Thursday Sep 9

Posts Tagged ‘Strategies’

Jun
02/10
Is Your Company On A Mission For A Statement?
Last Updated on Thursday, 3 June 2010 01:17
Written by Toby Reeves
Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

Mission Statement

I remember years ago, I worked for a company where the CEO would walk around the office and point blank ask employees what the company’s mission statement was, the value proposition, and other seemingly irrelevant facts. I felt like I was in Stallag 13 with Colonel Klink’s monocle burning a hole through my brain.

Actually, your company’s Mission Statement is probably less important than most C-level executives would have you believe. Its purpose is to define what the company is, what it aspires to be, and sometimes, the products and services offered.

In a sense, it gets everybody in your organization to rally around the same flag, and can be a valuable rudder when a company when faced with other potentially disruptive business opportunities.

For example, suppose a CPA firm’s mission statement is “to provide full-service private and public company audit and tax services to small and middle-market businesses and non-profit organizations.” If the firm started to market its solutions to Fortune 500 firms, chances are, the marketing efforts will fail, because that is not what the company is set up for.

If your company doesn’t have a mission statement, then your company may not have much of an identity. Spend some time with a qualified marketing constultant to help shape your firm’s identity.

For more information on elevator pitches and marketing, download my free executive report titled “How to Get My Marketing Back on Track” at http://www.StealthPlan.com.

May
13/10
And Heeere’s The Pitch…
Last Updated on Wednesday, 2 June 2010 08:52
Written by Toby Reeves
Thursday, May 13th, 2010

  The 30 second elevator pitch is a clear and concise, one or two sentence view about what your company does and how it helps clients address pain points. Pain points are something that every company, executive, or employee has. For a business owner, it may be not having enough time in the day to get everything done. For a sales guy, it may be how he can achieve 100% sales quota for the month. It’s different for each person.

   We try to have different a few different elevator pitches depending on who are expecting to deliver them to. For example, our general elevator pitch is, “Rescott Marketing is a twelve year old direct response and new media marketing firm whose sole purpose is to help our clients achieve a positive ROI when marketing their business. We do this in a number of ways, usually starting with a solid plan, followed by effective implementation of the plan’s strategies.”

Your pitch identifies who you are, what you do, benefits and strength, and how you’ve helped other clients.

For more information on elevator pitches and marketing, download my free executive report titled “How to Get My Marketing Back on Track” at http://www.StealthPlan.com.