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The
most often asked question from most of
my students who are starting the
marketing consulting businesses is “How
do I get my first client?” This
question was the catalyst for this
series of audio interviews between
Richard, myself, and existing HMA
Consultants about how they got their
first clients.
Each
interview is a gem in itself with the
HMA Consultants relating their personal
experiences with prospects, their first
client, and their plans for the future.
Each
HMA Consultant comes from a different
background and had different reasons for
becoming an HMA Consultant. As such,
you’ll hear the various ways they are
using the HMA System in their
businesses. By listening to each of
these consultants, you may discover some
new tactics to obtain clients for your
own Marketing Consulting business.
Enjoy!
David
David
is a seasoned sales person and has done
business consulting and development both
online and offline for small to medium
sized companies. He has a lot of
experience in all facets of business
consulting but was intrigued by the
philosophy of the HMA System.
By
becoming an HMA Consultant and using the
materials provided, David has found that
the HMA System gives him a “system” that
weaves all of his other sales,
marketing, and consulting skills sets
together, maximizes his business, and
make doing business easier and more
effectively. You’ll hear David tell us
how he now approaches prospects and
closes deals.
He
also discusses:
-
Pricing strategies for his services
-
Qualifying prospects
-
How a whole career can be made out
of just one of many pieces of the
HMA System
-
How easy it is for David now to
approach new prospects
Peter
Peter
was a student of Jay Abraham and Chet
Holmes for ten years. He owned and
operated several businesses before
becoming semi-retired.
Peter
studied all of the free material about
the HMA System and Marketing Consulting
available on my web site
hardtofindseminars.com. After becoming
quite astute and well-versed with what
he had learned, he actually got his
first client before becoming an
HMA Consultant and obtaining all of the
tools that Richard and I make available.
His
first HMA client was a long-time friend
who owned three businesses. The
business that they wanted to focus on
for growth was a light manufacturing
business. You’ll hear Peter talk about
his current association with the
lighting business to find sales
representatives in several states.
Learn
how Peter uses the USP when he works
with their sales representatives to help
them to sell the lighting products more
effectively.
Peter
has found that the HMA System gave him a
template for his Marketing Consulting
business. He states using the
Opportunity Analysis has been very, very
successful with prospects. Peter enjoys
having a systematized approach that the
HMA System provides.
Also,
listen as he talks with Richard about
the importance of looking for motivated
prospects. Dealing with people who are
ready to make a change and grow their
businesses is the only way to operate.
Bill
Bill
has been a consultant for many years in
the areas of accounting and business IT
systems for small to medium sized
businesses. His specialty has been
mainframe and minicomputer
applications. Unfortunately for Bill,
these types of systems are being phased
out and are being replaced with
technology that Bill is not familiar
with.
In
trying to plan a new direction for his
career, Bill realized that, over the
years, he had developed a great amount
of expertise in filling the needs of
small businesses in the way of
marketing. Again, the systematized
approach of the HMA System was very
appealing to Bill and prompted him to
become an HMA Consultant.
Bill
frequents a restaurant where he has
become friends with the owner. One day,
he struck up a conversation with them
about growing their business. Having
recently bought the restaurant, they had
already implemented some small
promotions that yielded a good amount of
growth for the restaurant. However,
they wanted to grow it even more.
Bill
suggested a couple of ideas that would
grow the business without increasing the
cost of their advertising. Bill tells
us that, throughout his career, the
majority of his clients were referred by
word of mouth. Because of this, Bill
has offered to do the first two projects
for the restaurant free of charge in
hopes that he will get referrals from
the restaurant owner. He is currently
in the first stages of the USP and
implementing the USP into the
restaurant’s current business processes.
Check back soon for more first client
stories on Part Two. What are you
waiting for? You have all of the tools
you need in the recording on this page
to get your first client. I hope to have
your story here soon!
Mat
Matt
is an accountant by trade but has always
had a passion for marketing. In fact,
before he became an HMA Consultant, he
used the knowledge he’d gained from
studying the work of Jay Abraham, Dan
Kennedy, and other marketing gurus to
help friends who owned businesses to
grow their businesses.
Yet,
he always felt that one thing was
missing – a way to put all of his
knowledge together into a systematized
approach to Marketing Consulting. He
had called me for a consultation some
time ago to learn more about the HMA
System and subsequently became an HMA
Consultant after learned about all of
the resources made available to all HMA
Consultants.
Another of Matt’s passions is EcoNatural
foods and diet supplements. He had
become very familiar with the owner of a
company that he had been purchasing
products from for many years. After
studying the HMA System materials, Matt
felt that the HMA System had provided
him a turnkey system and all of the
tools necessary to make a formal
presentation and to conduct an
Opportunity Analysis with the owner of
the EcoNatural foods business.
Needless to say, the EcoNatural food
manufacturer became his first client.
Matt says that it was easy to close this
client because he already had a
relationship with him from purchasing
his products and having the same passion
for EcoNatural foods.
In
fact, Matt’s advice to new HMA
Consultants is to study and learn the
HMA System and its tools and then to
approach businesses that you are already
familiar with and have a relationship
with. After working with these types of
clients, you will have the confidence
that you need to step up your own
marketing efforts by approaching
unfamiliar prospects.
In
this interview, you will also learn
about:
-
Potential problems in proceeding
with additional projects with
current clients who are too busy
-
Making bartering arrangements with
clients who may not have enough
money to hire a Marketing Consultant
-
Reducing your price per project by
obtaining good referrals from
companies who cannot afford your
services
-
…and more little gems of advice!
Enjoy!
Jez Hunt
Jez has been a
self-employed graphic designer for the
past eight years. He purchased the HMA
System about eight months ago but had
not really focused on it due to his
other business. However, he did spent a
lot of time going through all of the
materials made available to HMA
Consultants in an attempt to learn the
system and be well-prepared to begin his
new Marketing Consulting business.
He met an accountant
through a networking meeting that he
regularly attends. As the two gentlemen
became more familiar with one another,
Jez found that the accountant had
referred Jez to the owner of an auto
repair center who wanted to grow his
business. In fact, the auto repair
center’s owner was actually expecting
Jez’s call! During the call, Jez set up
an appointment for the following week to
do an Opportunity Analysis.
You’ll hear how Jez
planned for the meeting and refreshed
himself on the process of doing an
Opportunity Analysis. Jez found that it
was very easy to take his prospect
through the Opportunity Analysis.
Further, he found in this and other
Opportunity Analyses he has done since,
that using the Opportunity Analysis
Worksheet appeared to impress his
prospects because he came across as
being more professional because he had a
“system.”
During the Opportunity
Analysis with the auto repair shop
owner, it became clear that the business
had several hidden assets. Taking the
advice that he learned from the HMA
System materials, he closed all the way
through the presentation. It certainly
paid off because his prospect was very
excited about the possibilities of
growing his business throughout the
entire meeting.
And yes, he was able to
close the client! Instead of charging
on a per-project basis, Jez offered to
perform his services on a retainer
basis. Not only does it appeal to Jez
to have a regular cash flow, but the
client was happy that he didn’t have to
come up with a large lump sum payment.
Jez now has two clients
and you will hear him talk about his
work with his second client to date.
This client, a design and printing shop,
was also referred to him by his friend,
the accountant. In fact, all of his
prospects have been introduced by word
of mouth.
Jes has done a few
Opportunity Analyses that Jez has done
that did not result in a close. Listen
as Jez gives his thoughts about possible
reasons that they he was not able to
close these prospects.
Jez talks about his plans
for the future of his Marketing
Consulting business and how it is
important to work with prospects who are
eager to grow their businesses. Jez and
his two current clients are, indeed,
partners in growing their
businesses.
Lastly, Jez offers some
advice for new HMA Consultants
-
Watch
and study the DVD’s and/or listen to
audios provided with the HMA System.
-
Absorb
yourself in what Richard teaches and
the advice that he gives
-
Study
the Opportunity Analysis and
practice it on friends and family to
become familiar and comfortable with
the process
-
Don’t
become disheartened if your
Opportunity Analysis does not close
every prospect.
-
You
must look at it as getting practice
and more experience. Besides, not
everyone is going to be a proper
client for you anyway. Being
an HMA Marketing Consultant is fun –
so enjoy it!
Simon R.
Simon, a sixteen year old
student from New York, has to be one of
the most enterprising young people I’ve
ever met. Although he is not an HMA
Consultant yet, he plans to be one very
soon. What he’s done is study all of
the free material on the subject of
Marketing Consulting available on my web
site,
www.hardtofindseminars.com
and, using the knowledge he’s gained,
he’s gotten two clients for whom he will
be doing long term work as their
Marketing Consultant.
Simon met his first
client at his synagogue. Each week, he
would talk to the businessmen there
about how he was studying marketing.
One of the gentlemen he spoke to was
intrigued by Simon’s tenacity and
offered Simon a job as a Marketing
Consultant with his fence business.
Simon was up for the challenge. He
figured that, even though he was young,
he should be able to use his knowledge
just as well as someone three times his
age.
You’ll hear what Simon
proposed to the business owner and how
he set up his pricing terms. Listen as
Simon tells the story of his initial
ideas about growing the business and how
those ideas were rejected by the
business owner. Taking an alternative
approach, Simon put together a plan to
quickly grow the business without his
boss having to do a thing. The plan was
extremely successful and put lots of
money into his boss’s pocket. This
tactic established Simon’s credibility
so that his boss felt more comfortable
trying Simon’s initial marketing ideas.
An avid reader of
leadership and marketing books, Simon
was approached one day as he was leaving
the library with a teetering stack of
books. He was noticed by a curious
businessman about the topics of the
books Simon had chosen. After a
conversation with the businessman which
included Simon giving the gentleman some
tips on Marketing, the businessman
offered Simon a job as the Marketing
Consultant at his lending business.
