| Other Added |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Business > Marketing > Specialty Equipment Marketing and Traps Companies Run Into; Case Study |
|
Other Added - Specialty Equipment Marketing and Traps Companies Run Into; Case Study
Working For Yourself VS Working For Someone Else ipment?Do you work day in and day out, knowing you will have to punch out on the clock just to eat lunch??At the end of your work week are you satisfied or do you feel like you have accomplished nothing?? Let's be quite honest with each other who in their right mind enjoys working for someone else making th “We will start our promotion in California, Nevada, Arizona and Florida since they have the best year-round weather.” Well this would makes sense indeed. But realize if the bulk of your customers are in California, Arizona and Nevada, can you honestly give good service to your Floridian Customers? And back to the warrantee issues, will you be able to perform for the FL market base. Eventually I would add NM, TX, LA, AR, The Worth of the Individual In a recent business marketing project a new innovation was conceived by marketing student Paula Chavis. Her invention, is a filtration Reverse Osmosis system specially designed to recycle the waste wash water for use elsewhere in the carwash; for instance landscaping, toilets or even pressure washing the facility.For what are you exchanging your life? If it is not for people then you are paying too high a price. When we give ourselves to invest in other people, then we are investing for eternity, but if we give our lives for an organization, a job, an institution, a cause, or a program, then we are only focusing on t Now then what will be some of the details? For example these systems must have some sort of warranty right? Sure, that makes sense indeed. So what would be a good warrantee? “We will offer a 5 year warrantee with a chance to purchase an extended warrantee as well.” Five years is a very good warrantee but are we sure we can afford to do this? I would hold short on that due to the very expensive membranes in RO units, but if you warrantee the housing of the system you should be fine. I would have a 12-month warrantee, but then charge a service contract for electrical and membranes. You may wish to cost this out, because it could be very expensive and cost the company future earnings or worse ruin your credibility is you are unable to perform. Additionally you must be careful not to give away what the customer would be willing to pay for in a service contract, as that too can add revenue. If you make the warrantee too liberal customers may abuse the equipment and then expect you to be at their beck and call. So be wise and fair, to yourself and your customer too. If you have a service contract and you want to give away free parts once in a while do that instead and you are the good guy, which will help you get referrals and zero complaints you see? Next up where is the target market to be? Where will your sales be best and in what regions will customers most likely wish to partake in such specialty niche equipment? “We will start our promotion in California, Nevada, Arizona and Florida since they have the best year-round weather.” Well this would makes sense indeed. But realize if the bulk of your customers are in California, Arizona and Nevada, can you honestly give good service to your Floridian Customers? And back to the warrantee issues, will you be able to perform for the FL market base. Eventually I would add NM, TX, LA, AR, Barter - The Service Business Solution to the Post-Holiday Slump akes sense indeed. So what would be a good warrantee?Is your business in a post-holiday slump? It happens every year; service companies face a dip in business as consumers tighten the purse strings to compensate for holiday spending. Coupons may help bring in some business, but they can only do so much to improve the bottom line. So how do you keep your busine “We will offer a 5 year warrantee with a chance to purchase an extended warrantee as well.” Five years is a very good warrantee but are we sure we can afford to do this? I would hold short on that due to the very expensive membranes in RO units, but if you warrantee the housing of the system you should be fine. I would have a 12-month warrantee, but then charge a service contract for electrical and membranes. You may wish to cost this out, because it could be very expensive and cost the company future earnings or worse ruin your credibility is you are unable to perform. Additionally you must be careful not to give away what the customer would be willing to pay for in a service contract, as that too can add revenue. If you make the warrantee too liberal customers may abuse the equipment and then expect you to be at their beck and call. So be wise and fair, to yourself and your customer too. If you have a service contract and you want to give away free parts once in a while do that instead and you are the good guy, which will help you get referrals and zero complaints you see? Next up where is the target market to be? Where will your sales be best and in what regions will customers most likely wish to partake in such specialty niche equipment? “We will start our promotion in California, Nevada, Arizona and Florida since they have the best year-round weather.” Well this would makes sense indeed. But realize if the bulk of your customers are in California, Arizona and Nevada, can you honestly give good service to your Floridian Customers? And back to the warrantee issues, will you be able to perform for the FL market base. Eventually I would add NM, TX, LA, AR, What Is Your Vision? ract for electrical and membranes. You may wish to cost this out, because it could be very expensive and cost the company future earnings or worse ruin your credibility is you are unable to perform.Several years ago when I started my business one of the first things I did was develop a website (in itself a sign of the times because even a few years earlier one of the first things I would have done is develop a brochure -- or a Rolodex card – remember those?). The website developer asked me Additionally you must be careful not to give away what the customer would be willing to pay for in a service contract, as that too can add revenue. If you make the warrantee too liberal customers may abuse the equipment and then expect you to be at their beck and call. So be wise and fair, to yourself and your customer too. If you have a service contract and you want to give away free parts once in a while do that instead and you are the good guy, which will help you get referrals and zero complaints you see? Next up where is the target market to be? Where will your sales be best and in what regions will customers most likely wish to partake in such specialty niche equipment? “We will start our promotion in California, Nevada, Arizona and Florida since they have the best year-round weather.” Well this would makes sense indeed. But realize if the bulk of your customers are in California, Arizona and Nevada, can you honestly give good service to your Floridian Customers? And back to the warrantee issues, will you be able to perform for the FL market base. Eventually I would add NM, TX, LA, AR, Medical Billing - A Look At Notes to be at their beck and call. So be wise and fair, to yourself and your customer too. If you have a service contract and you want to give away free parts once in a while do that instead and you are the good guy, which will help you get referrals and zero complaints you see?It's a strange world we live in. We expect most things to be a simple matter of ABC. We don't want to have to think. We don't want to have to go outside the box to figure things out. We want it all laid out there for us in plain simple to follow steps. The medical billing world is no different. Medical Next up where is the target market to be? Where will your sales be best and in what regions will customers most likely wish to partake in such specialty niche equipment? “We will start our promotion in California, Nevada, Arizona and Florida since they have the best year-round weather.” Well this would makes sense indeed. But realize if the bulk of your customers are in California, Arizona and Nevada, can you honestly give good service to your Floridian Customers? And back to the warrantee issues, will you be able to perform for the FL market base. Eventually I would add NM, TX, LA, AR, 5 Reasons Why Headlines Are Crucial To Your Website's Success ipment?Without a powerful headline, your message stands little chance of being noticed in an increasingly competitive marketplace. If your headline doesn’t capture attention and pull prospects into your sales copy, than your marketing effort is a total waste of energy and resources.Nothing is more important “We will start our promotion in California, Nevada, Arizona and Florida since they have the best year-round weather.” Well this would makes sense indeed. But realize if the bulk of your customers are in California, Arizona and Nevada, can you honestly give good service to your Floridian Customers? And back to the warrantee issues, will you be able to perform for the FL market base. Eventually I would add NM, TX, LA, AR, OK, GA to your original target markets, once business gets good and also considering their drought issues. All in all good job on your Marketing Project, Paula, as it is reality based and I would have given you an “A”. Consider this case study in 2006.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Web and Video Conferencing: Who's Using this New Technology? 7 Ways to Gear up Your Job Search Mindset Innovation Management - does the idea fit with the firm?
|