tool that will actually help his business. There&#8217;s always a hint of desperation hidden in his voice (or his blog posts) because his business really isn&#8217;t doing that well. He&#8217;s drunk the networking &#038; social media Kool-Aid. It&#8217;s a poison, and if you&#8217;re not careful, you might easily fall victim to it too. Networking is fun. Furthermore, there&#8217;s generally no rejection in networking. People can succeed at networking even if they&#8217;re not succeeding in their business. And if you&#8217;re any good at it at all, occasionally it will work and actually generate you some business. &#8220;See? Networking works!&#8221; That becomes a validation of whatever you&#8217;ve been doing. It doesn&#8217;t matter that if you did things a little differently, you could have had ten times the results with the same amount of effort – what you&#8217;re doing &#8220;works&#8221;. It&#8217;s an addiction. And it&#8217;s an insidious one at that. Why? Because… More networking is not necessarily a good thing. First off, it can pull your attention and financial resources away from other, more important things. Secondly, more networking means more exposure of anything in your business or relationship management practices that&#8217;s not absolutely rock solid. Now I know you&#8217;ve all heard that &#8220;givers gain&#8221; – that you should give first in a networking context, without thinking about what&#8217;s in it for you. I&#8217;m not going to disagree with that…I&#8217;m going to qualify that, and I&#8217;m going to tell you that&#8230; It&#8217;s OK to be selfish sometimes when it comes to networking, or at least to appear that way. Let&#8217;s look at a few facts: · In order to take care of others, you must take care of yourself. On a plane, they tell you to put your mask on first – you can&#8217;t help your child if you&#8217;re unconscious. The more resources you have at your disposal – money, time, connections, etc. – the better you can be of service to the people you know. &#8220;Love your neighbor as yourself&#8221; requires you to first love yourself. Perhaps spend less time networking and more time becoming someone that people would want to network with. · Time is a zero-sum game. 24 hours, 7 days…that&#8217;s it…same as everybody else. An hour you&#8217;re spending networking is an hour you&#8217;re not spending with your current clients, your employees, your close friends, your family, or personal development. Sure, networking is rewarding, but really think about this when you consider attending a particular event or whether to spend an hour on Facebook – is it more rewarding in the long run than all of the other things you could be doing with your time? You can&#8217;t help everybody. · Your networking contacts are not the most important people in your life or your business, even for referrals. Who really gives you the most referrals (or at least the best ones)? New networking contacts? Or your current happy customers? If it&#8217;s not your current customers, &#8220;you&#8217;re doing it wrong.&#8221; The single most important thing you can do to drive referrals is to make sure your current customers are not just satisfied, but RAVING FANS. And your employees are what make your business possible. In most cases, clients are more easily replaced than good employees. And your family and close friends? They&#8217;re what make it all worthwhile. Don&#8217;t ever sacrifice those relationships on the altar of networking. · If your business isn&#8217;t solid, your network is a house of cards. More exposure means exposing the weaknesses as well as the strengths. If you&#8217;re stretched so thin that you can&#8217;t even begin to keep up with all the little commitments you make &#8212; &#8220;Sure , I&#8217;ll get that over to you&#8221; or that stack of &#8220;let&#8217;s talk next month&#8221; people – then why are you spending your time meeting a lot of new people? Do you really think all those new people will create more value for you (or that you&#8217;ll be able to create value for them) greater than those opportunities that are already in front of you? I&#8217;ll be the first to admit – I&#8217;m terrible about this. I get massively over-extended, because I have a really hard time saying &#8220;no&#8221; to people. That&#8217;s why I frequently disappear from social media for days or even weeks at a time – I&#8217;m taking care of business that&#8217;s more important. · People who don&#8217;t understand the items above are not your friends. If a networking contact can&#8217;t understand that in the event of a commitment conflict, you&#8217;re going to take care of your customer over them, do really even want them as a customer? Now I&#8217;m not suggesting that people start thinking &#8220;what&#8217;s in it for me&#8221; about every interaction. What I am saying is that you need to be selective with your time. You are going to have to make some choices. And sometimes the choices suck. Once I was scheduled to do a teleclass and cancelled the day of the event. There were a couple of hundred people registered and a very good networking contact of mine had arranged for the event. I knew it would damage my reputation to cancel and put a dent in my relationship with the friend who set it up. Why did I cancel? Because a client of mine had a meeting for a $2 million funding deal the next day, and we weren&#8217;t done with the presentation and prospectus. Taking even a couple of hours out for the teleclass could have meant a botched meeting for him. Maybe not, but I also had to be able to give reasonable notice to the teleclass organizer and attendees, so I made the call. Sure…in hindsight, I didn&#8217;t plan it all well. But as of the morning of the event, I had to make a very difficult decision. If I had it to do over again, I&#8217;d make the same decision. I&#8217;d risk my reputation with a couple of hundred people I don&#8217;t know and have never worked with to make sure that my current client knew I would do whatever it takes to keep the commitment I made to them. So go ahead…put yourself first. Take care of your business. Develop yourself. Stay healthy. Spend time with your friends and family. Put your customers ahead of your networking contacts. Don&#8217;t be afraid to ask yourself &#8220;What&#8217;s in it for me?