Archive for the ‘small business marketing’ Category

Market From A Position of Strength

Thursday, June 19th, 2008
I was reading (re-reading, actually) a great book over the weekend: Soar With Your Strengths. It’s all about how our teachers, our bosses and we ourselves are often so focused on improving weaknesses and changing natural tendencies that we neglect to focus on what makes us great, unique and powerful: our strengths.
“The goal,” the book says, “is to manage weaknesses so that the strengths can be freed to develop and become so powerful they make the weaknesses irrelevant.” By focusing on real strengths, people, their teams and their businesses will excel in ways never before imagined. By focusing on weaknesses, you will constantly be trying to explain away, make excuses and be something you really aren’t.

The same can be said for your marketing efforts. All too often, I see so much time and effort spent on trying to be something you aren’t. Why focus on what your business does just OK or a niche that you really don’t own? Focus on what works, on what makes you powerful and, ultimately, on the true value you offer your potential clients.

And speaking of strengths in marketing, I hope you consider your website to be a strength, an asset. But what are you doing beyond your website? Read my most recent post below, Beyond Your Website, to learn what you should be doing to build on the strength of your website.

Web Presence – Do You Have It? (Part 2 of 2)

Tuesday, May 13th, 2008

In the last entry, we focused on things (like prospective customers) you could potentially lose by not having web presence. Now let’s focus on the things you WILL GAIN by having a good well planned web presence.

• Your website and web presence can be the center of your marketing strategies. Using the same branding as your site, you can create and send e-newsletters, blog about industry specific topics, take part in editorial sites, social networking sites and lead generators. Most of this could all be done for FREE!

How does your marketing taste?

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008


Regardless of the forum you use for marketing, there are four essential ingredients to make sure you have a tasty message!

1. Customers want to know who you are and what you are all about. The easiest and least expensive way to make this happen is via the Internet. Right now, potential consumers everywhere are on-line looking for your service and the more they know about you, the more likely they are to hire you.

Are you a small business or a bank for small businesses?

Monday, January 21st, 2008

We talk a lot about what you need to do in your small business marketing. And sometimes we overlook the one thing you need to move your ideas into reality – money. It’s easy to let passion or a sense of doing good overshadow the economic component of your business picture.

Where are you going to get the funds to take your business to the next level? In case you’ve forgotten, it starts with something called receivables.

What gift is underneath your wrapping paper?

Sunday, November 11th, 2007

I have a client who came to me to rewrite his existing website. This is always a tough one because often it is more difficult and less effective to re-write something that wasn’t so great in the first place (although people often, mistakenly, think this is an easier job just because something is already written) than it is to start from scratch…but that’s another story.

Get It In Writing & Allison Nazarian featured in INC Magazine as "The Packager"

Tuesday, August 28th, 2007

Read the article in the September 2007 issue of INC Magazine (the INC 5,000 issue) in which Get It In Writing ’s Allison Nazarian discusses packaging services as a way to better benefit clients and take the focus off money and back on results.

Small budget, big plans

Monday, July 23rd, 2007

Many small businesses, especially those with entrepreneurial dreams and leaders, are looking to do the most with the least. We do not always have big budgets and big payrolls, but we do have big dreams.

I just read a great post (thank you, Chris Tynski) on Marketing Sherpa.com with the title: How to Get Tons of Publicity on a Tiny Budget.

The article is set up like a case study and basically includes these specific steps that the small business in question took: