Monday, September 30, 2013

Cliché Update: A Picture Is Now Worth 1,000 Clicks



In the old days, marketers could create presentations of smoke and mirrors to make their sales. A la, “pay no attention to the man behind the curtain.” But you sure can’t do that now. Because customers know how to get a 3D image of that curtain on Google maps.
That’s right. There’s no hiding anything. “Hiders” are totally out of luck in this research-savvy marketplace. Everybody has access to almost anything about companies, equipment, services… And if there’s nothing to be found? That’s even worse.
Imagine someone saying: “I searched. I couldn’t find anything.” If you don’t exist in cyberspace and social media, you’re not real. Or you’re regarded with suspicion.
So here we are: transparency is no longer just a term for self-help groups. It’s a critical need for businesses in the marketplace today. Fortunately, transparency – once you admit you need it – is not too hard to achieve. And one great way to do so is through images that help tell the story of your company and your people.
Not smoke and mirrors, but real pictures – because for starters:

  • 70% of social media conversations involve a picture, marketing researchers say.
  • One in five women in America uses the image-friendly Pinterest, according to Pew Internet & American Life Project, last Sept.
  • 56% of Internet users have either uploaded photos they have taken themselves or shared photos found online through social media, the same Pew research says.

Visuals tell your story faster and with greater impact. And they’re a plus for both the customer and the content creator. For instance, they take less time to create (or consume). Their meaning is clear right away, and customers can make a decision in a snap about whether to proceed with a click. (Hear REAL contractor success stories in this month's OPEN coaching call.)
Further, visuals tend to be more transparent about what’s on the other side of a click rather than, say, a teasing tweet that links to an article that may or may not be what the customer was expecting.
Pictures can also create more of an emotional reaction prompting a desire to learn more (and click).
One thing to note: the use of pictures is different, depending on platform. For example, Facebook and Twitter are chronological in their feeds. So your picture needs to tell the whole story (or contain in itself a compelling reason to click). Because by the time you post again, your picture will be pushed down in the feed. Pinterest, on the other hand, can tell a story with multiple images through boards.
So how can contractors use pictures to tell stories about their company, their people and their services? Smiling customers who’ve just been rescued from the heat, flood or electrical outage are a possibility. Or the smiling techs who’ve just done the rescuing. Or, if possible, take a (non-customer-identifying) photo of a dire discovery within a piece of equipment – something you could use to warn others. Brainstorm with your team for other ways to create compelling visuals.
You surely know the cliché from those old days – a picture is worth a thousand words. While words are fine in their place, in this new online world, we’d trade that any day for a thousand clicks.
Want to learn more about Social Media and Web Marketing? Join us for a ONE-TIME Only, no-cost training call, “8 Common Web Marketing Failures Contractors Make Everyday Day” that KILLS results with ACCA’s very one marketing duo Melissa Broadus and Christine Cunnick. Go ahead and SAVE YOUR SEAT for the call here. There are only 110 lines left, so don’t miss out.

Thursday, September 26, 2013

We Clearly Struck a Nerve...



Recently, I asked contractors from across the industry to attend the “Ultimate HVAC Lead Generation Formula” Training Series. It truly was a great event, and it generated an EXTREME amount of feedback.

For once in my life, I was speechless at the number of marketing questions submitted before, during and after the event. Many were answered in the videos, several on the MasterMind Webinar, and the ones that weren't will be answered in a series of blog posts (like the one below).

We clearly hit a nerve with this event, and are happy to have helped hundreds of contractors get on the path to simplifying, unifying and multiplying leads, sales and profits.

For those contractors who do them right, maintenance agreements are the bread and butter of year-round cash flow and steady work in season and out. But what is the “right” way to do them? We had a few questions come in asking just that. 

     Q: I always worked from the world of mouth referrals. Now, I would like to expand my service maintenance contracts. So, I would like to learn the best strategy and what will work most efficiently. Hope you will teach me!!!!

Peter Zarovsky
Temperature Zone, Inc.

     A: This’ll be short and sweet: For every service or replacement call you get for the rest of your life, offer it! Do the “With and Without” price close. Follow up with a CSR. Then a letter. Then a newsletter 4x per year. With an email ‘bump,’ 12 times per year.

And in case I need to repeat, repeat, repeat myself: Do this on every service or replacement call for the rest of your life. It can ALL be automated. You WILL see Agreements go up.


To read more of the questions asked throughout the Training Series, click here. Or if you have a marketing question of your own, feel free to send them to coachingquestion@hudsonink.com and a marketing coach will be in touch.