Finally, Simon gives his
best advice for fellow Marketing
Consultants to get clients. He states
that you must be driven to succeed be
willing to talk to people. He suggests
ways to talk to people that will create
opportunities for you as a Marketing
Consultant.
Enjoy!
For more information about how to make money as a marketing
consultant
click
here.
Or call 858-274-7851 or e-mail
Contact Us
Michael: Hi, this
is Michael Senoff with Michael Senoff’s
www.hardtofindseminars.com . Here’s a series of interviews with
existing HMA marketing consultants. The number one concern from
people interested in becoming a marketing consultant is how do I
get my first client. Well, what you’re about to hear in the next
series of recordings are interviews with existing HMA
consultants that reveal exactly how they got their first client.
I hope you find this helpful and I hope it gives you the
confidence and the ability to go get your first client, even
before you invest in the HMA system. You’ve got all the tools on
my website to go out and prospect and interview and get paid
upfront for a client for consulting. Enjoy.
[MUSIC]
Michael: I’m doing an interview with Bob Bly. He’s a great
copywriter and I’ve got hundreds of questions that come and you
know what the number one question by far is? How do you get your
first client? And so, it gave me an idea to put together a
little audio recording for people who are interested in the
consulting business; stories of some of the HMA students who
have signed up and how they got their first client or how
they’re getting towards getting their first client because it
seems like it’s something that is on everyone’s mind. That’s
really the purpose of this call.
David, the purpose of this call, what I’m doing, I’m putting
together a little promotional audio CD called My First Client.
All the people I’ve talked to who are interested in getting into
consulting, even though you’ve got a lot of experience, they
want to know, how do you get that first client. So, I though
what a better thing to do than ask some of the HMA students or
people with consulting experience how they got their first
client or how the HMA system has made it easier. Just any kind
of advice or reality check that someone considering going into
the consulting business can gain from your experience. So, why
don’t you just start off by telling what your name is, what you
do, and how you got into the little consulting business here?
David: Well, my name is David , White Bull Group, Inc. What I do
is business consulting, business development on the website, as
well as offline for small to mid size businesses. I do something
called Taguchi methodology and that works with other businesses
to help them increase their response rate. I was really
interested in the HMA system because I saw that as rounding out
or giving me further depth or breadth into my background. I am a
salesperson, offers to $100 million in sales I’ve already done,
but knowing the pieces and parts from the foundational
standpoint as far as a system. A USP, going from that to be able
to articulate your sales argument, put together the letters,
develop the alliances; basically from A to Z was something I did
not have. Getting the first client was relatively easy. It was
as easy as walking into a business owner and saying how’s
business going and him saying no so good and you say well we can
make that better and here’s how. And then that one client led to
another. Actually I engaged the client for $20,000 to help him
with the Web, as well as the offline part of his business. And
then I have another client coming right behind that one. If I do
this wrong, it will be $20,000 a month and if I do it right,
$100,000 a month. And all of that is based on just into the
client base, doing the survey that’s talked about on the CDs,
find out what the USP really is, find out not what you’re
selling but what they’re actually buying, developing the proper
alliances both online and offline, and then handling the
conversions on the interim. That’s really all I’m doing, which
is as easy as asking the question. I was at a conference in
Dallas just the other week and a young lady said that she had a
ski website and I said well how’s it going? She said, oh it
could be doing better. I said maybe I can help you with those
conversions. Here’s what I do. And she said let me have your
card and subsequently I got a call.
Michael: When you say here’s what I can do, what’s your elevator
pitch? What do you say?
David: My elevator pitch is I help you with the conversions on
your website or with your business. Anyone can get people either
to their website or into their business. That’s the traffic
part. But if you don’t convert that traffic because you have a
sales message, which is articulated very clearly and concisely
and that doesn’t necessarily match the customer’s conversation,
but aligns with it so you see a positive future, no profit comes
out. So, it is basic formula of traffic plus conversion equals
profit. I handle the conversion piece. That’s exactly how I
illustrate it to people.
Michael: So, with this particular client, the one with the ski
website, did you set up an appointment by phone or was it in
person?
David: It was by phone. She was in another state. I met her at a
conference. She took my card. She gave me a call. I used go to
meetings, so went to her site and saw the obvious things…no
headline, no articulated sales argument, no USP, no credibility
elements on the site, no capture mechanism for any email
address, no communication element; all those things that are
standard and customary for a business to have if they’re going
to enter into a sales process, she didn’t have. So, I turned
around and said look for me to just work on this, this first
part, it’s going to cost $1,500, but this may range if we keep
on going at this, it may get upwards of $15,000 and she said
fine, as long as I can see what each one of the steps are, then
we’re good to go. So, the first thing was to start with the USP.
What are you doing and why would someone want to buy from you.
And then I asked her, I said I’d like to speak to some of your
clients also to find out why they bought so we can take those
names and put them in the sales argument and move forward from
there.
Michael: So, on your pricing, are you charging per step, like
Richard recommends, or are you doing any contingency? What’s
your philosophy on pricing? And I know you’re an experienced,
seasoned sales pro. A lot of the consultants coming in don’t
have the experience you have. For instance, we just talked to a
gentleman who quoted someone $600 for a USP. And I know and
Richard knows and you probably know the difference in what you
charge can be two things; who you’re talking to and your level
of confidence. And it’s easy to understand you have that
confidence in you because of the experience you have behind you.
But what would you tell someone, I guess who’s starting out and
maybe doesn’t have as much confidence, what would you advise
them as far as charging and what’s your philosophy on pricing
your services?
David: It does really depend on who you’re dealing with. You
can’t squeeze blood out of a rock. I mean if there’s no money in
the business, then either you have to make the decision you’re
going to reduce your pricing and get it done for them so that
they get a result so they can continue to pay you or you just
don’t do business with them at all. For me it’s deciding is it
worth my time to work with that business. What is the potential?
I do, do contingency. It’s really not a contingency. I’ll do a
retainer of a minimum of $5,000, plus when I make my promise, I
get the rest of it plus I usually cut in the backend on any
increases they were able to see. Now, a lot of the work I do is
online and I have tools that allow me to track and test to make
sure that I’m above their baseline when we started. So, it’s
very easy for me to have that contingency backend because I can
see what’s going on. In an offline business, especially if there
are phone calls going to an office, it’s more difficult. So, in
that case, you charge a flat fee, get it done, whatever promise
you made as far as increase, I have to listen to the tape, but
it’s saying between 25 and 200%. Although with the technology I
can use, I can sometimes get it up to 700%. The 25 to 200 makes
people very comfortable, but it lowers the threshold at which I
have to perform. So, when I get the 200, 300, 400% increase by
stacking media or going offline and online, optimizing the
website, using advanced testing on any of the pieces of the
sales process. It’s just better for me because that backend is
tied to that. I’m tracking that all the time.
Michael: Richard, do you have anything for David?
Richard: David, you mentioned right at the beginning it’s as
easy as walking into a business and just saying how are things
going. Have you done any prospecting for business? Have you done
any workshops or anything like that?
David: Well, I’ve been very fortunate. I speak in seminars now
and I’m being called to speak at different seminars around the
country. I’ve been in Chicago twice. I was in Washington just
yesterday speaking on my expertise. And from that business
development comes. So, I really haven’t done any prospecting so
to speak. I am thinking about going to the local Chamber of
Commerce because the businesses that I get on a plane and go see
in the other parts of the country are in here Nashville. So, I
feel like I need to probably stop and go to the local Chamber of
Commerce because now I have an information product, which speaks
for me. I’m speaking at seminars. So, I probably will start
trying to be home a little because I’m a celebrity outside of my
own hometown now.
That one situation where I was at the conference, it was just as
easy as asking the question what business do you have and how is
it going. A business owner, most of the time the guy or gal is
not going to say it’s great. It’s always it could be better. And
if you can tell them that you can get them 25% more than they
had before minimum, what are they going to say, no. As long as
their product or service can hold my fee and that’s what I look
for too, what are they selling? If they don’t have the volume
and the profitability to hold my fee, obviously, it’s not worth
it. And I have turned away some clients because they were
selling an e-book for $98. That’s not going to do anything. But
when you get to the folks who are selling something upwards of
$2,500 per unit sale, they can easily hold the fee. I was
speaking to a dentist this morning. I told him that my fee --
what he asked me to do is going to be $20,000. He said done.
Within 30 seconds with no problem.
Michael: Do you have them pay you all upfront?
David: No. Usually what I do is I do half when I start because I
have people I need to pay to get things done and then half upon
my promise. The nice thing is with this particular situation --
this is a pilot -- the reason I’m doing this one so cheap is
because this one is a pilot and that person has a center of
influence of upwards of 2,000 individuals that he would want
this work done for. So, I’m in the process now setting up an
affiliate that will bring me more business without me having to
go out and prospect. It’s got to really be nichey. And that’s
people with websites in a particular area, high-ticket items
because those folks can pay me. I even have a client now -- a
hosting company -- that I’m looking to work with now that has
like 78,000 customers. Never surveyed a one of them. Has not
communicated at all with any of them. So, that’s a gold mine. He
has email addresses, names, addresses, phone numbers, and those
people are paying him on a year-to-year basis.
Michael: What’s this HMA system going to mean for you down the
road? How has it put things together for you or did you already
have a lot of this knowledge before you got it?
David: I knew of Jay Abraham and Dan Kennedy. I’ve been an avid
student of both of those. When I was put in my territory I’d use
those direct marketing and those points while I was working
corporate America. In corporate America, I learned how to be on
the sales side. Now, they don’t teach you a system. The HMA
system is a system. So, now I have something to weave all the
other skills sets, the sales, the marketing, all the different
skill sets are now woven into the HMA system. HMA is a great
foundation.
