I had an interesting conversation the other day with a fellow accounting firm owner. She had hired a few different firms to do lead generation for her – cold emails, LinkedIn outreach, and some paid ads. None of it worked. At all.
The interesting part was that she was complaining that the marketing agencies she was working with wanted to spend front end time asking her a lot of questions like “What makes you different from other firms” and “Who is your target market” and “What is your unique selling proposition”?
These seemed like reasonable questions to me and I could very much understand why these firms were asking. But her response was essentially “I don’t know – we do bookkeeping – what else is there to say?”
You can probably see why none of the marketing efforts worked. Under the best of circumstances, accounting can be a hard sell!
Most business owners don’t want to think about it much and when they do it’s not associated with positive vibes or good outcomes. But if you add on top of that a very boring offer that is in no way better than your current option, why would you expect people to respond?
Suppose you had a dental appointment coming up and you were not looking forward to it. A shocking and unlikely scenario, I know, but let’s go with it. Then, all of a sudden, in the mail you got a big shiny postcard from a dentist that said “Come see us instead of whoever you might currently be seeing. We are also dentists that do dental work.” Or the same thing, but it comes in your email. Or in your LinkedIn inbox.
Not very enticing, right? You may not be thrilled with your current dentist (or mechanic, or landscaper, or fill in any other service provider) but switching to a new one is a risk – they may be worse! They may charge more! They might not have any convenient appointments.
That is essentially the only marketing message that went out for my accounting friend’s firm. They didn’t have anything special to offer or any compelling reason someone may want to switch. That is not going to work.
Building a lead machine starts with having a reason for a person to want to contact you in the first place because you have something they aren’t currently getting. Then you have to target the right people. And then you have to be very consistent in reaching out.
Let’s review the steps in detail:
That’s the basics of this, but of course, many people have written whole books on this process and even on just parts of this process (for example – on the specific writing style that makes a lead decide to take action – this is called copywriting).
But the above is a good starting point and you need to have all the pieces in place – a unique and valuable offer, a list of people who fit your very specific customer target, and a consistent delivery of that offer to those folks.
The good news is, done well and done over and over you will be able to build a steady stream of new customers for your business that delivers every month year and year out so you can reach whatever growth goals you have set. Like most things in business, it’s not really hard but for some reason, most people just never do it. Be one of the few and you’ll never regret it!
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