&#8221; about your overall networking activities. If you&#8217;re not getting the returns you want, maybe it&#8217;s time to push away from the networking buffet table, go on a networking diet, and spend more time getting your business into shape. A 20-year veteran technology entrepreneur, executive and consultant, Scott Allen is the Entrepreneurs Guide for About.com, one of the top ten websites in the world with over 37 million readers, and a subsidiary of the New York Times. He is also the coauthor of The Virtual Handshake : Opening Doors and Closing Deals Online, published by the American Management Association. Related Posts: Online Social Networking is Really Neither Social or Networking International Networking Week is Coming Is networking online really that different? Does Anyone Know What Networking Really Means Anymore? Build Your Brand So People Will Refer You Powered by Contextual Related Posts Like this post? Share it with others </p>
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<p>Go here to see the original:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ducttapemarketing/nRUD/~3/8tsrxTJLFAs/" title="Is It Time To Practice a Little Selfish Networking">Is It Time To Practice a Little Selfish Networking</a></p>
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		<title>6 Ways to be More Referable than Edward Scissorhands at a Lawn &amp; Garden Convention</title>
		<link>http://www.productionsencart.com/social-media/6-ways-to-be-more-referable-than-edward-scissorhands-at-a-lawn-garden-convention</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 12 Mar 2010 13:21:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>cgseo</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Social Media]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[ 6 Ways to be More Referable than Edward Scissorhands at a Lawn &#038; Garden Convention This content from: Duct Tape Marketing This post is a special Make a Referral Week guest post featuring education on the subject of referrals and word of mouth marketing and making 1000 referrals to 1000 small businesses &#8211; check it out at Make a Referral Week 2010 1. Circumvent people’s suspicions. Recognize that you’re beginning with negative balance with most people. Sad but true. It’s just the posture of the masses. People have been sold, scammed and screwed; conned, played and hustled; manipulated, used and marketed to for too long and their TIRED of it. Your mission is to exert comfortable confidence. To lower the threat level. To prove to people that they aren’t going to be the first person to trust you. Otherwise they’ll show up plagued by an underlying unease. And that’s a brick wall you don’t have the time, energy or equipment to climb. How will you disarm people’s immediate preoccupations before entering your orbit? 2. Resort (not) to artificiality. People who do come off like terminal try-hards. And their gnawing sense of inferiority fills the room like a garlic fart. Not exactly the type of orbit admirers are drawn into. The secret is making the conscious choice to reassemble your posture. To assume a different pose. And to stand up in front of the world and put yourself at risk. That’s what authenticity is all about: Flirting with the possibility of people not liking who you are, accepting the reality when they don’t. As I learned from The Velveteen Rabbit , “Once you are real, you can&#8217;t be ugly – except to people who don&#8217;t understand.&#8221; How will you authentically extend yourself this week? 3. Be a source of infinite opportunity. “Become a platform.” Those three words alone were worth paying twenty bucks for Jeff Jarvis’s bestselling What Would Google Do? Here’s how it works: You give customers, users and fans the control to create and improve your online content. You aggregate information and services. Then, you enable your admirers to build communities, networks – even products and businesses – of their own, under the umbrella of your platform. Think Twitter. Think Facebook. Think Linked In. All platforms. All raking it in. Lesson learned: When you make a platform, you make an indispensible contribution. What are YOU a platform for? 4. Jump at every chance to declare the unspoken truth. Follow the advice of Dilbert creator Scott Adams: “Be completely and radically honest where most people would say nothing.” Simple, yes. Easy, no. The secret is to plant the seeds of love where fear grows. In my experience, here’s the best practice for doing so: Speak the unspeakables to compel people to think the unthinkables so they’re disturbed into doing the undoables. How are you branding your honesty? 5. Increase your agency. I love this concept. Just learned it myself a few weeks ago. Increase your agency . Now, it’s got nothing to do with the FBI or Leo Burnett. Agency is about the state of being necessary for exerting power. The cool part is, agency is relative. It all depends on where your power generator resides. HOW to specifically increase your agency is up to you. The only advice I can offer to support your process is: Don’t make despair your default setting. It’s timelessly unattractive and will slowly nibble your power away like a school of baby piranhas. Where are you unintentionally giving your power away? 6. Be willing to be crucified. I think it’s fair to say that Jesus Christ had a knack for drawing admirers into his orbit. And, among his long list of approachable attributes, I think it’s also fair to say that his willingness to be crucified – literally – served his purpose well. Now, the odds of you, as a Thought Leader, being nailed to an actual cross and left for dead are highly unlikely. (Then again, I don’t know you that well.) The point is: Crucifixion isn’t about wood and nails – it’s about criticism and persecution. It’s about passion, which comes from the Latin passio , which means, “to suffer.” The two-fold question is: What do you do that you are willing to suffer for? And what do you do that – if you did NOT do it – would cause you suffering as a result? Find the answers to those questions and you’ll find admirers drawing into your orbit immediately. No messianic complex needed. Have you taken up your cross today? Scott Ginsberg is the only person in the world who wears a nametag 24-7-365 to encourage people to become friendlier and more approachable. He is the author of four books including &#8220; HELLO, my name is Scott ,&#8221; &#8220;The Power of Approachability,&#8221; &#8220;How To Be That Guy&#8221; and &#8220;Make a Name for Yourself.&#8221; Related Posts: The Three Dâ€™s of Being More Referable 17 Terrific Tactics to Inspire Customer Love (and Get New Business) Making Referrals As a Job Creation Engine 5 Ways to Make Your Business Easier to Recommend Build Your Brand So People Will Refer You Powered by Contextual Related Posts Like this post? Share it with others ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> 6 Ways to be More Referable than Edward Scissorhands at a Lawn &#038; Garden Convention This content from: Duct Tape Marketing This post is a special Make a Referral Week guest post featuring education on the subject of referrals and word of mouth marketing and making 1000 referrals to 1000 small businesses &#8211; check it out at Make a Referral Week 2010 1. Circumvent people’s suspicions. Recognize that you’re beginning with negative balance with most people. Sad but true. It’s just the posture of the masses. People have been sold, scammed and screwed; conned, played and hustled; manipulated, used and marketed to for too long and their TIRED of it. Your mission is to exert comfortable confidence. To lower the threat level. To prove to people that they aren’t going to be the first person to trust you. Otherwise they’ll show up plagued by an underlying unease. And that’s a brick wall you don’t have the time, energy or equipment to climb. How will you disarm people’s immediate preoccupations before entering your orbit? 2. Resort (not) to artificiality. People who do come off like terminal try-hards. And their gnawing sense of inferiority fills the room like a garlic fart. Not exactly the type of orbit admirers are drawn into. The secret is making the conscious choice to reassemble your posture. To assume a different pose. And to stand up in front of the world and put yourself at risk. That’s what authenticity is all about: Flirting with the possibility of people not liking who you are, accepting the reality when they don’t. As I learned from The Velveteen Rabbit , “Once you are real, you can&#8217;t be ugly – except to people who don&#8217;t understand.&#8221; How will you authentically extend yourself this week? 3. Be a source of infinite opportunity. “Become a platform.” Those three words alone were worth paying twenty bucks for Jeff Jarvis’s bestselling What Would Google Do? Here’s how it works: You give customers, users and fans the control to create and improve your online content. You aggregate information and services. Then, you enable your admirers to build communities, networks – even products and businesses – of their own, under the umbrella of your platform. Think Twitter. Think Facebook. Think Linked In. All platforms. All raking it in. Lesson learned: When you make a platform, you make an indispensible contribution. What are YOU a platform for? 4. Jump at every chance to declare the unspoken truth. Follow the advice of Dilbert creator Scott Adams: “Be completely and radically honest where most people would say nothing.” Simple, yes. Easy, no. The secret is to plant the seeds of love where fear grows. In my experience, here’s the best practice for doing so: Speak the unspeakables to compel people to think the unthinkables so they’re disturbed into doing the undoables. How are you branding your honesty? 