Richard: It just gave you a way to package everything.
David: Right. I went through the paperwork first. I kind of spot
went through the DVDs. The USP, I think I went through four
times. That is the most important part. Everything else after
that becomes mechanics. Can you develop the joint venture? Can
you get a letter written? Can you get into the mail? My
expertise is in the testing part of it, so I don’t ever write a
letter and say this is the letter. This is the letter we’re
going to try and we can try that letter until we get it right,
but now I have a better copywriter, web designer, graphic
artist, traffic developers for the online market space, pay for
click folks that now when I need these folks in place, I just
plug them into a project, as long as the project has enough
money to hold them. It’s a great system. It’s great. I need to
go through it again to see if I’m missing anything, but so far
so good.
I mean you could really take just one piece of the HMA system,
like just the joint ventures part of it and go to a business and
say hi, you’re in business, who else has customers that want
what you’re selling. You could make a career just with JV piece
of it. You could make a career with the JV piece…
Richard: And you can make a career with just the USP.
David: Oh, absolutely.
Richard: And you could make a career just with database.
David: Oh my gosh, yes. I was at a database conference in
Washington. I had no idea that there are companies out there
that have more traffic than they know what to do with, more
content than they know what do with, and they still can’t figure
out how to convert. And I’m sitting there…oh my gosh…they don’t
split-test, they don’t do anything, and they’re saying we wish
we knew how to convert. Oh my goodness. So, I have a training
package now on nothing but testing; how to convert, when to
convert, what method to use, what tools to use. I’ve had other
tools created. So, now that is my segue into just about any
business now. Whatever you’re doing, you could probably be doing
better or better yet, let’s just get your baseline. Just getting
a businesses baseline is worth a lot money there because they
don’t know where they are.
Richard: That’s right.
David: This is great because I’m starting with the testing piece
and the HMA just -- now I’m business development as opposed to
just testing. So, I can talk to a dentist today and say well
what is it you’re trying to do. Well, I’m looking to put
something together for the Web and offline, CRM. Well, I can
help you with that. Really. Well, how much is that going to
cost? Well, that will be upwards of $20,000. Oh, okay. That was
the whole conversation. That was it.
Michael: David, I know you’re busy and I really appreciate it.
I’m glad I was able to connect. You’re a hard guy to get in
touch with. David, thank you very, very much.
David: No problem. I appreciate it. Richard, good to talk to you
finally.
Richard: You, too, sir. Thank you.
David: Thank you. Talk to you soon.
[END]
Michael: If I could just ask you some questions and you can just
share your experience and Richard you can offer any kind of
commentary and feedback.
So, tell us your name and where you’re from and how you fell
into this HMA consulting business?
Peter: My name is Peter. I’m from the greater Detroit area. And
I have been pretty much a student of Jay Abraham for probably
the last ten years and it’s been just an evolving trail. Started
out with Jay’s stuff and then got into the PEQ with Chett Holmes
and along the way I’ve been self-employed and had two or three
businesses and I sold them out about five years ago.
Semi-retired and wanted to do some of the marketing stuff that I
had learned. Did some stuff around the Detroit area, moved down
to Florida for a couple of years, worked with a couple of
companies down there, and really didn’t know how to totally put
it all together. The PEQ really helped me as far as
organizational and how to structure, things like that, but I was
still kind of vague on the marketing end. And then when I was
talking to you, you and I went back and forward on some things
and HMA came along and I kind of synthesized it all together
where it made sense to me. It gave me a template. I really like
the outline. In fact, when I go talk to client, I take that with
me.
Michael: Now, what outline is this? The Opportunity Analysis?
Peter: The Opportunity Analysis, yes. I just sit right down with
it and they watch me fill it out. It helps. It’s a lot more
professional because they’re not expecting that. They’re
expecting someone to come in there and start schmoozing them or…
Richard: Selling them a product.
Peter: Right. And you start asking them the hard questions and
the thing that really has impressed me the most and kind of the
light bulb went on. Well, when Chet in the PEQ talked about the
stadium pitch, the stadium pitch and the USP are kind of
related. The stadium pitch is kind of a longer version of the
USP. That’s what I’m finding when I talk to people. They just
have no idea what business they’re in. That goes right by them.
So, the three clients that I’ve had, that has been the light
bulb going on for them when they really stop. It’s hard for
people, too. A lot of people don’t have any idea. I’m a carpet
cleaner, but why am I cleaning carpets.
Michael: Can you go back and kind of bring us into the
involvement of very first client?
Peter: I was in Florida until last October and I came back. The
company I was working with had some financial problems. One of
our larger clients went Chapter 11 on us and I using the PEQ
down there. I had totally organized that company and we were
doing really well until this client puked on us. Then I got back
here and was fixing the house up. I have a residence up here and
I also lease a place down in the Sarasota area. And I had a
friend of mine who had three businesses. He had an insulation
business. He had a light manufacturing business, commercial
lighting. And he was starting a new operation, which was in the
training area or the health fitness area. It was called My
Training Card. It was a plastic card that workouts were put on
it and it was computerized thing, Windows, and it printed out
and we’re still working on that. But anyway, we were talking
when we were on his boat in October and he’s like what are you
doing and at this point I was just getting into the HMA because
I knew I was reading material on it and to be honest with you
Michael, I’m like everybody else, I’m there trying to read this
thing and glean as much as I can without having to buy the darn
thing. How much material can I get out of here that’ll help me
without having to buy the thing? It was titillating enough that
it gave you enough information, but not enough. You needed the
analysis worksheets and the videos and stuff. So, that was
October. So, he flat out just hired me because I had enough
information just from what you put free on the site to actually
start it. And I knew the USP was the first thing you had to do
and I went into his lighting business and he was kind of all
over the place and we developed the USP for that and he was
really happy with that. It helped us out. He’s a manufacturer
and it was kind of a direct sales situation and we evolved from
there into a sales rep regional model. And we are actually going
around the country now setting the reps up. The USP has helped
us with that because we need to get all the material down for
them and they need to get it to those people that are buying.
Richard: Peter, how are you finding these reps?
Peter: The industry is kind of small. In other words, like
Lithonia is the huge guy on the block and Cooper Light is the
other big manufacturer. And that’s the distribution model for
the lighting industry. They’re based on representatives in
regions. So, you merely look in the Yellow Pages, who’s the rep,
who’s the Lithonia rep and you go to that person. You say I have
another line of lights. We don’t compete directly with them. We
have an indirect commercial light that is patented by this
gentleman that I work with that puts out 25% more light and it
saves on installation. It’s indirect lighting, which is a little
different than direct lighting. I often build the USP around
that.
Richard: So, how many reps will he try to have?
Peter: Right now we have 16 reps mostly covering the Eastern and
Southern part of the country. We go as far as Oklahoma right
now. Pretty much like Oklahoma, Georgia, North Carolina, South
Carolina, New York, Ohio, Illinois, Indiana.
Richard: And these reps just take the product on, on a
commission basis?
Peter: Right. Like a representative might be handling 50 lines.
You’re just one more line and your job is to get him to sell
your line.
Richard: But you had to track those down one at a time through
the phonebook?
Peter: Yes, pretty much that’s what you would do. On the
Internet you’d click on lighting representative. There are sites
that will categorize them for you and give you the rep by state.
Richard: Okay.
Peter: You call them and, of course, they’re happy to take a
line on. It’s no skin off their nose, another line. But again,
the key is getting them…to educate them to sell your line. That
goes back to the USP because you don’t have much time with these
people and it’s like you’ve got to impress them right away.
Richard: That’s right.
Michael: How were you able to close the deal with this first
client?
Peter: What you do is you start asking questions. Oh, how’s
business going? Oh, it’s going all right. Well, are you selling
as much as you might? No, no. no. Well, why not? Guys can’t put
the finger on it. It’s like I’ve got this great product, but
nobody wants to buy it and they don’t understand it’s because
they don’t have a USP and they don’t know how to communicate
that.
Michael: Did you take him through the Opportunity Analysis?
Peter: Oh, absolutely. Yes, what I did is I go through the
Opportunity Analysis part and then he actually hired me on a
salary basis to work for him. So, I’m working with him now on a
salary on a regular basis and I’m still picking up other clients
on the side. And what I do because of the fact that when I
retired I really didn’t need this as a source of a first income
is I’m really tuned in more to joint ventures and I went through
the thing you sent me. It’s one of the bonuses with the 250-page
joint venture. And that’s kind of how I approach it. When I go
for a client now, I’m really looking at equity stake in their
company. I don’t need to waste my time doing a little bit of
consulting for them for a couple hundred bucks. I really like to
see what I can do. And the thing is, too, it’s almost like
cheating because you go in there and you ask them these
questions and they’re providing you with all this information.
It is very valuable and they have no idea how valuable it is.
So, these guys are divulging, yeah I have a customer list of
5,000 or 10,000 customers. What do you do with those? Oh, well
nothing. I think we mailed them once. And you’re sitting there
going, oh okay and you know that’s revenue just sitting there.
Richard: That’s right.
Michael: What’s the biggest challenge of doing this consulting?
Peter: The biggest challenge I think is getting people first of
all to believe you; that what you’re telling them is true
because no one’s ever told them that. And the second is to get
them out of their comfort zone because some of them are just
kind of comfortable doing what they’re doing. They’re making
enough and they’re paying their bills and they don’t want to go
to that next level. They’ve got kids. They’re busy. They need to
find somebody that’s really, really hungry or you need to go
into larger companies, which Richard was talking about on the
video. But what happens when you get into larger companies, like
you say over $10 million, they start getting…you’re butting
heads with marketing departments and things like that. The guy
I’m working with now, he’s doing about $5.5 million and he was
right at that point because he had a couple people that were on
the outside. He had a copywriter and he had a graphics person,
but he didn’t have anybody internally that was driving the
marketing. It was all coming from him. Nobody telling him what
he needed to do. So, that’s kind of where I came in. I said
here’s what you need to do. You need the USP. You need to
integrate it into everything. You need to get all your salesmen
on the same page. And then from the PEQ background, which I
throw that in for free, it’s like you need to systematize this.
