| You've
got questions, we've got answers.
Business by Design this
month opens up the mailbag to look at recent challenges
facing design professionals.
THIS MONTH:
+ Money Talk
+ Targetting
+ Control and Commitments
+ Selling Yourself
Money Talk
We've been flooded with emails since asking readers
a few months ago to share their biggest professional
obstacles.
Some of your issues -- and our thoughts:
One of my biggest challenges is my fee
schedule. I charge a fee for consultation and
shopping time, and ...a design fee (for) room
planning. I then make my money on the items people
purchase.
I charge everyone differently because
they have different needs. Is there a way to create
more uniformity? I'm afraid clients will compare
notes and wonder why I've charged them differently.
Linda Principe, Linda Principe Interiors
If there's one thing that puzzles prospects,
it's pricing.
Simplify yours.
Create one pricing system (hourly fee?) for your
service, another (markup?) for your stuff, bill
for your expenses, and leave it at that.
No games, no guesswork. Use the same system for
all of your clients, all of the time.
If you can't explain in 30 seconds -- or in one
page -- how you charge, people won't get it.
Do you have any language that addresses
the question from a client when they receive their
first invoice reflecting our time only and they
only have a concept board to show for it?
Jennifer Rose-Harris, Interiors on
the Move
Stop "sticker shock" before it stops
you.
Before you seal the deal, say: "This is
how I work with my clients..."
Then, discuss the importance of planning, drawing,
research, collecting samples,etc.
Explain how these tasks help you save them time,
money and headaches on the design project.
Targetting
My biggest challenge is marketing to the right
people.
Darcy Litt, Darcy Litt Designs
Don't pursue people. Pursue markets.
Identify the three best residential and/or commercial
markets for your business, and devote all of your
marketing efforts to them.
Network, speak, write -- do whatever it takes
to insure that when people in those markets think
of design professionals, they think of you.
I am considering my advertising. I would
appreciate advice on how to reach my target market
effectively.
Jill Robson, J.R. Designs by Appointment
Thinking about reaching your target market effectively?
Don't think about advertising.
Think, instead, about the best advertising design
professionals can't buy: free publicity. Articles
by and about you have far more credibility and
impact than ads.
Local editors, reporters, TV producers, and others
are eager for the kind of tips and trend information
you can share.
Then again, you can make news every time you
win an award, sign a contract, take on a new product
line, add additional staff, etc. All you need
to do is email media outlets with news about your
business.
Getting quoted and promoted in publications read
by your key prospects is a shortcut to success.
Control and Commitments
My biggest challenge is really me. It's
the fear of getting too much business, which I
think would mean less control.
Debbie Callas, ASID
It's only when your business runs you -- rather
than vice versa--that you lose control.
Set financial and other goals for the business,
and make the achievement of those goals your major
mission.
That will help you decide how many and what kind
of clients to take on, what to charge, which design
services to offer, etc.
Getting the commitments has been a challenge,
as well as getting folks to call you after you
have hung door hangers all day in the heat.
Diane Feist, V2K Window Fashions
Why you? Why now?
The better you answer those questions, the more
sales you'll close.
Sell yourself ("I'm the ONLY window fashion
professional in this area who...")first.
Then give them a reason to buy from you NOW --
a special "gift," discount, upgrade,
etc.
And ditch the doorhangers.
There are lots of wonderful ways to market your
services and yourself. Doorhangers ain't one of
them.
Selling Yourself
My greatest sales challenge seems to be
trying to stay competitive ... with pricing of
home furnishings so that clients will purchase
through me.
Sharyn Kastelic, Primed by Design,
Inc.
Your clients can get furnishings cheaper elsewhere,
but there's one thing they can't get elsewhere.
YOU!
Your most important sale is the personal one.
Explain how you offer the kind of expertise,
personalized customer service, attention to detail,
and guarantees that are unavailable from those
other guys.
Talk about your track record -- the clients you've
served, the awards you've won, the classes you've
taught, the articles your've written, etc. Share
testimonials and a list of references.
People don't buy home furnishing from companies.
They buy them from people. Your job is to convince
them to buy from people like you.
I have difficulty discussing my business
and successes. As a child, I was taught not to
brag about my accomplishments. I still associate
discussing my successes with bragging.
Michele Reed, Decor and You
Don't think of it as bragging. Think of it as
customer service.
Discussing your accomplishments educates prospects
on how you differ from your competitors.
That helps those prospects with their buying
decision.
And that's a good thing.
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