5. Increase your agency. I love this concept. Just learned it myself a few weeks ago. Increase your agency . Now, it’s got nothing to do with the FBI or Leo Burnett. Agency is about the state of being necessary for exerting power. The cool part is, agency is relative. It all depends on where your power generator resides. HOW to specifically increase your agency is up to you. The only advice I can offer to support your process is: Don’t make despair your default setting. It’s timelessly unattractive and will slowly nibble your power away like a school of baby piranhas. Where are you unintentionally giving your power away? 6. Be willing to be crucified. I think it’s fair to say that Jesus Christ had a knack for drawing admirers into his orbit. And, among his long list of approachable attributes, I think it’s also fair to say that his willingness to be crucified – literally – served his purpose well. Now, the odds of you, as a Thought Leader, being nailed to an actual cross and left for dead are highly unlikely. (Then again, I don’t know you that well.) The point is: Crucifixion isn’t about wood and nails – it’s about criticism and persecution. It’s about passion, which comes from the Latin passio , which means, “to suffer.” The two-fold question is: What do you do that you are willing to suffer for? And what do you do that – if you did NOT do it – would cause you suffering as a result? Find the answers to those questions and you’ll find admirers drawing into your orbit immediately. No messianic complex needed. Have you taken up your cross today? Scott Ginsberg is the only person in the world who wears a nametag 24-7-365 to encourage people to become friendlier and more approachable. He is the author of four books including &#8220; HELLO, my name is Scott ,&#8221; &#8220;The Power of Approachability,&#8221; &#8220;How To Be That Guy&#8221; and &#8220;Make a Name for Yourself.&#8221; Related Posts: The Three Dâ€™s of Being More Referable 17 Terrific Tactics to Inspire Customer Love (and Get New Business) Making Referrals As a Job Creation Engine 5 Ways to Make Your Business Easier to Recommend Build Your Brand So People Will Refer You Powered by Contextual Related Posts Like this post? Share it with others </p>
<p><img src="http://www.productionsencart.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/3c3b757d57button.gif.gif" title="6 Ways to be More Referable than Edward Scissorhands at a Lawn &amp; Garden Convention" alt="3c3b757d57button.gif 6 Ways to be More Referable than Edward Scissorhands at a Lawn &amp; Garden Convention" /></p>
<p>Read more from the original source:<br />
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		<title>Word of Mouth Versus Key Influencers</title>
		<link>http://www.productionsencart.com/social-media/word-of-mouth-versus-key-influencers</link>
		<comments>http://www.productionsencart.com/social-media/word-of-mouth-versus-key-influencers#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 11 Mar 2010 11:08:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>cgseo</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[ Share Word of Mouth Versus Key Influencers This content from: Duct Tape Marketing This post is a special Make a Referral Week guest post featuring education on the subject of referrals and word of mouth marketing and making 1000 referrals to 1000 small businesses &#8211; check it out at Make a Referral Week 2010 This summary of an article from the December issue of the Journal of Advertising Research (good luck finding the issue online because I couldn’t) says that common word-of-mouth advertising by regular folks is more powerful than “key influencers.” Which is to say that sucking up to A-list bloggers may not be all that it’s cracked up to be. It seems like it’s bad day for celebrity endorsements . James Coyle, assistant professor of marketing at Miami University’s Farmer School of Business, Elizabeth Lightfoot of CNET Networks, and Ted Smith and Amy Scott of MedTrackAlert conducted the study by surveying website visitors, conducting in-depth reviews, and analyzing website usage patterns. Said Coyle: “We find that trying to track down key influencers, people who have extremely large social networks, is typically unnecessary and, more importantly, can actually limit a campaign or advertisement’s viral potential. Instead, marketers need to realize that the majority of their audience, not just the well-connected few, is eager and willing to pass along well-designed and relevant messages.” I agree. I think that most key influencers are pompous, insecure jerks who take themselves way too seriously. And I say this knowing that you can rightfully accuse me of being one of them. The marketing lesson is this: Create something great, sow fields (not window boxes), “let a hundred flowers blossom,” and pray that “regular folks” will spread the word. Guy Kawasaki is a managing director of Garage Technology Ventures , an early-stage venture capital firm. Previously, he was an Apple Fellow at Apple Computer, Inc. Guy is the author of nine books including Reality Check, The Art of the Start , Rules for Revolutionaries, How to Drive Your Competition Crazy, Selling the Dream, and The Macintosh Way. Related Posts: Author of Word of Mouth Marketing Visits Referral Week Author of Book Yourself Solid Visits Referral Week Why Word of Mouth Doesn't Happen 17 Terrific Tactics to Inspire Customer Love (and Get New Business) Influencing The New Influencers Powered by Contextual Related Posts Like this post? Share it with others ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> Share Word of Mouth Versus Key Influencers This content from: Duct Tape Marketing This post is a special Make a Referral Week guest post featuring education on the subject of referrals and word of mouth marketing and making 1000 referrals to 1000 small businesses &#8211; check it out at Make a Referral Week 2010 This summary of an article from the December issue of the Journal of Advertising Research (good luck finding the issue online because I couldn’t) says that common word-of-mouth advertising by regular folks is more powerful than “key influencers.” Which is to say that sucking up to A-list bloggers may not be all that it’s cracked up to be. It seems like it’s bad day for celebrity endorsements . James Coyle, assistant professor of marketing at Miami University’s Farmer School of Business, Elizabeth Lightfoot of CNET Networks, and Ted Smith