You need to train these guys. It’s just a lot of the PEQ stuff
kind of comes in over the top of the HMA from a structural
standpoint.
Michael: Do you have any challenges that you want to discuss
with Richard?
Peter: How many other consultants do a lot -- what you do as far
as the meetings like the Chamber of Commerce stuff and things
like that?
Richard: Well, for example, I’ve got a client in Fargo, North
Dakota. We put on a workshop. He sponsored it. He was with a
manufacturing association group and he sponsored it with the
local business development center. We had 25 people there
representing about 11 businesses and these businesses were
across the board in manufacturing, in service, in professional.
And we scheduled for that client 10 appointments to follow up
and give assessments to those 10 businesses. He’ll either close
them on one-on-one consulting or he’ll put them in a group and
use the training materials. So, the workshops really, yes Peter,
it just depends on where you’re at in your career.
Peter: Some of the people that are doing this are pretty
much…this is what they’re doing and they’re geared to it and
they want to go right through it. I’m kind of…have been around.
I’m 55, been there, done that.
Richard: Well, let me just say this. What he did say was most
critical and I will say that and that is you’ve got to go in and
just start talking to them about their business and asking a lot
of questions -- that is why we have the Opportunity Analysis --
so that the client doesn’t feel like you’re pushing some kind of
solution or product, but rather you’re helping him solve his
problem. Then the other thing that Peter said that’s critical is
the guy’s got to feel and believe he’s got a problem. If he’s
not motivated, don’t waste your time. The guy that Peter met was
motivated. He was ready to change his situation. And it’s also
clear that some of these guys are so comfortable where they’re
at, they’re not motivated enough to change. So, to all of the
HMA guys out there who are looking for their first client, spare
yourself a lot of energy by not going to people who are not
motivated. That will only discourage you, you need to just find
out and make sure these guys are kind of in a mindset ready to
make a change. Is that right, Peter?
Peter: I totally agree. I think like you were talking about in
South Dakota, North Dakota, there’s not the opportunity that’s
available. I’m in a metropolitan area of 6 or 7 million people.
I could go down right now five houses off to my main street
right here and go down there and there’s 100 businesses. And I
can walk into any one of them I want or I can do mailings to
them. That was probably going to be my next move because I’m not
that comfortable calling people on the telephone. Just for
myself, I like the mailings where you just mail them out.
Richard: Well, I’ll tell you what Peter, send me an email with
your mailing and we’ll work on it together.
Peter: Okay.
Richard: I’ll certainly help you with that.
Michael: I remember talking to you about those cards for the
gym. Did you get that guy as a client?
Peter: That’s who it is. That’s his third business.
Michael: Oh, that’s his third business.
Peter: That’s Internet based and we’ve been waiting to get it
totally squared away on the Internet and just last week our tech
guys got that all set. So, we actually have a meeting a week
from Thursday with the person that has 40 fitness facilities in
the Detroit area and he’s very excited about looking at our
products. So, we’re going to go in and do a presentation. I’ll
do the presentation, like a Power Point and see if we can sign
him up. We went out to Vegas. We took the product up to Vegas to
the big ERSA show, which is the International Racquet, Health
and Sports Show. Premiered it out there and got a lot of good
feedback. We’re doing a lot of follow-ups, but nothing concrete.
Everyone wants the Internet version and like I say, that’s just
coming out now.
Michael: I like to talk about good stories, but have you done an
Opportunity Analysis where it just bombed?
Peter: Actually what I did is I think I told you about this, the
gentleman who was the racecar guy, Roy Booth. I mean this guy
was just perfect for this. He had a warehouse. Distributed out
of his warehouse. He was up to like $4 million three years ago
and business just stinks now. He’s down now to about $1.5
million and he ripe for this. He’s got a name recognition he
doesn’t use. He’s got mail order he doesn’t use. He’s got a
whole database of clients he’s not using.
Michael: So, you got in and did an Opportunity Analysis?
Peter: I did the opportunity for him, Michael, and he was kind
of excited and I did the analysis. What I do is I do a whole
binder for the person. I fill out the Opportunity Analysis and
what’s the other one. There’s the Opportunity Analyses, then
there’s the actual implementation where you tell them what
you’re going to do.
Michael: The prospectus?
Peter: A prospectus. I fill that out and I type that all out
specifically for them, putting their names in the different
spots and everything. I had them that in a binder and I couldn’t
land the guy.
Michael: What did you price it in?
Peter: I told him I would do the USP for $600 because I wanted
to get my foot in the door because I knew that once I got going,
I could take a percentage, especially with the Internet stuff
because he hasn’t started any Internet stuff. I don’t know if I
was too strong and scared him or if he just looked at it and
said it looked like too much work.
Michael: It is a numbers game and you’re not going to get
everyone.
Peter: I’m going to go back and ask him. I’m going to wait a
little bit and go back and say why didn’t you do it.
Richard: That’s a good idea Peter.
Peter: That and also there’s a photographer and his wife. They
do commercial photography and sat with them and they were
excited about it and they admitted, yes we don’t have a USP,
we’re going the wrong direction, things aren’t that great. Did a
one-hour free consultation with them. Left them the same thing,
material and everything. I sent him a follow-up and he was busy.
You know how that goes. And then I saw at a social function
three weeks later and he was like I really appreciate everything
and we’re really going to get going with this, I’m really going
to call you and I haven’t heard anything from him. I’m the kind
of guy that if you don’t call me, I’m not calling you.
Michael: I put an interview of me doing an Opportunity Analysis
with George, the owner of a tanning spa and I put it up there on
my site at
www.hardtofindseminars.com on page H. It’s one of the
first ones. In the beginning, I stated this is the perfect type
of client because it’s clear as I interviewed him, never meeting
him, just all by phone, he was such a perfect client. He was so
willing. He had studied the Abraham stuff. He had all the
materials, but he couldn’t put it together and he wanted an
expert to do it for him and that’s why he hired me right over
the phone. And this is the type of client that makes doing
consulting a pleasure because one someone say yes, you really
have a business partner. That’s the way I look at it.
Peter: It goes back to low hanging fruit, too. I mean I could
see this was going to be a more difficult one and there are a
lot out there that they’re like low hanging fruit. You can just
see it. They’re just not doing it right. You could make them
more successful quicker and that’s kind of what I’m looking for.
I really do appreciate everything you did and you put it
together. I mean you put it so that it’s understandable and that
people can take it and actually make money with it.
Richard: I appreciate that and that’s exactly all that happened
is we just packaged it in a way that you could step by step make
some money with this.
[END]
Michael: Well, Bill, I’d mentioned to Richard that you’ve been a
consultant for some time and you kind of got a little bit active
and got de-active, but you had just shared with me that you got
your first client, which you’re really excited about. And the
reason I’m doing this call is the number one question most
people ask me is how do I get my first client. I think it’s on
everyone’s mind. I want to get that first client, get my
investment back and I thought sharing some of the stories with
some of the HMA consultants on how they did that and the
feelings and the fears and all that, that went into that would
be a help for anyone considering becoming a HMA consultant. And
Richard agreed to get on the phone and interact with some of the
consultants and so, why don’t you just say who you are, where
you’re from, and kind of your story; how you got into the
consulting and then lead up to your very first client that you
were excited to tell me about and tell me how that evolved.
Bill: I’m Bill Milliken. I’m in Mansfield, Ohio. My career has
been over 30 years in consulting with small business owners, but
relative to their accounting and business systems like their
computer system. And in all of that time, the only people I’ve
talked to are people that own their own businesses and their
employees. Our business -- in doing computers -- kind of came to
the point where we were no long current with how things are done
these days. We grew up with mainframes in the 60s and through
the 70s to about 2000, we’re working with minicomputers and
things that are no longer that big a deal. And what we’ve always
done…there is a very difficult to find a market for now, but it
occurred to me after we’ve been thinking about what to do
instead. And I finally realized that my expertise, along with
writing software, has been sitting down and talking with the
owner of a small business and finding out what he needs and then
filling the need.
And so, after studying the HMA system, I finally realized this
is right up my alley to do this. It’s just in a different
segment of small business. So, last year when I did the HMA
course in the winter of 2005, I had a couple of clients I talked
to and they have been my clients…one of them a computer client
for 30 years and the other for 20 years this year. And I spoke
with them about doing an HMA approach with them because they’re
businesses are not growing anymore. Both of them, though, kind
of blew me out of the water because their response was I’m
tired, I’d rather sell it than work on it, which is really
disappointing to me because I know all about them, I know all of
their like oozing hidden assets. I mean they have all of the
assets just sitting there and they could be doing wonderful
things, but they don’t want to. That was disappointing and I had
sky-high hopes with that. And the one of the two, actually both
of them, but the one that’s been a client 30 years even told me
exactly what kind of a joint venture would make all the
difference to her business, but she didn’t want to do it because
she’s rather sell it and she’s tired.
So, I was even excited about my very first client then. Even had
a joint venture deal and I had the solution to the joint venture
with yet another former computer client and I even talked to him
and it was all set up. But then it fell through for those
reasons. Then I’ve been fussing with doing Internet marketing
since then and then a couple months ago, I thought, I really
need to get back to this thing that I understand and get going
with HMA again. So, I’ve been restudying, re-watched the DVD
course.
