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May 8, 2007 6:44 PM

Marketing to Mr. and Ms. Right

Somewhere in the world there are prospective clients or customers who will fit you and your work "just right." (If this doesn't feel true for you yet, then you have work to do. Perhaps you need training, practice, or mentoring before you can attract "just right" customers. Or perhaps, like I did with my art business, you are trying to make an avocation into a vocation. For now, let's assume that you are in the right business with the right skills.)

Second, let's assume that "just right" clients are those who get great value from working with you just the way you are. These are clients who share enough of your standards and values that it's easy to develop mutual respect, appreciation, and benefit. With these two assumptions in mind, here are some unconventional yet highly productive questions to help focus the image, tone, and message that will attract clients who fit "just right." Answer them quickly to tap into your creative subconscious. There will be plenty of time later for thinking about the answers and deciding when and how to use them in sharing your gifts with the world.

1. If your work were a color, what color would it be?
2. What shape would it be?
3. How big would it be?
4. What texture would it have?
5. If you pressed it with your finger, what would happen?
6. If your work were a popular song, what song would it be?
7. Who would be singing?
8. How loud?
9. If your work were an historic personage, who would it be?
10. If your work were going to a party, what would it wear?
11. If your work had a typical mood, what would it be?
12. If your work were a plant, what kind of plant would it be?
13. In what environment would it thrive?
14. If your work were an animal, would it be domestic or wild? How big?
15. If your work were a meal, what kind of meal would it be? (Fast food? Haute cuisine? Mac and cheese?)

What's the point of questions like these? Simply this: Answering them can reveal aspects of your personality that inform and augment the work you do. By surfacing these unique associations, you'll be unearthing imagery and attitudes you can use to set the tone for your marketing so that it is easy for your "just right" clients to differentiate you from other people doing similar work.

During the bonus call I led an exercise that works best when you can listen to the directions and follow along. You can do just that and hear the rest of the call, too, online. Give yourself about hour to listen to the entire call and have pen and paper available to sketch of make notes. It could be the start of something beautiful.

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JUST-RIGHT BIZ

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ART BIZ

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Wildcard Wednesday: success, fanaticism
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DON'T SAY NICHE

Getting Clients: It's About Them
In Praise of Small Ponds: Why Being Picky Is Good for Business
How Prospective Clients Can Teach You Marketing: The Surprising Relationship Between Marketing and Empathy
Are You Overlooking This? How your weaknesses make you a one-of-a-kind perfect fit for your just-right clients.
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AUTHENTIC MARKETING

Shining: How to believe in your own success
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The 3 hurdles info product gurus never talk about that keep you from creating passive income
The Spiritual Challenge of Asking for Testimonials (and How to Rise to It)

JUST RIGHT PRICING

Be a shark whisper: How to take care of your need for money and profit
Does your pricing strategy prevent customers from committing?
Why lowering your prices doesn’t work and how to resist the urge
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CLIENT CARE

Out on a limb: Why you should pray for your clients
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MONEY

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Why are you okay with being less than? The shadow side of "good enough"

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Why "The Secret" Hasn't Made You a Millionaire
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Don't stop now! What to do when you get stuck in the info product muck
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BOOKS | TOOLS

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The Books Are Here
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Going Sane: Working on Your Work
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FEAR

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Why are you okay with being less than? The shadow side of "good enough"
The 3 hurdles info product gurus never talk about that keep you from creating passive income
What to do when your confidence leaves for the tropics

SPIRIT

Why "The Secret" Hasn't Made You a Millionaire
The dangers of being jaded
Shining: How to believe in your own success
Out on a limb: Why you should pray for your clients
How to succeed at self-employment when you aren't a superhero, a rockstar, or a guru

LIFE SKILLS

Actually, you don't reap what you sow: The truth about thriving self employment
The dangers of being jaded
Creating the good life: Why it's your moral responsibility to choose and pursue prosperity
Shining: How to believe in your own success
Why is it so hard to trust yourself?

THE WORK of BYRON KATIE




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