and Amy Scott of MedTrackAlert conducted the study by surveying website visitors, conducting in-depth reviews, and analyzing website usage patterns. Said Coyle: “We find that trying to track down key influencers, people who have extremely large social networks, is typically unnecessary and, more importantly, can actually limit a campaign or advertisement’s viral potential. Instead, marketers need to realize that the majority of their audience, not just the well-connected few, is eager and willing to pass along well-designed and relevant messages.” I agree. I think that most key influencers are pompous, insecure jerks who take themselves way too seriously. And I say this knowing that you can rightfully accuse me of being one of them. The marketing lesson is this: Create something great, sow fields (not window boxes), “let a hundred flowers blossom,” and pray that “regular folks” will spread the word. Guy Kawasaki is a managing director of Garage Technology Ventures , an early-stage venture capital firm. Previously, he was an Apple Fellow at Apple Computer, Inc. Guy is the author of nine books including Reality Check, The Art of the Start , Rules for Revolutionaries, How to Drive Your Competition Crazy, Selling the Dream, and The Macintosh Way. Related Posts: Author of Word of Mouth Marketing Visits Referral Week Author of Book Yourself Solid Visits Referral Week Why Word of Mouth Doesn't Happen 17 Terrific Tactics to Inspire Customer Love (and Get New Business) Influencing The New Influencers Powered by Contextual Related Posts Like this post? Share it with others </p>
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<p>Here is the original post:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ducttapemarketing/nRUD/~3/g93pm1t8qzQ/" title="Word of Mouth Versus Key Influencers">Word of Mouth Versus Key Influencers</a></p>
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		<title>Build Your Brand So People Will Refer You</title>
		<link>http://www.productionsencart.com/social-media/build-your-brand-so-people-will-refer-you</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Mar 2010 14:58:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>cgseo</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Social Media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[facebook]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[internet]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[make a referral week]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[network]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[people]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[personal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[personal branding]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Referral]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[referral marketing]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[ Share Build Your Brand So People Will Refer You This content from: Duct Tape Marketing This post is a special Make a Referral Week guest post featuring education on the subject of referrals and word of mouth marketing and making 1000 referrals to 1000 small businesses &#8211; check it out at Make a Referral Week 2010 As part of John Jantsch’s Referral Week, I’d like to focus on personal branding, as a way to become someone that people want to refer to others. I agree with John that the best way to grow a business is to get referrals because of how powerful word-of-mouth is. These days, it’s become more and more obvious that referrals can help you substantially build your brand presence, your web properties and your cash flow. The reason is because of the viral nature of the web, and how one video review of your service can morph into seven blog posts, six hundred tweets and a front page story on BusinessWeek.com within twenty-four hours. Five years ago, this line of events was impossible, but today it happens all of the time. Here are some ways to become a brand that people want to refer: Be interesting : People, who are interested in you, as a person, are more inclined to connect with you, do business with you and refer you to their own personal network. Your personal brand is not only defined by your job or company, but also by the activities you participate outside of the office and your hobbies. It might be hard to connect with someone on a professional level, but you might be able to bridge the relationship by talking about your golf game or the last season of Lost. Be valuable : There’s no question that experts are judged based on hard and soft results. It’s not just being valuable though, because all of your competitors can do that. You need to be unique and offer something your competitors don’t and compete on prestige and quality, rather than price. Online, if you’re seen as a valuable resource, the press will call on you, customers will be to work with you, and when all is said and done, and people will refer you to even their third degree network. Be generous : It’s rare that people share others products and services before they receive a sample for free. “Free” builds trust, authority and generates attention. If you want to be referred by others, then you’re going to have to give before you receive. The more generous you are with your network, by providing them with resources, helpful links, reports and advice, the more you will get back in return. Be enabled : How are people going to refer you to their network, unless you enable them to do so. By providing your email address on your web page and by allowing people to share your content through Facebook, Digg, Twitter, Google Buzz and others, people