ETS Tan sponsors this website.

Posts Tagged ‘business development tips’

Using LinkedIn for business development important in gaining new business

Tuesday, October 12th, 2010

Do you use LinkedIn for business development? Well, you should. LinkedIn is the exclusive No. 1 business social networking site with more than 70 million members from more than 200 countries. The site allows a member to build business and business-related connections with hopes of gaining new opportunities for business growth. There are thousands upon thousands of blogs, forums and posts that help people use personal social networking giants Facebook and Twitter. But there aren’t nearly that many to help with LinkedIn, let alone good sources to really help someone develop new business potential through the site. Until now.

Author Bernie Borges of Optimize This posted a great article that includes 11 tips for LinkedIn business development. Read the full article here. Here are his Top 5 tips:

1. Complete your profile 100 percent. The LinkedIn meter tells you how far your profile is completed. Many people overlook this simple tip.

2. Add a recent photo to your profile to humanize your profile. Likewise, many people have no photo in their profile.

3. Include links to your company website and new blog in the “my website” and “my blog” section. Note: use keywords like: “My internet marketing website” and “my internet marketing blog” which you can link to each respective site and create SEO value.

4. Build your connections methodically and consistently. You can send invitations to people based on recommendations from LinkedIn, your own professional network and even by uploading your contact email list.

5. Add a short note that personalizes your invitations to connect. The extra touch can make an impression.

Make things happen for your business with a creative marketing plan

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

No architect would think of constructing a building without a blueprint. Yet many tanning salon owners today are seeking new clients, introducing new services and even planning new locations without a clearly defined marketing plan.

Most companies have marketing plans, although some may be outdated and in need of revision. Your marketing plan should be comprised of small, interrelated steps that involve everything from how your signage looks and how your employees treat customers to the cleanliness of your salon and your salon’s image in your community.  All these items involve marketing and all must be planned, coordinated and evaluated in an overall action-oriented and cost-effective blueprint. That blueprint is the marketing plan that outlines the path your business will follow to long-term growth.

If you do not know where to start, you may have to hire a marketing professional or team. But basically, your marketing plan can be segmented into four steps.

Define your current situation.
Situation analysis is usually the longest portion of the marketing plan. It is a statement of where your business is today and how it got there. It should include all relevant facts about the company’s history, growth, products, services, sales volume, share of market, competitive status, markets served, past advertising programs, results of marketing research studies, company capabilities, strengths and weaknesses and any other pertinent information. Marketing requires a clear understanding of what you have to offer, what you want to achieve through marketing and how you are going to communicate to your audiences.

Strategize and write the plan.
Exercise your creativity by setting meaningful goals. Vague directions result in wasted time. Ask yourself how changes will take place. Be specific so you can measure progress. Make a calendar or timetable of expected change and anticipate problems and how you will solve them. You must plan for any training that might be needed to get you or your staff ready, decide who you will target and then prepare advertising and other communication vehicles to reach those particular markets. Your plan must include a sensible time table, a realistic program budget and a back-up plan in case the market changes, the economic climate is altered or to face competition. Establish a launch date and plan backward from it.

A key factor in determining an overall marketing plan for your business is determining the image you want to project to your clients and non-clients. It is helpful to consider what the local community knows about your business, what image you want in your community and how our salon’s image has changed over the years.

Also, you must know the position of your salon against the total market. The position is basically what makes your salon unique. Do you have a clearly identified position? If so, what is it? Proper positioning can make a positive difference when it is consistent and consciously built in a way the practice is operated. Good positioning will also work well against the competition.

Implement your plan.
After you have written your plan, take some time each day to implement a part of it then visualize the end result. Assign tasks to staff members and pursue your market with consistency. Implementation means follow through at all points. Identify key referral sources and target each for new business. Incentivize new customers and existing ones for coming to you. Train new staff members to develop new business.

Evaluate your progress.
As your plan takes shape, you may notice that some of your objectives have changed. Do not lock yourself into a result you no longer want. Be open to adjusting your marketing plan to a changing market. A monitoring and evaluation step should be included to track results and make changes as needed.

Conduct weekly or monthly meetings with your staff to review projects, budgets and new business. Review milestones set in the original plan to be sure you are on track.

Some problems you may run into are lack of coordination, communication or personnel commitment to your marketing plan. These three things can be the difference between a workable plan that gets results and a meaningless effort.

It is also important that those who develop the marketing plan are determined. They must be committed to seeing that the items on your list get done well and on time. When approving the plan, they must be able to consider a full range of alternatives and have the confidence to push your salon toward these alternatives, even if it means making things more challenging for themselves or others.

A completed marketing plan is one that is well thought out, using all staff input and involves senior- and middle-level employees working together to accomplish mutually agreed-upon goals. If all this is accomplished, your marketing plan can be successful in making things happen for your tanning salon.

Fresh website content keeps clients coming back

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

The last thing your customers want to see on your salon’s website is that you have not updated your site in quite some time. If your site isn’t interesting or useful enough for you to visit, how can you expect your customers to visit frequently? Though specific content applicable to your website depends on your preferences as a business owner, here are some tips to incorporate into your website and keep things fresh.

Provide a tip of the week. Have an employee post a weekly tip on your website talking about a new lotion, a tip for making their tan last longer or even a new song for their MP3 player. Tips will encourage customers to visit your site. Everyone loves tips about something they’re in to.

Provide interesting links. Your customers may come to rely on your site as a destination if you provide them with several interesting links to other sites. Your salon’s site not only satisfies their interest in a specific practice area but also serves as a resource for additional information.

Take a vote. Voting on certain issues can help draw visitors to your website. You could conduct an opinion poll on your site to gain input on your salon, its services and your employees. Voting and opinion polls engage visitors and encourage them to share useful information.

Post news on your site. Have you added new products or services? New employees? Changed the décor of your salon? Let your customers know on your website. Post anything and everything that may be news, including special offers and promotions, and post your news often.

Post greetings from you. Engage current and potential customers by actively posting greetings to them on your website. Talk about your business, your employees and your clients. Encourage them to drop in and chat. Share information about nearby businesses and events and activities in your community. Posting greetings to your site puts you in front of customers and hopefully will put customers in front of you.

Though still dependent on print and TV to get customers on-line, the Internet is a great way to disseminate information to and gain feedback from clients at a reasonable cost and help the client get to know you and your firm and what you have to offer. It is up to you, however, to keep the content fresh as you want visitors to come back time and again.