Photography Marketing and Advertising Tips: An Amazing Free MarketingTool Every Photographer Needs
Posted: Monday, November 02, 2009
by Charles Lewis
Creativity International
Not keeping a few simple records of every original inquiry that comes into your photography business is like trying to sail a ship across the ocean without ANY navigational tools at all - not even a compass - you might end up somewhere, sure - but who knows where that will be? It certainly WON'T be where you wanted to go!
If you want more paying clients in your photography business, this "Marketing GPS Tool" is going to be extremely valuable to you - and it's totally FREE to set up and use! It just takes a little time.
I use a simple "Original Contact Record" to do this. It's simply a list where I log specific information about every original caller or e-mailer.
Here's what the Report contains:
1. The date the call or e-mail came in - this is important because you can track the number of calls, and the type of calls that come in by month and by year-to-date. This way, you can compare this year with previous years, and see exactly how you're doing.
2. How she heard about you - this tells you what parts of your marketing efforts are working, and what parts of it are not working. This is very valuable information which you can use to improve your marketing efforts and methods. (So you ALWAYS ask the caller or e-mailer how she happened to hear about you.)
3. Who she's thinking of having photographed - this is the "type" of call or e-mail - by tracking this, you can look at how many of this type you have received this year, compared to previous years.
4. Whether or not prices were discussed, and what specifics were given - this will give you insight into whether or not it is best to give out prices, and if so, how best to do it.
5. Who took the call or answered the e-mail - this gives you statistics as to who on your staff are the "best" at closing the sale, and who needs more work.
6. Whether or not the client "booked" the next step - this will tell you who actually agreed to take the next step with you - based on where they heard about you in the first place.
7. The prospect's name - you put this in the Contact Record, so you can go back and fill in what happens next with that prospect. (See #8 below.)
8. Did she actually show up for the "next step?" - this is where you go back and fill in whether or not she actually took the next step in your sales process - which for me is to come into the studio and "chat" with us - no charge and no obligation.
9. Any notes or comments about the call or e-mail - why it was or was not successful.
By putting together a simple "Original Contact Record" and using it for every call and e-mail inquiry you receive, you are compiling valuable information which will greatly help you make the correct marketing decisions for your photography business. It works amazingly well for me, and I know it will work great for you, as well.
--------
Why are some photographers getting rich and having all the customers and clients they could ever want, while others are struggling? Charles Lewis has created the *ultimate* guide - "The TOP 33 Photography Marketing Secrets" free E-Course reveals the secrets for getting hundreds of new customers - FAST - regardless of the economy, your town, or whether you work on main street or out of your home studio.
Click Here: ==> http://www.cjlewis.com
This Article has been viewed 281 times. (Not updated in real-time.)
Top-level comments on this article: (1 total)This is basically common sense kind of stuff. Headline hype needs to be toned down. Any good direct marketer (which this author claims to be) should know where all leads are coming from. If you have to ask then you're not really doing direct marketing. (A referral from a paying customer will tell you who sent them).As far as real information is concerned this piece doesn't offer any. Of course the only goal here is to send you over to his website so you can spend money. Funny thing, I can't find the photography website for his photography business. (Not his photography marketing business). Marketing GPS Tool? Really.
We want your comments! If you can read this, you don't have javascript enabled, so you can't use this comment system. Please enable javascript.