5 Ways to be Top of Mind When Your Prospect is Ready to Buy

5 Ways to be Top of Mind When Your Prospect is Ready to Buy

5 Ways to be Top of Mind When Your Prospect is Ready to BuyStacey Hylen
Published on: 15/02/2025

Are You on Top of Mind When Your Prospect is Ready to Buy? Many business owners and sales people give up way to early on a prospect after just a few no’s. Recently I went through a new client’s sales process and discovered that they were doing a good job in the first 2 weeks but after that they stopped contact for six months and if they got another no at six months they didn’t contact the prospect again for another year. Are you also making this mistake of not staying top of mind with your prospects? What happens when your prospect is ready to buy in 3 months. 9 months? Unless you have top of mind awareness the prospect will probably be calling your competitor. Here are some ways to keep the top of mind awareness with your prospects. 1. Start with a good list of prospects that fit your perfect client profile. This list should be big enough to get results but small enough that you can follow up consistently with the resources that you have available. So instead of a list of 1000 that you can only m

Lead StorySales
10 Follow Up Mistakes that are Costing you Sales

10 Follow Up Mistakes that are Costing you Sales

10 Follow Up Mistakes that are Costing you SalesStacey Hylen
Published on: 01/02/2025

You want to grow your company, you want more clients and more sales, but chances are you suck at follow-up. You’re not the only one. 95% of the businesses I work with have little to no follow-up systems in place and often, if they do have some semblance of a system, they fail to implement. This means that you have leads that have been ignored and left to your competitors. Here are the top 10 mistakes you are probably making with your follow-up. Implementing these will easily increase your sales and profits: 1. Don’t have a highly effective, consistent, multi-step system for follow up, do it haphazardly or when they get a chance. They need to a plan for follow up for each entry point that a prospect comes into their marketing funnel (for example: trade show, call in, internet lead, etc.) and develop the pigheaded discipline to implement. 2. Give up too soon. Statistics show that 80% of sales are made on the fifth to twelfth contact so you need to stay in front of your prospect and keep following up. 3. Not personalized. Make sure you inject your personality and some personal details that you have learned about your prospect into your follow up pieces. If you are using an auto responder, write it like you are talking to one person so they will feel like you wrote it to them. 4. No strategic objectives. Before creating your follow up strategy and pieces, establish your strategic objectives overall and for each piece. Do you want to develop rapport, establish expertise, build social proof, etc…? 5. Too much about their company or product vs. their prospect’s wants, needs, pain points and desire. Don’t tell me about your product or company, tell me how it can help me, the prospect. 6. No call to action. Give the prospect a next step to take. It doesn’t need to be to purchase something it could be an article for them to read or an online video for them to watch. 7. Doing your follow up the way you see other companies in your industry doing it. Be a resource for your prospect; give them information of value that they can use, even if they don’t buy from you. Be original, have fun and make it interesting so they want to open it and read it. One of my clients just closed a major account and when his staff asked the client why they chose their company, the new client said it was because of the consistent creative follow up that made him see that an alternative was available to his current provider. 8. Using only one type of follow up. Mix it up use phone, email, social media, video, direct mail. 9. Stop after the prospect becomes a client. Just like marriage experts tell you to date your spouse you should continue to “date” your client and deepen your rapport and relationship by sending them fun things and inviting them to events. 10. Not tracking your implementation and results and modifying follow up systems once you see which things are the most successful.

Sales
Designing your Business Around Your Vision for Your Family

Designing your Business Around Your Vision for Your Family

Designing your Business Around Your Vision for Your FamilyStacey Hylen
Published on: 06/12/2024

