iSnare.com - Free Content Articles Directory
Authors Contents [Advanced Search][Add OpenSearch][Job Search]
Distribute your articles to thousands of article sites for only $2 and below! Read more...

Index  Marketing
 

The False Promise Of Word Of Mouth Marketing

 
[ Contact the Author] [ Send to a Friend] [ Article Publisher] [Make PDF] [ Print] [ Bookmark & Share]
 
Read our Terms of Service before reprinting this article. The submitter specified above has claimed the rights to this article.
Paul Mccord

We’ve all heard the advice: turn your clients into your mini ‘sales force’ by encouraging them to tell others about you and your business. Word of Mouth Marketing is touted as being the easiest and best marketing any salesperson, professional, or business can hope to get. Not only does it get your word out, but nothing is more powerful than a customer telling others about how great you are. Customers will flock to your door if your clients create a buzz about you.

There is some truth to those statements. If you can get your customers to create enough ‘buzz,’ you will see an increase in your business. Customers will come. Sales will increase. Nevertheless, for most small businesses and salespeople, the hype about word of mouth marketing is a false promise of easier, less stressful marketing and increased business.

The problem isn’t with the concept. A broad, expansive word of mouth marketing campaign can work wonders for a business. If you can get enough people talking about your product or service—or you, the method can be one of the most effective marketing formats there is. A spontaneous recommendation from a very satisfied customer is a powerful thing that few other marketing methods can match.

The problem with word of mouth marketing is the breadth of buzz needed in order to see an increase in business--and the passive nature of the method itself.

True word of mouth marketing seeks to create a substantial level of general discussion and awareness within the community of a product, service or individual business. This awareness isn’t spontaneous but is rather generated and directed by the company who is seeking the promotional benefit of the marketing. True word of mouth marketing is typically engaged in by large companies who commit millions of dollars to creating the ‘spontaneous’ viral marketing by ‘customers.’ Often the ‘customers’ who are spreading the word about the product or service are not actually customers but are hired to appear as satisfied customers or are receiving some type of incentive for talking up the product or service.

On a much more modest level, small companies, professionals, and individual salespeople try to create word of mouth marketing by asking their legitimate customers to tell others about their services. Unlike the major word of mouth campaigns above, these are simply a handful of truly satisfied clients whom the salesperson or company encourages to spread their word for them by telling family, friends and acquaintances about their experience and then encouraging the prospective customer to call the salesperson or company.

Of course, this mini word of mouth campaign can never begin to reach the magnitude of buzz of that created by the major corporate campaigns, but the hope is the same—increased business through the transmission of the company or salesperson’s message to potential new customers through their existing client base.

Unfortunately, for the typical individual salesperson or small company, the numbers simply don’t work. Despite their effort to encourage each client to tell others about them, in reality only a small percentage of customers will actually tell anyone else about the salesperson or the company. Recommendations generally only come when the client happens to hear someone say they are currently looking for the salesperson or company’s products or services, and these occasions of happenstance occur very seldom for any one customer. Consequently, for the word of mouth marketing campaign to generate a substantial increase in business, the salesperson needs hundreds or even thousands of customers spreading the word for them.

To compound the issue, once the customer has made the recommendation to a potential customer, the prospect must then take the initiative to contact the recommended salesperson or company. All the salesperson can do is hope the client passes the word along and that the recipient of the recommendation decides to act upon the recommendation and contact the salesperson.

Word of mouth marketing is a passive activity where the salesperson has no control over any aspect of the process once they have encouraged their client to tell others about them and their products. Either the customer chooses to tell others or they don’t. Once a client has encouraged a prospect to seek the company or salesperson’s services, the prospect chooses to contact the recommended company or salesperson or not.

For a small company, professional, or salesperson to rely on word of mouth marketing as their primary method of generating new business is dangerous. Asking others, no matter how much you trust them or how sincere they are, who do not have a stake in the success of your business is to risk your success and future on chance.

This is not to say that word of mouth marketing should not be a small portion of your marketing plan. Word of mouth marketing certainly has its place in the marketing lexicon of most businesses. It is simply to say that it should play only a minor part in the marketing strategy of your business.

Nor is it to say that some small businesses haven’t used word of mouth marketing successfully. For some certainly have. Most of those who have found word of mouth marketing to be highly successful have tended to be retail stores and others who rely heavily on walk-in traffic.

Moreover, it isn’t to say that a salesperson or company’s client base can’t be the primary source of new business, for it certainly can, and for most businesses and salespeople, it should be. However, it shouldn’t be through word of mouth marketing but rather through referral selling.

