Marketing Rapport - 3 Tips!
by Daniel Levis
Published on this site: June 10th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month...

Establishing & maintaining rapport with your online audience
is perhaps the single most important ingredient in marketing online.
Actually in marketing period, but even more so online because of
the lack of personal contact. Rapport is at the core of selling,
always has been, always will be.
Let me tell you a little story.
Earlier this week, I got a call from a salesman after leaving a
message about getting my stereo repaired. My expensive, but aging
Nakamichi CD player is on the fritz, & Im virtually tuneless.
Not good.
It was a notable conversation for anybody interested in the art
& science of persuasion. And in particular, the role rapport
plays in that process.
My apprehension was this.
I bought the unit about 8 years ago, & Im thinking. OK,
this is going to cost me some money. I could probably now go out
& buy a new CD player for the same amount. Justgetting an estimate
is going to cost me.
So the guy calls up, & immediately starts building rapport
with me. How does he do it?
After introducing himself, he says, So youve got an
MB-1s, awesome unit, what do you listen to? I tell him, Im
into rhythm & blues & jazz. He probes a little to
see what kind of blues I dig, & we find ourselves rapping for
a bit about how much we both love the music of Stevie RayVaughan.
And then without missing a beat, he says So I suppose youre
wondering whether technology has advanced so far in 8 years that
you could replace your MB-1s with a new unit for pennies on the
dollar?
I say, yes.
And then he goes on to tell me. Unless youre
prepared to fork out a sizable chunk of change on a relatively
high end unit, your going to lose some of the raw analog warmth
& character that oozes faithfully from Stevies Fender
Stratocaster every time you slide a CD into that Nakamichi.
And Im like, Wow, thanks for saving my life dude.
This wasnt the only guy I called, but I can tell you this.
He was the only one I considered doing business with. And it came
down to the rapport he created.
So what can we learn from this?
First off, let me point out that while this was a personal interaction,
you should take the principle of rapport very seriously when it
comes to your marketing.
The fundamentals are thus.
I liked this guy. Because I liked him, I listened to him. Because
I listened to him, I believed him. And because I believed him, I
bought from him. Sure it wasnt a huge purchase. But what happened
in those few minutes on the telephone takes place in virtually every
sale you make, whether youre an active participant in the
process, or not.
You are developing an unspoken relationship with your customers,
as a result of both your personal interaction, & every piece
of online marketing you deliver.
The challenge is this. How do you generate rapport, when you dont
have the expensive luxury of personal contact with all of your clients
at every stage of the buying cycle?
Here are a few ideas.
- Be a person in your online marketing. Far too many businesses
make the dreadful mistake of coming off as stuffy, corporate,
& boring, in the name of professionalism. Your business can
be professional, & still have character.
This is just as true in b2b & technical sales, as it is in
consumer sales.
One of the best things you can do is deliver your marketing message
in the first person. You should voice a friendly, rapport-building
persona in virtually every kind of direct response advertising
you do.
- Communicate with your prospects, in their own words. If youre
marketing to engineers, & you know they use acronyms, use
acronyms. If youre selling to the CEO, speak in plain English.
Just common sense, but so often ignored. If youre selling
b2b, understand that there are multiple decision makers involved.
Find a way to speak to them all. Use multiple campaigns if need
be.
- And finally, give your customers more than they expect. It
is rare to do business with a company that demonstrates a genuine
concern for the actual outcomes that their customers experience
as a result of a purchase.
This is very different than simply being committed to the satisfactory
performance of your product or service. You build rapport by showing
your prospects exactly how what youre selling fits
in to what they are already doing.
In the final analysis, your prospects & customers should feel
like they know you as a person from your marketing & advertising.
More importantly, they should know you as the kind of person they
would call a friend, & look forward to hearing from.

Daniel Levis is a top marketing consultant & direct
response copywriter based in Toronto Canada. Recently, Daniel &
world-renowned publicist & copywriter Joe Vitale teamed up to
co author Million Dollar Online Advertising Strategies
From The Greatest Letter Writer Of The 20th Century!, a tribute
to the late, great Robert Collier. Let the legendary Robert Collier
show you how to write words that sell.Visit the below site &
get 3 FREE Chapters!
http://www.Advertising-Online-Strategies.com/ad-strategies.html

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