Houston Speakers Bureau – Networking Speaker, Donna Fisher on Word-of-Mouth Marketing Fuels Success

Houston Texas Speakers Bureau presents Donna Fisher on How Word-of-Mouth Marketing Fuels Success.

When Sally is not treated well at the local cleaners, she not only doesn’t go back there, she tells others of her unpleasant experience. People talk! They talk about their frustrations, disappointments, poor service and inadequate products. Statistics indicate that every unsatisfied customer tells at least eight people about their unpleasant experience. People tend to readily talk about unsatisfactory service and yet what you want is to have them talk about great service.

Imagine if every person who came to your center told eight people about how you are enhancing the lives of people everyday. The people you serve are you best vehicle for positive word-of-mouth marketing.

Tips for Generating Word-of-Mouth Marketing

1. Create a memorable, easily repeatable value statement.

Decide what it is that you want people to say about your center. What do you want people to think of when they think of your center? Make it easy for people to talk about you by giving them the words to say.

2. Provide quality service, and most of all treat people with respect.

Make sure respect is present in everything you do and say. Respect creates a feeling of honor which nourishes people at a soul level. Communicate your commitment to “respect” by the way that you speak; i.e. “We respect the difficulty you must face when . . .” “We respect your need to . . .” “We want you to feel like you’ve been treated with the respect you deserve . . .”

3. Ask people to spread the word.

Ask people to help you reach others who can benefit from the services you provide. With a little encouragement individuals will help you spread the word to others throughout the community.

4. Give people something great to talk about.

Do something extraordinary that makes people want to talk. What can you do that will just naturally get people talking? It could be a community project, a new service, an in-house program. Be willing to be creative and do something extraordinary that gets people’s attention.

5. Stay in touch with people.

By staying in touch with people you increase the chance that they will mention and recommend your center to others. There are always plenty of reasons for being in touch with people. Make sure you don’t get too busy to ignore those nudges to call people. Be aware and alert to opportunities to be in touch.

6. Acknowledge people.

Acknowledge people for being clients, contributors, vendors, community supporters. Make sure that the people in your life realize they contribute to the work that you do. Include people in celebrations and acknowledgements regarding the impact that the center is making in people’s lives.

Does your community really know about the value and benefit of your services? If not, they need to and it is up to you to get the word out. You can initiate a word-of-mouth grapevine that creates positive visibility and exposure. Creating this type of visibility is critical – it is the way that the people who want and need what you have can find you.

For more information or to book Donna Fisher,  Houston networking speaker, to speak at your event, click here.

About Donna Fisher

donna-fisher-powernetworkingDonna Fisher is an entrepreneur and top Texas speaker on networking, communication, and people skills.  She loves to create and grow fun and profitable businesses – and teach others how to do the same.

For over 18 years, she’s been teaching people the art and skill of communicating and connecting.   Her books:Power Networking, People Power, and Professional Networking for Dummies have been translated into 5 languages, recommended by Time Magazine and used as textbooks in universities.  Some of her programs include, Drumming Up Business, First Impression Marketing, How to “Tweet” Your Business and In the Beginning is Your Word.

Donna shows professionals how to communicate and connect to create powerful teams, marketplace visibility and new opportunities.    Her businesses include a music store specializing in drums and percussion, where she has grown the business 35% since 2001.  She also has an online shopping service and markets an online technology for staying connected with clients and prospects.

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