Although often used as synonyms, word of mouth marketing and referral selling are distinctly different marketing methods. As mentioned, word of mouth marketing is a passive activity. On the other hand, referral selling is a highly proactive marketing format.

Whereas with word of mouth marketing, you have no control of the process; with referral selling, the you retain complete control of the process.

Referral selling is a process where you work with your client to acquire direct introductions to others your client knows who may need or want your products or services.

True referral selling is a disciplined process that establishes a relationship with your client that has a predictable outcome—receiving a large number of high quality referrals from the client.

Unlike the referral method most salespeople, professionals, and business owners have been taught, true referral selling isn’t just “doing a good job and asking for referrals.” That method, like word of mouth marketing is more chance than process. The most typical result of ‘asking’ for referrals as most have been taught to ask, simply results in the client claiming they have no referrals to give or if they do give a name and phone number, it is most often little better than taking out the phonebook and simply pointing at a name at random.

In order to turn referral selling from being little better than a warm call to a suspect rather than a true prospect, you must develop a referral generation process that:

• Gives your client an opportunity to get comfortable with giving referrals

• Lets the client know exactly what a quality referral is

• Gives the client a reason to give referrals

• Gives the client ample opportunity to think of quality referrals to give

• Helps the client come up with several quality referrals to give

• Turns contacting the referred prospect from a warm call to a direct introduction

A referral process that meets the above criteria turns referrals into a disciplined process where you retain complete control. You know exactly where the process will end—with several high quality referrals to people you know you want to be referred to and with a direct introduction to them from your client.

Word of mouth marketing is dangerous for the typical salesperson or company if relied upon as their primary marketing method. It is easy. It is safe in the sense that the salesperson seldom hears rejection. But for most salespeople and companies, it cannot produce enough new customers to sustain the business. The promise of easy marketing and increased business is false because the premise of word of mouth marketing on a small scale is false.

Yet, taking the time and effort to learn how to generate high quality referrals from each of your clients will expand your business many times over by eliminating chance and replacing it with a predictable process to generate new customers.

Important NoticeDISCLAIMER: All information, content, and data in this article are sole opinions and/or findings of the individual user or organization that registered and submitted this article at Isnare.com without any fee. The article is strictly for educational or entertainment purposes only and should not be used in any way, implemented or applied without consultation from a professional. We at Isnare.com do not, in anyway, contribute or include our own findings, facts and opinions in any articles presented in this site. Publishing this article does not constitute Isnare.com's support or sponsorship for this article. Isnare.com is an article publishing service. Please read our Terms of Service for more information.

Paul McCord is a leading authority on prospecting, referral selling, and personal marketing. He is president of McCord and Associates, a Houston, Texas based sales training, coaching, and consulting company. His first book, Creating a Million Dollar a Year Sales Income: Sales Success through Client Referrals (John Wiley and Sons, 2007), is an Amazon and Barnes and Noble best-seller and is quickly becoming recognized as the authoritative work on referral selling. His second book, SuperStar Selling: 12 Keys to Becoming a Sales SuperStar will be released in February, 2008. He may be reached at pmccord@mccordandassociates.com or visit his sales training website at http://www.powerreferralselling.com
Article Tags: marketing [See Dictionary], mouth [See Dictionary], word [See Dictionary]
Got a question about this article? Ask the community!
Article published on July 08, 2008 at Isnare.com
 
Rate this article:

Who Are You Marketing?
Submitted by: Paul Mccord

Take a look at your business cards, your brochures, your filers, and your other marketing materials What sticks out to you...

Is Your Follow-Up Communication Guilty Of Prospecticide?
Submitted by: Paul Mccord

Like Angela Lansbury in “Murder, She Wrote,” I run into cases of murder everywhere I go Unlike Lansbury who faced cunning villains who intentionally murdered, the cases I come across are unintentional, but with the same deadly results...

Do You Need To Fire Your Employer?
Submitted by: Paul Mccord

If you work as an outside, commissioned salesperson, think about what your employer does: Your employer pays for: • virtually 100% of your training • virtually 100% of your marketing • your gas, your cell phone, your prospect and client lunches and coffee meetings Your employer is investing hundreds of dollars per month in your career...

Projecting An Expert Image
Submitted by: Paul Mccord

Virtually every salesperson with any experience what so ever proclaims him or herself to be an expert in their field...

The Power Of The Press Release
Submitted by: Paul Mccord

Open any newspaper and you’ll find mention of thousands of companies and products Most typically the same names are mentioned over and over—Sears, Old Navy, GM, Microsoft, Wal-Mart, and the list goes on...