can find you. If you don’t enable your network and empower them to refer you, without much effort, then you won’t get as many referrals. Be networking : The more people you meet, the larger network you have and thus, the more people that can refer you to others. Meeting people is quite easy now due to the connectivity of the internet. Try and locate people that you’re actually interested in and can benefit from your services, instead of someone random you see on Twitter. Dan Schawbel is the bestselling author of Me 2.0: Build a Powerful Brand to Achieve Career Success , an award winning blogger at Personal Branding Blog , the publisher of Personal Branding Magazine , a national speaker and consultant on branding and a BusinessWeek columnist. He’s been called a “Personal Branding Guru” by The New York Times and has been featured in over 150 media outlets. Related Posts: Thoughts on Personal Branding Bake a Referral Engine Into Your Business Model Educate Your Referral Sources 17 Terrific Tactics to Inspire Customer Love (and Get New Business) Are There Holes In Your Network? Powered by Contextual Related Posts Like this post? Share it with others ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> Share Build Your Brand So People Will Refer You This content from: Duct Tape Marketing This post is a special Make a Referral Week guest post featuring education on the subject of referrals and word of mouth marketing and making 1000 referrals to 1000 small businesses &#8211; check it out at Make a Referral Week 2010 As part of John Jantsch’s Referral Week, I’d like to focus on personal branding, as a way to become someone that people want to refer to others. I agree with John that the best way to grow a business is to get referrals because of how powerful word-of-mouth is. These days, it’s become more and more obvious that referrals can help you substantially build your brand presence, your web properties and your cash flow. The reason is because of the viral nature of the web, and how one video review of your service can morph into seven blog posts, six hundred tweets and a front page story on BusinessWeek.com within twenty-four hours. Five years ago, this line of events was impossible, but today it happens all of the time. Here are some ways to become a brand that people want to refer: Be interesting : People, who are interested in you, as a person, are more inclined to connect with you, do business with you and refer you to their own personal network. Your personal brand is not only defined by your job or company, but also by the activities you participate outside of the office and your hobbies. It might be hard to connect with someone on a professional level, but you might be able to bridge the relationship by talking about your golf game or the last season of Lost. Be valuable : There’s no question that experts are judged based on hard and soft results. It’s not just being valuable though, because all of your competitors can do that. You need to be unique and offer something your competitors don’t and compete on prestige and quality, rather than price. Online, if you’re seen as a valuable resource, the press will call on you, customers will be to work with you, and when all is said and done, and people will refer you to even their third degree network. Be generous : It’s rare that people share others products and services before they receive a sample for free. “Free” builds trust, authority and generates attention. If you want to be referred by others, then you’re going to have to give before you receive. The more generous you are with your network, by providing them with resources, helpful links, reports and advice, the more you will get back in return. Be enabled : How are people going to refer you to their network, unless you enable them to do so. By providing your email address on your web page and by allowing people to share your content through Facebook, Digg, Twitter, Google Buzz and others, people can find you. If you don’t enable your network and empower them to refer you, without much effort, then you won’t get as many referrals. Be networking : The more people you meet, the larger network you have and thus, the more people that can refer you to others. Meeting people is quite easy now due to the connectivity of the internet. Try and locate people that you’re actually interested in and can benefit from your services, instead of someone random you see on Twitter. Dan Schawbel is the bestselling author of Me 2.0: Build a Powerful Brand to Achieve Career Success , an award winning blogger at Personal Branding Blog , the publisher of Personal Branding Magazine , a national speaker and consultant on branding and a BusinessWeek columnist. He’s been called a “Personal Branding Guru” by The New York Times and has been featured in over 150 media outlets. Related Posts: Thoughts on Personal Branding Bake a Referral Engine Into Your Business Model Educate Your Referral Sources 17 Terrific Tactics to Inspire Customer Love (and Get New Business) Are There Holes In Your Network? Powered by Contextual Related Posts Like this post? Share it with others </p>
<p><img src="http://www.productionsencart.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/3c3b757d57button.gif.gif" title="Build Your Brand So People Will Refer You" alt="3c3b757d57button.gif Build Your Brand So People Will Refer You" /></p>
<p>Originally posted here:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ducttapemarketing/nRUD/~3/f4S0jzLIBzw/" title="Build Your Brand So People Will Refer You">Build Your Brand So People Will Refer You</a></p>
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