The future of coaching discussion will return next week
Thursday, November 14, 2002
Dear Today's Coach Reader:
Are you confused about
which 'niche' to go into?
Are you wondering how to brand yourself?
Are you trying to decide how to package yourself?
In my view, all of these are the wrong questions...
Please, let me explain...
Marketing guru Dean Jackson woke up all of us at the Full Practice
Marketing Conference in San Diego last week (318 coaches) with his
approach to marketing, especially via the web. And, given Dean is
one of the top earners on the web, it makes sense to hear him out.
Dean's view?
Focus 100% on the person you wish to reach.
Not by trying to explain who you are, i.e.,
The Executive Coach
The Relationship Coach
The Evolution Coach
(That's all about you and your specialty. Two problems with that,
according to Dean.)
First limitation of above is that it's about a broad category (executives,
relationships, evolution). It's like going to the store and asking
for dessert instead of German Chocolate Cake.
Second, it's about you (coach) instead of about the person visiting your
site or who you are speaking to. Dean says that people don't care
who you are; they only care what they can get from you (it's not personal;
it's just life/business).
Dean suggests that you describe to your prospective clients who they
are and what they are facing/going though.
Here are a couple of examples of this approach...
Example #1: Have a
very specific solution to what someone is very specifically going
through...
Below is a screenshot of Dean's entire website (visit http://www.stopyourdivorce.com)
1. It looks really plain
2. It brings in high six figures annually
3. It's not about improving your marriage, offering relationship services,
or legal assistance.
4. Rather, it's about one thing -- very, very, very, very specific --
called stopping a divorce.
The point here is that when a person comes to this site, they KNOW this
info/ebook is for them. There is NO doubt.
Now, if Dean wanted to, he could also start a website/ebook on:
--Starting Your Divorce
--Living Together Blissfully and Never Getting Married
--Accelerating Your Divorce
etc.
(yes, there are various websites on these)
See the point?
1. Don't be afraid to be really specific.
2. Make it situational.
3. Mention yourself/abilities only in the context of the clients you have
helped.
The trick is to have multiple websites or pages so that when someone is
searching on the internet they come to the PERFECT page for them. NOT a
"nice page about improving your relationship."
Example #2.
Target toward a very specific type of person and show them that you really
know and understand them.
Here's a different approach.
Here's a coach (me, actually) who targets a particular type of
person/client. (Full disclosure: Actually, I'm not targeting them
right now because I run CoachVille but if i went back into private
practice, it's who I would target).
Visit the website at http://www.todayscoach.com/2002/x29genius.html
to see the cool moving logo/Flash file. And, below is the drop-down
menu which outlines some of the situations/problems/feelings that this
type of person would typically experience. I'm speaking to THEM via this.
When my ideal client reads this, they KNOW I
know them. I don't have to say I know/understand them. This list 'proves'
it. Credibility is immediately established. And, by having
multiple situations, I don't have to have a separate website for each
problem.
When the visitor clicks on 'click for solution' I would have a brief
description of what causes each of the situations described as well as how
I generally coach folks around/through these. (Don't be afraid to
give away your tricks/strategies -- clients will hire you anyway, and even
more so.) I would then invite them to Instant Message, call or email me to
get started.
Bottom line...
Above are just 2 examples of how to
target a specific market. And, there are many successful ways to build a
website and to target your ideal clients. You CAN do the traditional
approach of being a relationship coach, etc. You can benefit tremendously
from branding.
And, start first with identifying 1, 5 or 15 types of clients or
client situations that you want to help people through as a
coach. And, be very, very specific.
Want more?
We cover this, and 36 more
marketing strategies, at the Full Practice Intensive. Details at http://www.coachvilleconference.com.
Upcoming cities include Vancouver, Chicago, New
York, London (England) and Atlanta in the first part of 2003.
And,
soon, we will include this in the new School of eMarketing curriculum (Feb
2003) that is now part of the School of Coaching bundle -- all schools for
$1795 until June 1, 2002, when it all jumps to $4495. Details at http://www.schoolofcoaching.com.
I hope that this was useful. It was fun to write because I see/believe in
the effectiveness of this approach.
Note: The Future of Coaching Series will return next week
(really!)
Personal Note:
Wild time in San Diego last weekend with 318 coaches, Dean Jackson, Steve
Straus, Richard Reardon, Susan Austin and Ginger Cockerham who made the
Full Practice Intensive a success. It was one of the highlights of my
professional career. Now, on to Atlanta and Denver for the Certified
Coach Intensive; then to Seattle and Ft. Lauderdale after
Thanksgiving. Then a break.