Three "Secrets" To A Successful Networking Event
Submitted by: Paul Mccord

Are you one of the millions of small business owners and professionals who have attended networking events held by the chamber of commerce or a business organization and found the experience to be far less than what you had hoped...

Secrets Of A Successful Marketing Partnership
Submitted by: Paul Mccord

I recently received an interesting e-mail from a gentleman in the UK asking if marketing partnerships really work...

Speak Your Way To Success
Submitted by: Paul Mccord

Salespeople often overlook one of the most effective and quick ways to both establish themselves as experts in their field and generate a pipeline of quality prospects...

Why Clients Resist Giving Quality Referrals
Submitted by: Paul Mccord

Virtually every advisor has been taught that generating referrals from clients and prospects are the way to success, but less than 15% of all advisors generate enough referrals to significantly impact their business...

Effective Client Communication
Submitted by: Paul Mccord

Whether you know it or not, your database of current and past clients is your best source of new clients...

Knowing Who Your Client Knows
Submitted by: Paul Mccord

One of the critical parts of generating a large number of quality referrals is, of course, getting quality referrals, as opposed to just getting names and phone numbers...

Meeting Your Client's Expectations Isn't Enough
Submitted by: Paul McCord

One of the current buzz phrases in business is “exceeding the client’s expectations” This is a laudable goal, but one that is seldom met...

Unlock The Untapped Commissions In Your Client Database
Submitted by: Paul McCord

Right this minute, you are probably sitting on tens of thousands, maybe hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of commissions...

ESelling: Sellign Your Cars Online in an EMarket
Submitted by: Pete J Ridgard

It has been a very long time since I last went shopping for a car; so long in fact that I have noticed that the whole nature of car shopping has changed irrevocably...

Top Tips on How to Promote and Market Your Own Book
Submitted by: Tony Mandarich

Marketing is often not an author’s area of expertise, but it does not mean an author is incapable of learning how to successfully market a book...

Tips For Marketing Your Restaurant Locally
Submitted by: Adriana Noton

In any city or town across the country, there are a large number of restaurants which can make marketing quite difficult...

How to Successfully Market Your Business Online
Submitted by: Trond Lyngbø

Throughout the ages as technology improved and evolved, new forms of marketing developed The radio made the way for audio ads, jingles, and other catchy forms of advertisement that still are transmitted by radio stations to this day...

From Computer Illiterate To Internet Marketing Affiliate In Less Then 7 Days!!
Submitted by: Michelle Pinto

My husband and I have been working home based businesses for about 7 years We have had various levels of success with different Network Marketing companies (always nutrition based) and definitely believe in earning "residual income"...

Target Market Your Way to the Top of the Online Business Ladder
Submitted by: Erica Njie

Those who target market do very well with their online business If you give your viewers something that they are craving, you have a far greater chance of success...

Telemarketing – Use These Top 6 Tips For Getting Great Results With Every Call
Submitted by: Daljeet Sidhu

The business of telemarketing emerges from a conflict Telemarketers need to make calls to customers despite the fact that these calls are viewed with scorn and derision by a vast majority of people...

The Big Bang Affiliate Marketing Theory - My Theory of Affiliate Marketing
Submitted by: S James

Affiliate marketing has the potential to change people's lives, but some advertising in this area of work is getting the business a bad name...

Promotional Products - Matchbooks
Submitted by: LQ

When many people think of matchbooks, they think of smoking or bars And while it's true that it used to be pretty commonplace to pick up matchbooks from different bars and they were generally on hand for smokers, promotional matchbooks reach far beyond those narrow niches these days...

Fake Traffic: Do Not Buy Website Traffic Until You Read This Report
Submitted by: Daniel Richmond

Have you ever purchased website traffic and received zero results If so, chances are you were ripped-off by people who sell Fake Traffic...

How to Take Your Niche Market to Google Page One - Helpful Information to Know
Submitted by: Dan Atkins

To begin with, you need to understand that it is going to be rather difficult to take your niche market to Google page one unless you are a well established website owner with a huge marketing budget...

Benefits of a Press Release in Marketing
Submitted by: Scott Lindsay

Picture this Your website has just experienced a significant upgrade and you hope it will benefit existing customers...

Finding Added Value in Online Marketing Strategies
Submitted by: Scott Lindsay

People buy stuff Things they don’t need...

Ugg Boots and Amazon
Submitted by: Robert Buford

Ugg boots have been made in Australia for over 200 years, and they are starting to take the USA by storm...

Online Marketing and the Content Curse
Submitted by: William Randall

Videos, blog posts, articles...

Isnare.com Footer Divider

© 2004-2009. Isnare Free Articles - An Isnare Online Technologies Free Articles Project. All Rights Reserved.   Privacy Policy