Proven Business Growth
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If you’re a salesperson, practice lead, business development specialist, or owner in the professional services space, there’s a very good chance you’re looking for real business growth. And, to a large extent, business growth means more leads.
The most productive business development strategy for professional services firms requires a potent blend of expertise and communications that reach buyers who are ready to act. That means leveraging both proven online marketing techniques—and the demonstrated expertise of BD professionals.
What can make a difference in terms of real business growth? How can professional services providers—with clients to help, staff to manage, and hands to shake—assess whether their marketing approach needs a tune-up or a teardown?
Before we explore the answers to these questions. Let’s first look at how buyers are buying professional services—and what that means for business growth.
Making a Good First Impression Online
When decision makers have a problem, they go online.
Online resources like company websites, LinkedIn, and industry blogs give buyers an unprecedented depth of information and breadth of choice about providers. Today, 77% of professional services firms generate new business leads online, and 80% of buyers check out service providers by looking at their website.
When a buyer faces any sort of challenge, they search online. Maybe they find a helpful post on an industry blog published by an unfamiliar firm. Overtime, the buyer follows the blog, attends a free webinar, and receive useful tips in weekly emails from that same firm. If the buyer later needs services in the area covered by these pieces of content, they pick up the phone and reach out.
Figure 1. How Buyers “Check Out” Potential Professional Services Providers
Once, formal references would have dominated this chart. Today, a firm’s website is the uncontested champion, though buyers are typically using multiple resources. In fact, they’re using an average of 3.2 methods—many of which are online. From search engines to social media, buyers have a wealth of ways to learn about providers and solutions—and they’re using them.
SEE ALSO: Are You Invisible? Why Expanding Professional Visibility is Critical for You and Your Firm
Develop Great Content Your Expertise
The fact is your expertise can drive the success of your content marketing long before you talk to a prospective client. And that’s exactly what happens in the most successful content marketing campaigns. And as we learned earlier, content leads to business growth.
Strong content has a couple of key attributes. It should be:
- Educational. This isn’t guerilla promotion. Your content should teach audiences something valuable, not promote your firm.
- Relevant. Your content should speak to target audiences’ real challenges and opportunities. It has to be rooted in a sophisticated understanding of their needs and marketplace.
- Accessible. Content should speak your audiences’ language. Keep it clear and accessible while avoiding unnecessary jargon.
Right away, these three key characteristics should give you an idea of why your expertise is so important: as a business development specialist, you have the ability to ensure that content meets all of these criteria.
Identifying Expertise
Your accumulated experience in your industry is valuable for business growth—often, more valuable than you realize. Knowledge that you take for granted, ideas that may feel like the “basics” to you can provide essential insight to others. So take a step back and assess what you know.
What do you know a lot about? What are the typical client problems you help to solve? What has your experience taught you about the causes of these problems? The answers to these questions are fodder for educational, relevant, and accessible content.
Give It Away
I know it sounds counterintuitive, but you’ll want to give away—free of charge—all that great content. The goal is business growth, and to do that, you want to put yourself in a position to advise your target audience. This is a great way to be introduced to a prospective buyer and spur business growth. Build credibility as a problem-solver in your marketplace, as a knowledgeable advisor. If you do, potential clients may come to you over a competitor.
Educational Content and High Growth
When your firm starts assembling its marketing toolbox, it makes sense to ask, “Which tools work?” After all, if a tool or technique isn’t going to make a demonstrable contribution to the bottom line, then why bother?
For answers, we can look to our studies on the marketing strategies used by average and high growth businesses. Our research shows a major difference in the way high growth and average growth firms approach content and digital marketing more broadly.
The chart below shows how 500 professional services firms focused their efforts, with a stark difference between the high and average growth firms.
Effectiveness Rating: High Growth vs. Average Growth Firms
The top techniques used by high growth firms are dramatically underutilized by average growth firms.
Figure 2. Top 5 digital techniques favored by high-growth firms
The research shows that companies that blog regularly see 50% more traffic and 70% more leads. Why? Not only does educational content like blog posts help boost your firm’s credibility and share your expertise, it also helps raise your visibility in search engines—so prospects are likelier to find you when they go looking for solutions.
SEE ALSO: Top 10 Marketing Techniques for Professional Services
Long after you or your firm’s other experts have written and posted a blog, that content keeps working for you by raising your profile in searches and educating potential clients who you might not even know are out there. You can think of robust educational content that will remain relevant for years to come — often known as “evergreen content” — as a long-term investment in your brand, and ultimately in your business growth.
Moving Forward with Content
Content marketing doesn’t work overnight. It succeeds through sustained effort.
Once your team is committed, here are a few ways you can help shape relevant content:
- Identify your typical prospect type
- Isolate 5-6 key concerns per prospect type
- Identify areas of specialty – from a prospect’s perspective rather than a service perspective
- Identify field-facing personnel fluent in the business “language” your ideal customer speaks
With the organizational support to produce quality educational content in an ongoing way, your firm will have much of what you need to raise your visibility among potential clients and make the most of business growth opportunities.
Additional Resources:
- Join the online marketing revolution that is transforming the way professional services are bought and sold. Download our book, Online Marketing for Professional Services.
- In our 2016 Learn how high-growth firms can be 45% more profitable while putting less time and money into their marketing in our 2016 High Growth Research Study.
- Read about How to Drive Organic Growth for Professional Services Firms.
How Hinge Can Help
Hinge is a global leader in helping professional services firms grow faster and become more profitable. Our research-based strategies are designed to be implemented. In fact, our groundbreaking Visible Firm® program combines strategy, implementation, training and more.
Internet Marketing Course
Digital marketing is the component of marketing that utilizes internet and online based digital technologies such as desktop computers,
mobile phones and other digital media and platforms to promote products and services. Its development during the 1990s and 2000s,
changed the way brands and businesses use technology for marketing. As digital platforms became increasingly incorporated into marketing plans and everyday life,
and as people increasingly use digital devices instead of visiting physical shops, digital marketing campaigns have become prevalent,
employing combinations of search engine optimization (SEO), search engine marketing (SEM), content marketing, influencer marketing, content automation,
campaign marketing, data-driven marketing, e-commerce marketing, social media marketing, social media optimization, e-mail direct marketing, display advertising,
ebooks, and optical disks and games have become commonplace. Digital marketing extends to non-Internet channels that provide digital media, such as television,
mobile phones (SMS and MMS), callback, and on-hold mobile ring tones. The extension to non-Internet channels differentiates digital marketing from online marketing.
More Course: INTERNET MARKETING
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