Determining Your Target Market: 6 Ways You’ve Probably Not Considered–Part 4

In this 6-part series, I’m offering tools to help you determine the market that is best for who you are, what you do, and that will actually buy you. I can’t possibly underestimate the importance of a niche-market or underestimate the difficulty in getting this right for most coaches, consultants, practitioners and speakers. This is Part 4 in the series. Be sure to read the previous posts for all of the tools, then blend them together for your Perfect Buyer mix.

#4. With Whom Do You Have the Most Credibility?

You must go where you are seen as valid and valuable. Many clients come to me and don’t consider this at all, let alone thoughtfully. Here are some questions to help you:

    1. Where do you have solid contacts? Do you have them from your previous career? From your PTA days? From your church? This is one of the very first questions I ask, in large part because you do not want to make business any harder than it needs to be! Go where you have contacts, but also, go there because where others know you, you have credibility.
    2. What have you experienced and conquered? Yesterday, my advice was, “be your market.” If you have gone through something that your market has gone through, as well, you have instant credibility. Downsizing; divorce; teen motherhood, etc. In determining your market, look for the experiences you’ve had because your success journey will be wanted by the market going through the same thing–and they will buy you because you are credible.
    3. Who would resonate most with your beliefs? Like-minds find each other credible. If you say something that causes others to fervently nod their head in agreement, you have credibility with them–even if you lack experience in what you do. Even if it is a market in which you have interest, but no contacts. If you believe in something they do, you are one of the tribe. I always delve deeply into my clients’ beliefs, and eventually have them include them in their marketing because inspirational marketing works for this very reason–you are powerfully credible with those who share your philosophies.

By now, you must be getting ideas. Who is a strong contender for your target market?

10 Rules of Effective Communication

“The slovenliness of our language makes it easier for us to have foolish thoughts.” –George Orwell

I do believe this is going to be the quote I use for my
future 12 Sentences courses, which are all about cleaning
up your thinking so you can articulate what you do to the
world! How true is this?

Today, I’m going to write an easy post and take some great
information from a source other than me: Dr. Frank Luntz.
He wrote a book in 2007 called, “Words That Work,”
where he highlighted the Ten Rules of Successful
Communication
. I would like to share them with you here,
though I encourage you to buy his book because it is
resplendent with important information about
effective communication.

My comments are in italics.

Rule One: Simplicity—Use Small Words

(The point is to be understood, not to show your intellect.)

Rule Two: Brevity—Use Short Sentences

There’s a story about a college philosophy student who
was given the exam question, “Why?” and he simply
responded, “Why not?”

Enough said.

Rule Three: Credibility Is As Important As Philosophy

(I.E. No hype! Mean what you say and follow through on what you say.)

Rule Four: Consistency Matters

“…the constant tinkering with taglines and the inability to
stick to a single message have been major factors in
contributing to…image erosion.”

(Have 1 message, 1 identity, and stick to it!)

Rule Five: Novelty—Offer Something New

(Students who learn about the brain from me know this one
by heart!)

Luntz says, “Words that work often involve a new definition
of an old idea.” Seth Godin is brilliant at this. The Dip and
Purple Cow are by NO MEANS new ideas…but they’re new
words, aren’t they? And very successful new words.

Rule Six: Sound and Texture Matter (!)

Luntz: “The sounds and textures of language should be just
as memorable as the words themselves. A string of words
that have the same first letter, the same sound, or the same
syllabic cadence is more memorable than a random collection
of sounds.

“The Itsy Bitsy Spider went up the water spout; down came
the rain washed the spider out.”

And my all time favorite!! ….

Rule Seven: Speak Aspirationally

“Aspirational advertising taps into people’s idealized self-image,
showing them a picture of the other, better life that they wish
they had…”

 And, as we know, can have.

Rule Eight: Visualize

“Paint a vivid picture.”

This is perhaps the #1 communication correction I make with
my students and clients: I have them use words that “bring
pictures to mind.”  If the brain can’t see it, the brain can’t
process it.

Rule Nine: Ask a Question

My public speaking students know this by heart, too! Telling
is ALWAYS less effective than asking…right?

Luntz: “’Got Milk?’ may be the most memorable print ad campaign
of the last decade.

Rule Ten: Provide Context and Explain Relevance

Luntz believes this is the most important rule of effective
communication. “You have to give people the ‘why’ of a
message before you tell the ‘so that’ or the ‘therefore.’”
Remember the “Have it your way” slogan from Burger King
in the 70’s? The only reason it resonated was because it
spoke to the frustration fast-food consumers felt who didn’t
want their burgers like everyone else’s.
 “Without the context
of fast food being a mass-produced, assembly-line proposition,
and that all fast food was essentially the same, “Have it your way”
wouldn’t have worked.

I hope this was helpful to you! Go buy Luntz’ book; it’s very
informative…and if you’d rather have all this “stuff” done for
you automatically
…that’s what I do, and I do it in my sleep.
And through tomorrow, Wednesday, June 30th, you can
work privately with me (I only do this in the summer) at a near
50% reduction in my fees. Read about the 7 areas I’m helping
people with this summer right here.

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