One day at lunch…there’s a little restaurant we go to and I was
sitting there and we’ve been kind of friendly with the now owner
of this little restaurant for a long time. He was the manager of
a different restaurant and we got to know him there. We’re in
his restaurant one day a month ago, I asked him what is he doing
to ask people to come back to the restaurant and why do people
keep coming here. And he said I don’t know, but he’s had the
business now for six months. It’s a very old business. It’s been
there 15-20 years. It’s a family business in a small town near
here. Since he bought it, he and his wife, they haven’t done
anything. The way he says it is, I haven’t done anything yet to
make money. What he’s been doing is learning exactly what the
business is before they start changing it or doing things to
increase their profit. And just by being there, they’ve done a
little promotion and increased their business by over 50% in the
last five months, which is pretty good and they’re happy with
that. But he wants to go yet another 10% over that this year,
which will end up being close to 100% from where he started. But
he was just starting to think about how do we do this and I
happened to be there and I started asking questions about it and
I suggested a couple of things like since you don’t know who
your customers are, you can’t mail to them, you can’t promote
them. You can only talk to them while they’re here, but you
can’t send them something or whatever. The advertising they have
and had success with are the little throw away marketing
newspapers. There’s one here call ICBM, which a little 8-page
advertising business card size ads of things. And he’s been
doing that in three or four publications. But when he doesn’t do
it, the people come in anyway and say well I can’t come as many
times this month because where was your coupon. And it turns
out, it’s a lot of people who are fixed retiree income and they
wait for that coupon because it lets them go out to eat. So,
we’ve been exploring things like what could we do instead of
those coupons so that they know they’re getting maybe a better
price because they keep coming in’ maybe a member card, frequent
eater card or something. So, then we started talking and I said
I’m doing this for a living, helping small businesses increase
their sales and profits without spending more money advertising
and I think maybe I can help you grow your business. And I’m
coming in there…speaking of the fears and stuff…in the case of
Earl, I was comfortable talking with him. We had talked already,
so he wasn’t a cold call. It was actually several years worth of
chatting on and off over time. And, of course, he loved it. And
then using your example, Richard, on the DVD training talked
about maybe on your first marketing consulting gig, you do a
couple of them for no charge because that way you have
somebody’s name on a reference.
In my entire career since 1973, I believe every client I’ve ever
had, including the first one, was word of mouth. It was a
referral from someone else, so I’ve never had to do cold
calling. And my closing ratio always has been somewhere around
80-85% because when I walked in the door, I’m already a friend.
They know they want me. So, I did this with Earl. I said I’m
going to do the first two steps of the system, I’m going to do
them without charging you. It’s okay if you comp me some meals,
but I’m not going to charge you a fee. He thought he could
probably comp me for meals. We’re in the process of the USP. At
this point, I’ve gotten everything he thinks and I’ve talked and
met with his wife Amy and I’ve talked to half of his employee
and two customers to find out what they all think. So, I’m at
that point now and Wednesday or Thursday of this week is our
next appointment when I’ll go back and sit down with him and go
over what people have told me. I don’t see a way -- the way
their hours and things are broken up -- to do something like a
focus group to do brainstorming. But there’s no un-clarity. I
mean I’ve talked to one person at a time and they’re all open
and friendly and they’re happy. They’re madly in love with their
owner and maybe because they make it fun to work there and the
old owner wasn’t fun. So, I’m getting a lot of the same kind of
feedback from everybody about why it’s a great place to eat and,
of course, from the employees also it’s a great place to work.
So, that’s where I’m at.
Michael: That’s great, Bill. I appreciate it.
Michael: Tell me your name, where you’re from, and how you got
intertwined with this HMA consulting thing and we’ll just roll
into the story of how you ended up getting your first client?
MATT
Matthew: I’m Matt . I’m in Chicago, Illinois. Probably the last,
I would say seven or eight years, even longer, I’ve been
intrigued by marketing. It just so happened I was working at an
accounting firm when I first came out of school and this guy
handed me this tape program. It happened to be Jay Abraham’s,
Your Secret Wealth. I listened to that and I was kind of
intrigued by it, although all my work experience from that point
and even on through the last couple of years was all accounting.
But I was intrigued by Jay’s ideas about the three ways to grow
a business and all that stuff. So, back in my mind, I wanted to
help businesses more than just recording their accounting
transactions. So, I started to study a lot of the marketing
greats. I studied Joe Vitale and Dan Kennedy’s stuff, his
Magnetic Marketing, and got some Jay Abraham stuff and even some
Chet Holmes, reading all of this stuff and trying to figure out
I could deliver it because a friend that would have a business,
I would help them with some tidbit of information I had from one
of these guys that I read and studied. They were kind of like,
wow, how did you know that. But I really never had a systematic
way to help people. So, I was shooting from the hip or
recommending this strategy, but nothing really formal. So, in a
subconscious way, I was trying to think of how can I get
something where I can deliver this in a way that’s systematic or
I can know how to charge?
So, initially being in tune with the marketing stuff, I came
across your information. It may have been something you were
selling on Ebay, so I may have been on your list or something
because I’ve been getting emails from you for a while. And I
must have been on your email list because I remember first
reading maybe a couple of years ago about how you got the Jay
Abraham cassettes. And then really interested in trying to
figure out a way to do marketing consulting because I had all
this content of people who were experts in different areas, but
I had no way to put it all together and to go prospective client
or business to help them because I really wanted to help these
small businesses. I always wanted to do small, medium size
businesses. So, anyway, at some point, I must have gotten
something from you, an email, and I probably read over it a
couple of times and then I called you and that was that.
So, I ordered it from you. Studied the materials. My first
client, it was a company that I patronize. It’s this all-natural
eco-manufacturer guy.
Michael: Were they local?
Matthew: Yes, they’re local. I had a business relationship with
them via me purchasing products from them. And even back when I
was purchasing, I was talking to the guy about marketing. I
didn’t have a system two or three years ago, but when I first
met him, I was talking to him about marketing more effectively.
So, he remembered me from buying stuff, but also just tossing
some marketing ideas out to him when I first met him. So,
anyway, I just called him up because I’m really interested in
the eco-natural stuff. I called him up and set up an appointment
using the information that you got. And I’ll say one thing, the
system actually gave me not only a formal way to present it, but
I think it gave me more confidence in how I would actually
approach a company.
Michael: Why is that?
Matthew: Because it was systematized and I didn’t have to figure
out…like I was doing _____. I was thinking okay I know USP. I
always knew USP was the first thing from the Dan Kennedy stuff.
Message, market, and media; that’s what his approach to
everything was. So, I always knew the USP, but I felt like
something was missing and I didn’t have enough to go to a
client. I didn’t know what to charge. So, once I got the HMA
System, I had a complete turnkey way to deliver some of the
things that I already knew. It gave me a lot of confidence in
the knowledge that I already had because it was put altogether
for me to go to a customer and they could understand it better
this way.
Michael: Have you looked at any other systems or were you
shopping other consulting opportunities?
Matthew: I got all the Jay Abraham PEQ stuff. I didn’t buy the
program, but I almost bought it. I got Chet Holmes’ program, so
I already knew about that. But I hadn’t come upon anything. I
actually was getting a lot of stuff in the mail by the Y2K
Company all the time. I never responded to it, but I used to get
stuff in the mail all the time.
Michael: Do you know how much that program was?
Matthew: No, I never knew how much it cost.
Michael: $35,000 plus you pay a percentage of everything you
make.
Matthew: Oh really. Wow. The way they market it, it was kind of
an obnoxious way. I used to get these things. They would use
cool headlines, which I thought they adapted from some of the
old great John Capel stuff on all their postcards. I could see
that’s what they were doing. They were saying if you’re not
making at least $100,000 right now, then we don’t need to talk
to you or something like that. Marketing it like you’ve got to
be a super-duper serious person to even talk to us.
It was pretty easy with this guy because I had this relationship
with him. And I would say one thing; that may be a great route
to go. I know you guys talk about getting an endorsement or
getting a list from may be some people you already do business
with. But some of the people that you actually do business with
daily are great prospects. You’ve got a local grocery store.
You’ve got a cleaner. You’ve got some places or something you’re
already patronizing. Most of those Mom and Pop shops are really
looking for somebody to help them their marketing, in which this
case this guy was. They’re doing like a million and a half and
he’s wearing all the hats trying to be a marketer, a payroll
guy, operations. I sat down with him. I did the Opportunity
Analysis, word-for-word right off the sheet, and he accepted it
and that was my first client. I charged $1,500 for the first
project and he paid for it and no problem.
Michael: Very good. Did you get a second project with him?
Matthew: I did get a second project and that was $1,500. And
actually we never completed it because the guy’s kind of a
scattered type guy, so I did the sales training. I was trying to
get the stuff integrated to all his marketing efforts and I just
never got back over there. He paid me for it. I didn’t even get
to the last step. I was trying to get to do some packages for
him.
Michael: That’s going to happen. Some are going to flake out and
not go all the way through. What advice would you give anyone
considering getting into the consulting business as far as how
to get their first client? What would be your worldly advice
based just on your experience?
Matthew: Based on my experience, I would read all the
information and get familiar with the system itself once they
receive it and then I personally would go to businesses that I’m
already familiar with. And even almost as practice to get
comfortable with it. I would just go get one of those really
quick as a client. That is what I would suggest. That gives you
a more comfort level. There’s a relationship there already. And
then once you get that first client, then you feel more
comfortable doing the cold calls and more comfortable with even
the endorsed call like a friend of yours knows this business
owner, he referred me to you. But I would go directly. That was
the easiest for me. I think everyone has a rapport like that
with some business. Do you know what I mean? I think that’s the
easiest step to go grab one really quickly, boosts your
confidence enough where you can get the script down. Even if you
screw up, they know you already.
I forgot to tell you about this one, Mike. I go on Craig’s List
and I type in marketing. And so, there’s this bed and breakfast
in Ottawa, Illinois. So, this guy is looking for somebody to
help him market, but he really doesn’t have any money because
this is already a year old. So, I did an Opportunity Analysis
with him over the phone. So, this is going to be a straight
barter deal, but I have a $1,500 credit at this bed and
breakfast.
Michael: There’s nothing wrong with that. Craig’s List has a
whole barter trade section.
Matthew: So, this guy was astonished with some of the things I
was saying. I sent him the outline with the four projects.
Michael: There’s nothing wrong with that. You could have him
provide you script. Do you know what script is?
Matthew: No.
Michael: When you do barter, what you do is you set your deals
up like this. You say look, I’ll take you through the
Opportunity Analysis. We’re going to trade for $1,500 worth of
services from your bed and breakfast. I want these services in
the form of $100 little notes. So, have him make little gift
certificates worth $100. You want to make sure it’s
transferable…that you could pass it on to someone or sell it to
someone. You don’t want any expiration date on it and it’s
redeemable just like it is for cash; $100 worth of products or
services from their bed and breakfast. Outline the terms of what
you want on that. And then you have a currency that you could go
and trade someone else. You’ve got something worth $100 at a bed
and breakfast that you could trade and negotiate with. You can
do this with all your vendors. You do trades for them.
Matthew: I didn’t know that.
Michael: You could make a lot of money just by saving money. I
bartered all my server time with my website host provider. That
server is $300 a month. I’ve got the next 18 months all paid for
through consulting. I do a lot of trade and it’s a great way to
keep that money in your pocket.
Matthew: Yes, that’s a cool thing. The place where it’s located
is a place where my parents used to take me as a kid.
Michael: You and your wife and your kid can go and have a
vacation.
Matthew: Right. Or I was just thinking about maybe using it with
another client. After I talk to you, I’m doing an Opportunity
Analysis with this guy who has a small bookstore in the
neighborhood.
Michael: Good job. Tell me how you got that Opportunity Analysis
appointment?’
Matthew: I just walked in. It’s a Black bookstore, so it’s got a
lot of Black books in there about African art and I was looking
around for some books for my kids. The owner of the store was at
the front desk, so I started talking him and I said are you
interested in growing the business. He said of course. I said
well the reason I asked that is because some business owners
that I ask that question to say no. They’re at capacity or they
can’t fill…he’s like I can’t believe any business owner would
say that. He said who could ever be at capacity. I said you’d be
surprised how many blow me off. The conversation kind of
followed from there. Established rapport with him really fast
and I set up something with him and I confirmed it.
Michael: That’s great. So, it’s really as simple as talking to
people?
Matthew: Yes. I find it’s easy because I bought a list from Info
USA and it’s cold call stuff. It’s like you said. It’s much
harder.
Michael: Oh yes. Besides your two clients that we’ve talked
about in previous recordings, the real estate guy with his
course and your bean products guy, have you obtained any other
clients?
Matthew: I have one client that’s an iridologist.
Michael: Yes, I think you told me a little bit about that.
Matthew: What I did with her is, I actually did the Opportunity
Analysis and she’s not really making much money at all. So,
essentially I was kind of funding her whole thing for my initial
proposal because I’m just popping $1,500 for a project, but when
I did that, they were going to do it, but they were trying to
get the money together or whatever. So, I said, well if you’ll
give me a list of some business owners that you’ll endorse me
over to, I’ll do it for $500 a project. I did the first project
for $500.
Michael: You did a USP for her?
Matthew: Yes and they really liked the USP. She was totally
astonished.
Michael: What was it? I’m just curious.
Matthew: Well, the USP…it kind of was parallel to what the USP
for the Marketing Associates. I said well here’s what your USP
is. We show people, using a multi-dimensional approach and
without the use of harmful and toxic drugs how to improve their
health in 14 days or less guaranteed.
Michael: That’s great.
Matthew: Because with her, I did some research when I was doing
the USP and with this all natural stuff, it’s kind of becoming
clichéish within that little industry to say optimal health. Oh,
Mike, we’ll promise you optimal health or holistic or whatever.
Well, 20 years ago that might have sounded like a unique thing,
but it’s almost a cliché. I know its cliché. And nobody else is
going to guarantee for anything. They’ve got a whole write up
about it. I can send it to you if you want it.
Michael: Yes, I’d love to see it.
Michael: Tell me who you are
and how long you’ve been an HMA consultant and where you’re
located.
Jez: I’m Jez Hunt, located in Oxford in the U.K. I’ve been an
HMA consultant now…I bought the course eight months ago, but
I’ve only really just started pushing that side of things
because of my existing job.
Michael: What do you do right now? You’re a graphic artist?
Jez: Yes. Graphic artist/graphic designer…creating brochures and
some marketing materials for communications.
Michael: How long have you been doing that?
Jez: This is my eighth year now, running my own business doing
that.
Michael: So, you’re self-employed. You’ve been doing this for
eight years as an individual business owner.
Jez: That’s right.
Michael: Do you like working from home?
Jez: Oh, definitely. I think I’d find it very hard to go back
and work for somebody else now.
Michael: What was your previous job before you started your
graphics business?
Jez: I was working actually for an industrial electronics
company. I’ve worked for a number of companies, but it was doing
a mixture for the technical manual design work and in-house
marketing, so sort of a combination of all those sorts of
things; sort of technical background with applying marketing and
then design techniques to that.
Michael: Do you remember how you first learned about the HMA
opportunity?
Jez: Yes. A friend of mine who I got to know through local
networking, we were talking about how I could develop my
business and how I could take things up a pace and then do
something perhaps a little bit different, which was still within
the realm of what I’m aware of and what I’m able to do and to
take that a step forward. And he suggested that I get in touch
with you and have a look at the HMA course. I’m not sure how he
found it. He avidly searches the web for marketing materials and
things like that that might be of benefit to his business. He
has a similar thing to the HMA, but it’s basically a system he
set up himself over the years, business growth and business
marketing.
Michael: And you had mentioned recently that you now have your
first client.
Jez: That’s right.
Michael: Can you tell me how that happened?
Jez: Yes. Because running my own business I haven’t focused
particularly on the HMA side of it and the marketing side of it,
I’ve been using this time to read up on the manuals and listen
to the audio and watch the DVD, etc. And I was talking to a guy
that I met again from one of the focus network groups that I go
to, he’s an accountant, about the fact that I was now going to
be developing and then start doing marketing and business growth
stuff. And he said hey there’s a client of mine that’s looking
to market his business and then pushed forward with it. So, he
introduced us and got us talking. So, I went through and sort of
followed the initial process and landed him as a client. It’s
actually a garage…I think it’s an auto repair center that is
actually my client. The auto repair center was my accountant’s
client.
Michael: I see. So, your client was the auto garage repair
service.
Jez: That’s right, yes. Roger, my accountant, my accountant gave
the client’s name and telephone number and said he was expecting
a phone call from me.
Michael: Was your accountant the guy at the networking meeting?
Jez: Yes.
Michael: So, your accountant was at the networking meeting and
he introduced you to his auto mechanic.
Jez: That’s right, yes.
Michael: So, that me through the process. So, you had a lead.
When you got home you phone the auto mechanic?
Jez: Yes, that’s right. I gave him a call and explained who I
was and that Roger, the accountant, had asked me to give him a
call. And he was immediately very receptive and oh yes I’m
expecting your call and when can you come and see me. So, I
didn’t even have to do any selling over the phone at all. There
was nothing like that.
Michael: You were already positioned as an expert through the
accountant.
Jez: Absolutely. The phone call was about three minutes, just
long enough to set an appointment for the following week.
Michael: Did you do anything to prepare for that appointment?
Take me through the appointment process when you met with him.
Jez: Yes, I did. I always do a lot of forward planning in my own
mind anyway, outcome based thinking, that sort of thing. So, I
worked out what I expected or what I wanted to have out of the
meeting and what I hoped he wanted out of the meeting, as well.
And then, obviously, I just refreshed myself on the Opportunity
Analysis process and fact sheet and then basically I went in to
see and really just took him through the Opportunity Analysis
program.
Michael: Where were you guys sitting, like in an office area?
Jez: Yes. I went to his office area at that stage.
Michael: Were there any interruptions during that?
Jez: No, actually there weren’t. I was a bit wary of that
particularly being in an auto repair center. I’m sure if you’ve
ever had your car repaired, you know the type places they are,
busy, lots of people moving around, lots happening, and all
happening quickly. It actually worked, in this instance, quite
well, but subsequently with potential clients, I’d like to try
to make sure there are no interruptions. But on this particular
occasion, I didn’t find that to be a problem.
Michael: So, you had your Opportunity Analysis in front of you.
Was it easy to follow along?
Jez: Yes, absolutely. I have actually added some of my own
questions in, as well since then. But I find it very easy to
take the clients through and surprisingly it doesn’t seem to
matter to the client that you’re actually reading from something
or you’re referring back to. I mean I wasn’t reading from it,
but I was referring to it there. I think in some ways it came
across to my client that I was actually more professional
because I had a system there. I wasn’t relying on just my
memory. Since we spoke last, Michael, I have taken on another
client, so I now have two HMA clients.
Michael: Very good. If we have some time, we can talk about that
one, too.
Jez: But I actually found that just taking people through the
Opportunity Analysis just step-by-step, asking the question and
that, they actually felt quite comfortable with me working from
a sheet.
Michael: Very good. Well, that’s no different than a good
attorney, who always references his notes and his
cross-examining and stuff like that.
Jez: That’s right.
Michael: So, as you took him through this Opportunity Analysis,
were you finding gold in his business? Were you finding hidden
assets as you took him through this questionnaire process?
Jez: Yes. It became very clear quite early on that they
certainly hadn’t marketed to past customers. They haven’t tried
to revisit past customers and get them to come back. In fact,
they hadn’t at that stage even got the database on the computer
in a way that we can actually use to market. I think there are
about 3,000 past and current clients of whom I would guess
probably about 600 were within the last year or so. So, that’s
2,500 people that they’ve done work for in the past that they’ve
never revisited. So, yes, I mean that was pretty amazing to
find.
Michael: So, after the Opportunity Analysis, did you try and
close him and ask for money on that or did you say you wanted to
come with a proposal? How did you position yourself there?
Jez: Well, what I did was I kept doing test closes while we were
going through. I think if you remember some of the recordings
that Richard had done where he’s saying all the way through
saying do you see how that can add value, can you see how that
can be hidden money in your business; those sorts of phrases.
And all the time he was giving me back buying signals saying oh
yeah, yeah and quite excited and animated about it. So, in this
particular instance, I actually tried to close him there and
then at the end of the analysis. So, then I kind of recap and
explain all these different areas that we can work on and the
first thing to do is come up with a USP for him and take it from
there.
Michael: And what was your offer to him?
Jez: Well, to start off with, and again this partly due to his
circumstances, which the accountant had warned me of before, but
I had started with 500₤ a month, which is about $700 in
American…
Michael: So, you asked for a retainer, a monthly fee.
Jez: Yes, that’s right, yes.
Michael: And you promised him that you would work on his
business, taking him through the steps of the system.
Jez: That’s, right, yes.
Michael: That’s very good. That’s another way of packaging your
services. You have a lot of variety and ways that you can make
offers. You could ask for a retainer or you could sell it a
project at a time or you could package projects two or three at
a time. So, it does give you some choices of ways to package
your services.
Jez: Yes, that’s right. I think, from my point of view, I’m
looking for ways of balancing out the dips in seasonal work,
which in graphic design it’s difficult to put people on
retainer. It typically tends to be project-by-project basis. So,
by doing this, I’m looking at the retainer scenario. It seems to
work well from my point of view because it’s regular cash flow.
And the beauty is, as well, I can control the speed of how
quickly I do a project anyway because I’ve only got them on 500₤
a month, so I don’t have to do it four weeks. I can, but I don’t
have to. It seems to be working and from my client’s point of
view, they seem to be happy because it’s not a lump sump they’ve
got to come up with straight away and I’ve not had any problems
with payment. They’re set up on standing order so it’s regular,
straight from their bank to my bank automatically and no
problem.
Michael: That’s very good. Tell me about your second client. How
did that come about?
Jez: The second client was basically a printer doing printing,
brochures and that kind of stuff.
Michael: How was the contact made?
Jez: Well, this was actually Nick Divine again, the guy who put
me in touch with you because it was a client that had approached
him through some of the marketing he had done. And,
unfortunately, _____ circumstances, they were too small a
business for him to deal with, with the workload he had at the
moment. So, he asked me if I’d like to step up to the challenge
and he referred me in.
Michael: So, he referred you and then you called?
Jez: That’s right. He referred me in and again it was the same
scenario, really. I rang, they were expecting my call, they
immediately wanted to see me as soon as possible, so we arranged
an appointment. I went in to see them, sat down and went through
the Opportunity Analysis. This time I told them the monthly
retainer was 650 a month and I told them that and then they said
right, no problem, we’ll go and think about it and get back to
you. So, I left the meeting and came away. The following morning
I had a phone call saying we want to go ahead.
Michael: That’s great. If you have another potential client, as
you have two clients you’re working on and your confidence has
gone up a little bit, do you see yourself charging the same or
asking for a little more money?
Jez: I set out in my own mind to aim to have three clients
around about the 500 to 600₤ mark. And that’s really, again,
from my point of view, experience, confidence. And it’s really
to get things started. But, no the intension is then that my
next client, number four, five, and six, will be maybe 750,
eight, nine and ten will be up to 1,000 a month; that sort of
level. It depends really what I feel and also the size of the
business I’m going into and circumstances like Richard was
saying about charging different amounts for the modules. I think
you do have to take a bit of a _____ and see when you get there.
I mean your gut feel about the business and how it’s doing
genuinely. I mean people always want to spend less than they
have to, but I think you can get a realistic feel for something
by going through the Opportunity Analysis and talking to guys
and going on your instincts, as well, to a degree.
Michael: What were some of the hidden assets you found in the
printer’s business?
Jez: I’d say the biggest thing is the cross selling and up
selling in their case. It became very clear that they hadn’t
ever promoted all of their products to all of their clients. And
so, for example, if a client was in touch with them and getting
them to print stationary, so letterhead, business cards…that
kind of thing…they hadn’t then been saying we also do brochures
and we also do promotional stuff and we also do this and we also
do that. So, none of that was going on at all. And what we’ve
just done, literally just done talking about it this
week…yesterday, in fact…is set up a matrix of products against
clients where we can very quickly track whose been told of what
products…told of the printing things that they do and at what
level they are, i.e., whether they’ve bought, whether they’re
not interested, or whether they haven’t been told…that sort of
thing. And what it does is it’s just systemizing that process of
telling the clients of what they do. So, they’re looking at
doing some mail shots, direct mail pieces is what they
particularly want to get involved in to past customers
particularly at this stage. They’re also talking about buying
lists and also in the longer term. I’ve only had them as a
client for three weeks now.
Michael: So, it sounds like both of your clients were very eager
to work with you and eager to grow their business. Have you had
any challenges in them working with you? Do you feel like you
are partners in the business on the same side of the table?
Jez: In both cases, yes. There’s been no resistance to what I
said at all. They understand where I’m coming from. They
understand the fact that I’m using non-traditional marketing
methods in some cases and they understand where I’m coming from
with that and I’ve not had any resistance with that. A few
people I have done the Opportunity Analysis with that haven’t
become clients, I’ve had a few interesting conversations with,
but I think there are some people out there that really just
don’t get it. They just don’t understand that you’re not doing
it traditionally and sticking an ad in the local newspaper every
month. If you’re not doing that, you can’t be doing marketing
properly and some people just don’t get it, I think.
Michael: How many Opportunity Analysis have you done total?
Jez: Seven now.
Michael: So, out of seven, you’ve got two clients.
Jez: That’s right.
Michael: That’s not too bad.
Jez: No, it’s not too bad and I’m not actually disappointed with
it because what I have done is honed the way I do the
Opportunity Analysis and also the way I then ask for the close
or don’t ask for the close at the end of the meeting. And again,
it’s that feel, I think. But I found it a very interesting
experience and the point is, as Richard said, again, in the
training stuff that we get, the more you do it, the better you
get at it. So, I’ve had five Opportunity Analysis meetings that
haven’t come to anything, but I’m five steps closer to
perfecting my Opportunity Analysis meeting and closing the next
one.
Michael: In the five that didn’t go through, why do you think
those didn’t result in clients…if you could give your opinion on
that? Do you think it had to do with were they qualified or were
they more for practice?
Jez: If I’m honest, I think probably the first couple I went in
with the mental view that they were for practice and maybe that
came across. Not that I was practicing with them, but the fact
that I wasn’t hungry for the business. I might be wrong. But
maybe something came across that I thought this doesn’t seem
right. Then the next one I think he was just looking for free
advice. He wasn’t looking for me to actually help him grow his
business. He was hoping I would tell him all the things he could
do for his business that would make a difference and then he’d
say thanks very much and then go.
Michael: How were these set up? Did you do a promotion or
something to get leads?
Jez: No, again, just word of mouth and me talking to people
saying what I’m doing and people saying I know someone that’s
got a business and they keep talking about looking to expand it
and looking into marketing and it might be worth talking to
them. So, again, that kind of thing. All of them have been
introductions. But, I think the two that became clients were
different. When I picked up the phone and rang them, they
immediately knew who I was and they immediately just wanted me
to go and see them. The selling had been done for me. Whereas
the other five, I was ringing up and I’m just _____ and your
friend _____ has asked me to contact you and it’s _____, yes,
okay. You take them through the basics of what it’s all about
and they’ve got interest about it and yes come and see me. But I
think it wasn’t quite set up the same. Then the last one seemed
fired up until I went through and started going through ideas of
things that we could start doing and then looking these
databases and we’re going to do this and we can go back to ask
clients and then I think he just started getting a bit twitchy.
This is a catering company and I think he just thought we’ve
never done this sort of thing before. I think he was just maybe
a bit uncomfortable with it.
Michael: Yes, that’s possible.
Jez: Because it’s not what he’s done in the past, that sort of
thing.
Michael: Very good. So, what advice would you give to anyone
considering becoming a marketing consultant? Any words of advice
that you could give any who is thinking about getting into the
business, a realistic expectation of what it’s going to take for
them to get some clients?
Jez: The realistic expectation is the first thing I would
recommend is that they listen to the audio or they watch the
DVDs to get a real feel for what it’s all about. I have more
time for audio while I’m walking the dogs or whatever and I
listen to my MP3 player. But just to absorb yourself in what
Richard’s saying and what the course and the program and the HMA
System is all about. Be familiar with that. Look through your
Opportunity Analysis and I absolutely recommend you go and find
a friend or your wife, your husband, your colleague, your
whatever and treat them like a client and explain what you’re
doing and just sort of take them through the system just a
couple of times to get yourself a little bit more familiar with
it. Not because you can’t follow it because, obviously, you take
it into the meeting and follow it, but it does help if you know
what’s coming next rather than going in completely cold. And
then the other thing I would say is not to get too disheartened
if something doesn’t happen. So, if you go and do an Opportunity
Analysis meeting and it doesn’t result in a client signing up
immediately, that’s not a bad thing because every one that you
do is you learning, it’s you progressing. And not every client
that asks you to do an Opportunity Analysis is going to actually
necessarily be a right client anyway. And I think that is one of
the main things I would say at this stage.
Michael: All right, Jez. I really appreciate you taking the time
to share your experience with the HMA consultants and anyone
considering becoming an HMA consultant. It’s been valuable.
Jez: You’re welcome and I hope it helps people out because it’s
fun. The other thing is have fun with it.
[End]
Michael: Here’s another recording. Now, this gentleman is not an
HMA consultant, at least not one yet. He’s a 16-year-old Jewish
kid, out of New York, who contacted me a couple of months ago
wanting to get into the marketing consulting business and he
talks about how he’s gotten his first two clients. Now, he
hasn’t ordered the HMA System, but he’s been using the audio
recordings and the Opportunity Analysis and the training from my
site, www.hardtofindseminars.com. It won’t be too much longer
before he gets the HMA System and I’m real proud to introduce to
you Simon, a 16-year-old kid out of New York, who has already
got two clients just by talking to people. Enjoy this short
story.
Tell me your name.
Simon: My name is Simon Rosenthal.
Michael: Where do you live?
Simon: I live in Lakewood.
Michael: And your goal here is to try and get some clients
before you even purchase the HMA System, correct?
Simon: Before I purchase HMA and I already have one right now
and I’m just starting my second one.
Michael: How old are you?
Simon: I’m 16.
Michael: You’re 16 years old. Tell me about how you got your
first client, Simon.
Simon: The way I got my first client was in the Synagogue every
week I used to go over to all the businessmen just to tell them
I’m studying marketing and this guy said come on, let me see
what you can do for me. So, he offered me a job and once I went
through your CD and realized that if I know this stuff, I should
have the same confidence as anybody three times my age. So, I
went over to him and proposed to him where he would pay me $500
a week and I would get him more customers. We’d work on his
advertising, on doing joint ventures. So, I started working for
him and tried changing his ads and he wasn’t very open to that.
So, I decided let me do something that will make him money
without him having to do a thing.
Michael: What kind of business was he?
Simon: He does fencing. He has a fence company. He puts in
residential, commercial, and I went to pool owners and
landscaping owners and I proposed to them that my company will
give them a small discount to their customers, plus we’ll give
them a commission, like a percentage of the whole purchase by a
customer, if they start referring us. So far I gave him 13 names
and I brought him $15,000 worth of sales in seven to eight
weeks. Number two, he has another…at least $75,000 in sales
waiting, but it takes two months because pool people give the
name to the customer in the beginning when they do the estimate,
but it takes two months until the customer gets the pool. So,
they’re not going to put a down payment on a fence two months
before they get the pool.
Michael: How did you contact these businesses and what was your
offer to them? Did you go see them personally or did you do this
by phone?
Simon: Everything was over the phone. I pretty much perfected it
over a couple of times. I do have a pretty good closing ratio,
like one out of five, I could close them even on the phone and
then some of them I would call, leave a message, they’d call me
back, propose to them, and they would want it without referring
us right there. Then I would have my boss call them with the
percentage and send the business cards and he also did not meet
with most of them. Two of them he met and the two that he met
are those that are giving him a lot more business. So, I just
propose to them on the phone and told them that I’m willing to
give your customers a discount and that could be a benefit for
you for working with you that you have a discount on a fence.
And number two, the pool people…the only way for them to put in
a pool is if they have a permit, then you have a fence around
it. So, my client was willing to give their customers the very
date that they want for him to put in the fence.
Michael: So, you felt like it was important to get your client
initial results that he could see that the efforts you were
producing for him was bringing green money in his pocket?
Simon: Right. First of all, I wanted to get him money in his
pocket. Then this past week when he paid me, I told him let’s
start working on your advertising and he was more open to it
because he realized that I was good enough to bring him money in
his pocket through joint ventures without him having to do a
thing. Also, I explained to him that if you’re really careful
about where your money is going to on me, then you should be
careful where your ad money is going. If you could throw away
your money on just putting out an ad just so people could see
your name, it makes much more of an impression on someone if
they see your sign on the fence. This is much more effective
advertising. So, you should work on having more direct
advertising. He has an ad that just says use our company…not
exactly use our company, but it was just his name and the names
of the different types of fences. It wasn’t direct. So, if he
focuses more on direct advertising and then gets more customers
and puts his name on the fence, that’s putting his money to a
much better use.
Michael: That’s wonderful.
Simon: He’s very open to it right now. In the beginning, he
wasn’t really that open to it. But once I brought him money into
his bank account, he’s really open to changing his advertising.
Michael: That’s great. Now, tell me about your second client.
Simon: I am very into reading all different books on leadership,
on marketing, on management, on sales; a lot of different
business books. I read a lot of success stories, too. So, I was
in the library taking out like a stack of ten books and I didn’t
notice at the time…my client told me after…that he was watching
me take out these books. And I started walking home. And this
car stops and offered me a ride home. So, I get inside and he
asked me…I see you’re into CEOs or leadership. I said yes, I’m
into reading this. I’m into marketing. I explained to him that I
work for some guy. I really helped him a lot and then I was
explaining to him the different pointers about marketing, like
three ways to grow your business, but nothing really that big.
Michael: Was he in the library?
Simon: Yes, he was in the library. I didn’t notice at the time.
I thought he was just passing by and he didn’t know who I was
and he offered me a ride. Once he hired me, he told me that he
saw me there and he is into that type of stuff, so he thought
maybe he’d give me a ride and see what’s going on. Maybe ask me
a couple of questions. So, after that he explained to me what he
does. What he does is he has foreclosures. Let’s say a guy owes
$150,000 to the bank and their house is worth $250,000. Now, the
banker is telling this guy that they’re going to take his house
and foreclose. So, this guy goes and the guy that owes the money
tries finding someone to give him a mortgage and if his credit
rating is not good, he’s not going to get a mortgage. My client
has some sort of bank account with investment money. He pays
back this guy’s debt.
Michael: So, what did you negotiate with him? Did you ask for
money up front?
Simon: No money up front. He wants to pay me $1,000 per client
that I get him for these foreclosures and this is negotiable.
That means I can make it higher in the future. Number two…he’s
going to pay me for other projects that I take on. The people
that produce results are ten times more paid and more respected
than people that just give ideas.
Michael: Will he put that all in writing for you?
Simon: Yes, we have a contract. Another thing that I’m happy
about is I have a teacher that is a lawyer, but does not
practice it as a profession. He has another business, but he
happens to be a lawyer so I send him my contracts and he looks
it over and he would tell me what I should fix and what I
shouldn’t.
Michael: Let me ask you this. You’re 16, what would you tell
anyone considering getting into the marketing consulting
business? What do you think the key is to getting clients?
Simon: You’ve got to be very good speaking to people. And here’s
the thing, when you are driven to be successful in these things,
you get pulled into a lot of opportunities. Like before this, I
was so close minded in business in general that even if I would
have gotten into it, I would not have gotten opportunities
knocking on my door. When you’re driven to succeed and when you
feel your insides turning with excitement, then you’re going to
be getting clients knocking on your door. You have to go out,
though, and find those people. So, whenever you speak to
someone, just tell them that you’re doing marketing. You have to
put it into the conversation…not that you’re trying to sell them
something…that you have the opportunity. When you go over to
speak to someone, don’t try selling them on the fact that you’re
doing marketing. Tell them that you’re doing marketing. If he’s
in business, give him a tip maybe. Try to give him a little idea
about referrals. It doesn’t have to be an idea that will make
him so much money because maybe he would be an opportunity to
make money for you. But it could be like three ways to grow your
business. And another thing is I realize that when you give
people ideas, they’re not all going to take it and go create
money for themselves. People want someone to do things for them.
It’s very nice to give them ideas, but they’re not going to do
it. They want a marketing consultant that is going to do what
they don’t want to do and they’re willing to pay for it. You’re
more valuable if you could do instead of just give ideas. So, my
advice is, if you could be someone that does the work, it’s
worth it for me to be paying a girl $8 an hour to be doing the
calls if I can be paid five times the amount. It’s worth it…ten
times worth it.
[End]
Hi, it’s Michael Senoff with
www.hardtofindseminars.com . Here is another tip for you. If
you ever wanted or dreamed about making money part time from
home working as a business growth specialist, or in other words,
working as a marketing consultant, well I’ve got good news for
you. There are over 20 hours on my site all having to do with
how to become a marketing consultant. In these recordings you’ll
hear me doing live calls getting clients, making real money all
by phone. Never having to drive out and make appointments. Never
meeting face to face, all following a simple system that I’m
going to hand to you on a silver platter where you can do the
same thing. See, I believe to become a marketing consultant, you
shouldn’t have to invest a bunch of money upfront. I want to
give you the tools to go out there and get your first client
before you pay anything and that’s what I have waiting for you
at
www.hardtofindseminars.com . If you go to the home page at
www.hardtofindseminars.com and click on the Audio
Clips and if you scroll down a little bit and go to the page H,
that’s page H, there you will see all my recordings on marketing
consulting. There you will hear me do live, real calls,
consulting with prospects and you’ll hear me making real money
closing the sale at the end of this presentation. This is an
education that you won’t find anywhere else only here at
www.hardtofindseminars.com . What are you waiting for? Get
on over to page H at
www.hardtofindseminars.com and I hope to see you as a
successful marketing consultant. Enjoy.
I hope these recordings have been helpful for you. Please check
back often because I will be adding new recordings at the end of
these so you can hear more stories of successful HMA consultants
getting their first client.
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