Four Secrets to Marketing Success

Photo by Kristina Flour on Unsplash

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I frequently get calls from advisors with this request: “How do I make the phone ring?”

I wish I knew.

I am highly motivated. If I had a glib answer, I could make a fortune.

But I have four tips you should consider when deciding how to spend your marketing budget.

Secret #1

Don’t spend money on marketing strategies that don’t work.

If a vendor tells you they have a digital marketing formula that will generate tons of leads, ask them to provide at least five references of advisors who used them and earned a positive return on their investment.

I’m approached by vendors constantly who claim to have the magic bullet. None have ever complied with this request.

Secret #2

If you serve a niche market, you may have success with social media ads. If your demographic is broader, you’re probably wasting your money.

Be skeptical of automated marketing campaigns that use bots to skim prospects from social media websites. Using them may violate the terms of service of those websites and could result in the termination of your account.

Being active on social media is an important part of your marketing strategy, but many of the claims I’ve seen are overhyped. There’s often little correlation between social media “likes” and prospect inquiries.

Social media marketing may drive more visitors to your website, but here’s what vendors may neglect to tell you:

  1. More visitors doesn’t mean more qualified leads; and
  2. “Doubling” or “tripling” website traffic is only meaningful in context. A website that goes from 1,000 visitors to 2,000 a month, is impressive. One that doubles from 100 visitors is less so. When I verify claims made about increased traffic, they are often with websites that had few visitors initially.

Secret #3

Beware of bundled providers.

There are some very successful companies serving advisors who bundle digital marketing with website design.

The result is often a cookie-cutter website and generic content.

No wonder advisors have trouble differentiating themselves. Their websites are indistinguishable from their competitors.