Yahoo’s new CEO, Marissa Meyer, is stirring up a lot of debate with her maternity leave plan. She has said that she plans to take a few weeks of maternity leave but to keep working throughout her maternity leave. This stirs up a lot of feelings for me and other moms. I am excited that she is the first Fortune 500 CEO to be hired while pregnant which means that women have broken through a new glass ceiling. I am also happy that this has placed the parental/ maternity leave in the headlines since the US ranks 20th out of 21 high income countries for their parental leave policies according to a study in 2009 by the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CERP). This whole debate of childcare and how to balance parenting with earning a living is one of the reasons I started my own business. I wanted to be in control of how much time I spent with my kids and have the freedom to design my own schedule. Not to say that this has been easy, instead of getting a paid maternity leave with my first daughter like most employees, I promptly lost almost all of my clients when she was born when many of my coaching clients choose that time to complete their coaching assuming I would be taking time off with my daughter. So I was challenged to rebuild my business with a newborn! There were many weeks of getting up at 4am to nurse my daughter before heading off to an early morning BNI meeting and having my hubby and I meet at Tim Hortons for him to hand her over on his way to work. This was exhausting so I had to create a better way. I resolved that when my second daughter was born and would have a thriving business that was designed around the life I wanted for my family. Here are some of the steps I took to design my business around my vision for my family: Get clear on what you want. Take some time to figure out what would make you happy both for the growth of your business and your family time. I figured out what I wanted to be done with my day when my daughter got off the bus, take all school vacations off with my kids, have at least 4 weeks off in the summer and only work half days the rest of the summer. This adds up to 8-10 weeks per year that I take off per year. I was also very clear that although I was family centered I didn’t want a business that was just some part time income and set my goal for six figures per year short term with a long term goal of reaching a million dollar business. Get clear on your boundaries, aka, what you don’t want. I realized that I was willing to travel some for business but I set clear limits on how often and how long I was willing to be away. This is necessary so you can say NO when it doesn’t fit your life. Be creative and persistent! When my second daughter was born I was insistent that she stays with me instead of going to daycare, so I kept looking and asking until I found someone to care for her in my home so I could nurse her and play with her in between clients. This worked out even better than I could have imagined since the woman was amazing. She loved my daughter and she COOKED too! Set your business up for leverage. In order to make my plan come true I had to set up passive revenue streams so I was making money even when I wasn’t coaching my clients. We are so lucky now to have multiple ways to do this using the internet. Some examples are: memberships sites or programs, affiliate marketing, and offering info products. Maximize every opportunity. Look for ways to get more out of less in your business. How can you increase your average sale? Keep clients longer? Get more referrals? What can you do with prospects that say no? How can you make the most of every time you travel? Stay focused on creating more results and more revenue out of every opportunity. Stay flexible. Things will change, clients will ask you to make exceptions, great opportunities will come up be willing to stay flexible and bend while keeping your vision for your life and your business in mind. Hang out with like minded people. This journey balancing a business with a family centered life is not for sissies, the stay at home moms will say you aren’t doing it right, the people who work in regular jobs may be jealous, other business owners might not think you are serious enough so it is important to get support from others who have chosen this path and stay true to the vision you have for your family and business. Know that the time is short and before you know it your kids will be choosing to hang out with their friends instead of spending their time with you so enjoy every moment while you can.

Strategic Planning
Are You Being Lifted Up or Dragged Down?

Are You Being Lifted Up or Dragged Down?

Are You Being Lifted Up or Dragged Down?Stacey Hylen
Published on: 08/11/2024

If you have big goals and are taking action to make them a reality but you are not surrounding yourself with the right people you may find yourself stalled without knowing why and not reaching your goals as quickly as you could have. Jim Rohn , the modern philosopher said, “You are the average of the five people you spend the most time with.” this can be a scary thought for some people. This summer at the lake I had a good reminder of this and how important it can be. We had an amazing weekend of fun at the cottage and afterwards I reflected on why it was so fun. I realized it was because we had another family visit us that was a fun loving active group. Instead of sitting there waiting to swim or for the weather to be exactly right, we spent almost the whole weekend either on the boat or in the water. As a result I swam more that weekend than usual, which is great because I LOVE to swim and be in the water as much as possible. I realized that when we have guests that aren’t big swimmers I spend most of my weekend on the dock or sitting in the boat. When I am with this friend, we go running, rollerblading, swimming, and I have even been convinced to sign up for a class of adult gymnastics ( that is a whole other blog post!). It is definitely a friendship that has a lot of positive energy and fits in with my goals of being fit and spending lots of fun time with my family. But we all have had the opposite experience as well, spending time with people who drag us down with gossip, complaining, and lots of negative energy. After spending time with these people you feel worse. So how about you? Are the people that you spend time with supporting your success? Here are some areas to look at: Family Friends And in your business: Employees Clients Business Relationships Networking Groups Mastermind Groups Events or conferences that you attend Once you take a look at this list and evaluate if they are lifting you up or dragging you down, you may have some changes to make especially if you are someone who seriously invests time, energy and money into your personal growth and business development. You may have outgrown the relationships that served you before and need to redefine the relationship and how much time you spend with that person and set strong boundaries in place of how you interact with this person. It is important to surround yourself with people who not only have big goals like you but are also action takers. A few years ago I had a referral partner who sent me coaching clients that all had been to a certain seminar, the common denominator with all of these clients was that they had super big and often extremely unrealistic goals and did not take action. So I chose to decline taking on any more of these clients since they were not a good fit for me. The reason this is so important is that if you are hanging out in the wrong people you may find yourself holding yourself back and unable to fully express yourself and live up to the amazing potential that you have. My favorite quote from Marianne Williamson that I have printed out and framed on my desk sums it up. “Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness that frightens us. We ask ourselves “Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous?” Actually, who are you not to be? You are a child of God. Your playing small does not serve the world. There’s nothing to be enlightened about shrinking so that other people won’t feel insecure around you. We are all meant to shine as children do. We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us. It is not some of us. It’s everyone. And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our own fear, Our presence automatically liberates others. No more surrounding yourself with people who drag you down. Stop playing small to make others feel better and get out there and live up to your full potential.

Marketing