Monopolize Your Marketplace

Train Your Targeted Prospects To Buy From You
and Loathe The Competition

The Monopolize Your Marketplace System is the systematic approach to making prospects want to listen to what a company has to offer by presenting a compelling case for your product or service and systematically and consistently communicating it in a way that's instantly embraceable.

We have found that most companies don't have much of a problem selling their services or products - once they get an audience. If a salesman gets an appointment, as long as he can fill the prospect's basic needs, then he's got a good shot at making the sale. In retail, if the customer just comes in the door, it's likely that they'll buy again, provided that their needs can be met at a fair price. Professionals can usually sell new clients if they can just get the initial consultation to demonstrate how good they are. If a manufacturer can just get his products into the hands of distribution, there's a good chance they'll make sales and so on. The problem is generally NOT selling.

The Problem Is Getting An Opportunity To Sell

The Monopolize Your Marketplace System is to consistently contact your target market with compelling marketing pieces. In this way you train your prospects to buy from you and loathe the competition. You do this through the creation and implementation of a Hopper System.

The whole point of the Hopper System is to allow you to manage huge quantities of leads without all the additional time, hassle, and expense of trying to personally contact each one of them with the intent of developing a one-on-one relationship. Most business owners and salespeople spend 80% of their time trying to frantically manage prospects (with little success), instead of spending 80% of their time closing business and building their residual income.

To help you more clearly understand how the Hopper System works, consider the analogy of a plum tree. It's simplistic, but it's also true to form. Let's say you have a plum tree in your backyard. Each year that tree will grow hundreds of green plums that are up on the branches just waiting to turn red. If you wait long enough, you'll discover that some of the green plums ripen, turn red, and become ready to eat.

Plums on a tree are like your prospects. At first, some of your prospects will be ready to buy just like the ripe plums that are ready to eat at the beginning of the season. But the fact remains, that for various reasons, many of your prospects WILL NOT be ready to buy when you first contact them. They still need some nurturing some time to "ripen," so to speak.

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Harvesting "ripe" prospects is easy. These are the ones you call on and they have an immediate need and since you called at a good time, you get the sale. This, incidentally, is not your greatest opportunity to gain new customers. Your REAL potential wealth lies in the "green" prospects-ones who need more time and more nurturing from you before they'll finally be ready to buy.

The average business owner or salesperson will pick all the red plums off the tree, throw them in his little bucket (he doesn't need a very big one!), and run off to the next tree looking for more red plums. Maybe his next tree is a trade show, a networking group, a mail campaign, a fax blast, or a telemarketing list. But wait a second-don't you think some of those green ones, the ones who weren't ready right away might pan out in the future?

Well, even the average business owner or salesperson figures that his green plums might turn red someday, too. So he sets up a great system for cultivating them called the tickler file. Every so often, he calls the people on his list from a given tree and becomes what's known as "the annoying little voice on the other end of the phone."

See if this sounds familiar; maybe you've even been guilty of doing it. You call an unconverted prospect and say "Hello, may I please speak with Tom. Tom? Hey, this is Joe over at XYZ Cash Flow Solutions. Remember I met you at the chamber of commerce lunch a couple of months ago? You don't. Well, did you get that brochure I sent you with my business card? Oh, don't worry about it. Anyway, I was just calling to see if you guys over there need any of our services yet? You don't? That's okay. I'll give you a call in a couple of months to see if you need some then. Bye!"

See how silly that sounds? There is no reason from the prospect's perspective for you to call him and waste his time in the first place. So instead of building trust and confidence and brand equity, you're building a gulf of contempt and hatred! This routine gets old (for them) very, very fast.

In business, realize that there's a process that a prospect must go through before he'll be ready to buy from you. He may need to learn more about this industry in general or he may want to know about you and why your offer is any better than anyone else's he's considering. Or maybe, he just doesn't need what you have...right now.

Your challenge is to educate and nurture each prospect along. But that's hard to do if you've got more than 10 prospects. Lots of business books and trainers talk about what's known as "relationship marketing" or the process of building a personal relationship with a prospect so he'll think you're his friend. After all, given a choice, we'd all like to buy things from our friends. But with 250 prospects, that's a tough row to hoe.

Let's go back to the orchard to find the solution. In the orchard, you cultivate plum trees by watering, fertilizing, de-pesting, etc., and you also let nature take care of some things (sun, rain, and so forth). But remember, prospects are like plums, not entire trees. Building a relationship with every prospect is a lot like paying a lot of attention to every plum on the tree. Imagine inspecting all the plums for bugs every day. Or somehow adding a small but precise amount of water to each plum each day. This is a silly example, but it does make the point. You have to address the entire tree at once not plum by plum.

In the orchard you can set up an irrigation system that would automatically come on every day to water the trees. You can hire an airplane to drop pesticide on your trees once a week. You can send in a crew to prune the branches. In other words, you can treat the entire orchard at once. All the plums will ripen when the time comes. Then your job is to go in and HARVEST!

In sales, your nurturing consists of two things: Communication and Consistent Contact. You have to continuously communicate with your prospects why they would want to do business with you…and you have to say it in a way that makes them believe it and take action. If you will do this consistently, you will win the lion's share of the business. Here's why:

  1. None of your competitors are doing it, so you win by default.
  2. If you do this properly, you will be building your case and as soon as the prospect has a need, you will already be the OBVIOUS CHOICE to do business with. More>

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