are you holding yourself back?
by sandi leyva, cpa
as an accounting professional, you’re likely very talented at delivering the service you offer your clients. but when it comes to marketing and selling yourself, many of you didn’t voluntarily sign up for that part.
more on small-firm growth strategies: survey quantifies link between online reviews, revenue | major search algorithm change could affect your rankings | is your client newsletter stuck in the 1990s? | outsource or in-house? how does your marketing get done? | making content marketing part of your growth strategy | do you know your cac number? | beyond referrals: getting new clients
exclusively for pro members. log in here or 2022世界杯足球排名 today.
many of you are resisting (kicking and screaming) marketing yourself. if that’s you, that could be why your business is slow or not growing at the rate you’d like it to.
we all hope we will have enough referrals so that we will never have to sell ourselves. but in the last few years, referrals, even for those of us with huge followings, have slowed down. it’s (past) time that we work on more fully developing the marketing and selling function of our businesses. as you do, here are five mistakes to avoid.
5. offering every service in the world to every industry in the world
it’s hard to convince prospects that you are the best at one particular service such as tax returns for corporations doing business outside the u.s.; it’s even harder to convince prospects that you’re the right person for anyone’s payroll, tax return, bookkeeping, management consulting, budgeting and accounts receivable factoring.
plain and simple, it’s better to specialize. it sounds counterintuitive, but here’s an example from my own practice: i sell more websites because i am specialized to serve the accounting profession. i would not sell as many websites if i didn’t have the specialty. the product is niched. the accountants feel like the product is made for them (and it is). coke did not get to be coke by selling coffee, bananas or cake.
4. not having (or showing) a track record
discerning prospects need to know you’ve done business and created results for people just like them. ask for, compile and publish testimonials, client reviews, case studies and other reputation-building tools to show that you’ve produced results for dozens of clients in the past.
3. overselling
selling and marketing are learned skills, just like the skill you learned that you now offer to clients. if you don’t have those skills, people notice. it manifests in overselling, which looks needy; selling to the wrong prospect, which is costly; and most crucially, low confidence, which repels just about everyone around you.
there is no fortune 100 business without a huge division of sales and marketing people who are trained and have degrees in their expertise. what would happen if they tried to wing it with hardly any budget or staff for marketing and selling like accounting firms do?
once you learn the skills of marketing and selling, the payoff is usually immediate. you can practice consultative selling and easily find the people who need what you have.
2. taking the “freedom” of being an entrepreneur a little too far
as an entrepreneur, you can have it your way. however, that doesn’t mean you can be successful while avoiding pieces of your business just because you don’t have the skill or don’t like doing it. i hated project management so much when i was doing it in corporate that i avoided it in my business for years – and i suffered great consequences of my avoidance. what if google’s founders said, “no project management allowed here. we don’t like it.” pretty ludicrous, right?
all businesses need a solid marketing and selling function that is professionally executed. the only part that is a choice is whether you do it yourself (assuming you have the skill set your business needs) or hire someone with the right experience and skill set to do it for you.
1. having the belief that selling and marketing are “dirty” or sleazy, or whatever label you are putting on them
there may be some of you (perhaps many of you) out there who have a belief that salespeople are sleazy. you avoid them like the plague when you go into a department store. you think they are pushy even if they just say hello. you would rather die than ever have to cold call, or even ask a current client for something. if this is you, then you might be getting in your own way of your success.
after all, marketing was “illegal” in our profession until the 1970s.
a business today will not succeed without sales and marketing. it simply won’t be heard through all the noise that’s out there, and you will stay the world’s best-kept secret. you will wonder why everyone else is doing better than you, even when your solution is better. does apple say, “selling is sleazy?” no, they’ve made it a beautiful art.
your solution (and only hope) is to undergo a major mindset change. when your business is below its capacity of serving clients, you cheat the world out of the gift and talents you have to offer. start sharing who you really are so more people can benefit from your services.
use this list as a checklist to see if any of these mistakes are holding you back from your full potential.