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Jon Spolestra's book is another must-read book on selling and was written in 1997. "People don't buy certain products for a reason. It doesn't happen by accident. Jump-start marketing isn't taking a product nobody wants and cramming it down their throats. It's taking a product nobody wants and repositioning, reshaping or reconfiguring it to make it something that a buyer can't refuse." The 19 principles or ground rules of jump-start marketing: 1. You've got to want to clip on the wires and turn up the juice. In other words you and your team must be highly motivated to try new things to reposition your product. 2. Don't fool yourself into thinking you're somebody else - accept the realistic limitations of your core product or service, and build from there. 3. Increase the frequency of purchases by your customers. No matter how poor your current product or service, you must have some customers or clients. One key strategic dimension that you should be thinking about is how to augment and reposition your product in order to sell more to this group. 4. Get the name and address of the end user of your product. This is fundamental. If you sell through a distributor, you may lose the chance to get direct feedback from customers (as well as the opportunity to directly sell to them) unless you have ways and means of finding out who they are (such as names and addresses from warranty cards). 5. The janitor isn't going to lead the charge for new customers. A focus on jump-start marketing must come from the top. 6. Create big change with little experiments. Spolestra advocates trying little experiments to augment the basic product - initiatives that don't cost much time or money but that may pay off big dividends in terms of customer reaction. He suggests that what he terms 'terrorist groups for innovation' (a group within the company that wants to pursue new innovative marketing ideas) be formed within the organization to pursue these ideas. 7. Don't wait for a new product to bail you out - use innovative marketing now. 8. To get your ideas approved by the boss, prepare as if you were defending yourself in front of the Supreme Court. When you and your team have innovative jump-start marketing ideas, make sure you do your homework in order to get them approved. Even these little innovations have to be justified in terms of the potential return-on-investment. 9. Only sell a product that the customer wants to buy. See point #15. 10. Get the feel for jump-start marketing outside the ivory tower. In order to really get a feel for what the customer wants, and develop ideas as to how the product or service could be repositioned, senior management must get on the front lines with the customer. This requires them manning the ticket desk occasionally, getting behind the counter, going along on sales calls, etc. 11. Only target people who are interested in your product. Don't waste resources trying to spread your (repositioned) message to all people - identify your key accounts and most likely customers, and go after them. 12. Don't let research make the decision for you. Research can fool you all the time. It can particularly fool you when major decisions are to be made. With major decisions - where somebody has to be sold on something - big professional research firms are brought in for credibility. A ton of money is spent. It's understandable that more credibility is given to these huge research reports than to the free research.
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