Comments on: You Get All the Ideal Clients You Create https://ducttapemarketing.com/ideal-client/ Fri, 23 Oct 2020 04:16:40 +0000 hourly 1 By: Pam https://ducttapemarketing.com/ideal-client/#comment-65540 Fri, 27 Sep 2013 14:23:00 +0000 http://ducttapemarketing.com/blog/?p=14978#comment-65540 This is nice, if you already have an ideal client. But what about those of us wanting to get started? Especially with limited funding to attract a broad spectrum of people until the right clients do come in the door. What do you suggest for those of us who do not have an ideal client, who are just starting out, and would like to capitalize on the right client and spend the limited marketing funds in the right place from go. This has been my struggle. Thanks!

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By: Brian https://ducttapemarketing.com/ideal-client/#comment-65539 Fri, 27 Sep 2013 02:08:00 +0000 http://ducttapemarketing.com/blog/?p=14978#comment-65539 Great point on needing to service all your customers but targeting the ideal ones for growth. We often make a similar point when trying to explain to clients that their marketing needs to focus on an ideal even though they will sell to anyone.

Here is our fun analogy:

Imagine you own a salon and a bald man in his seventies walks in and purchases $500 in shampoo. Will you sell it to him? Of course. Do you want to market to him….I don’t think so!

Excellent post!

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By: ducttape https://ducttapemarketing.com/ideal-client/#comment-65538 Thu, 26 Sep 2013 20:55:00 +0000 http://ducttapemarketing.com/blog/?p=14978#comment-65538 In reply to michelle.

Actually I don’t think you disagree at all – you simply interpreted ideal to mean what most people consider ideal – ideal is ideal to you and that’s what you are attracting – you actually helped make my point quite well.

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By: ducttape https://ducttapemarketing.com/ideal-client/#comment-65537 Thu, 26 Sep 2013 20:53:00 +0000 http://ducttapemarketing.com/blog/?p=14978#comment-65537 In reply to charmon stiles.

I agree – when you help someone be a great client you’re going to deliver more value through that process alone.

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By: ducttape https://ducttapemarketing.com/ideal-client/#comment-65536 Thu, 26 Sep 2013 20:52:00 +0000 http://ducttapemarketing.com/blog/?p=14978#comment-65536 In reply to Adam Franklin.

I think when you can identify the behavior that makes a client idea it gets much easier to spot who is and who is not a fit

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By: Adam Franklin https://ducttapemarketing.com/ideal-client/#comment-65535 Thu, 26 Sep 2013 01:47:00 +0000 http://ducttapemarketing.com/blog/?p=14978#comment-65535 Great article John.

It got me thinking about our journey to define our “ideal client” so that we can recognise them when they come along, and seek them out more proactively.

I’ve eventually worked out that “Marketers with some skin in the game” are my ideal buyers.

And I’ve learnt that clients with big budgets are nice to have, but not as good as clients who are nice decent people and who want to learn. I’ve tried to introduce affordable “price points” from free to 6+ figures to cater to our “ideal clients” depending on their budget and where they are in their journey.

Plus I’ve said no to a few wrong clients along the way too, which frees me up to service ideal clients better!

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By: charmon stiles https://ducttapemarketing.com/ideal-client/#comment-65534 Wed, 25 Sep 2013 17:28:00 +0000 http://ducttapemarketing.com/blog/?p=14978#comment-65534 What a great article! The responsibility of the outcome is placed on the business. Create what you want. Don’t just wait for it to fall in your lap. In my experience, most clients are appreciative of efforts to help them be great clients. It deepens the trust and relationship.

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By: michelle https://ducttapemarketing.com/ideal-client/#comment-65533 Wed, 25 Sep 2013 16:59:00 +0000 http://ducttapemarketing.com/blog/?p=14978#comment-65533 In reply to $311151.

thanks B, This is why i wrote the provocative comment — to generate this kind of feedback, and advice.

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By: $311151 https://ducttapemarketing.com/ideal-client/#comment-65532 Wed, 25 Sep 2013 16:23:00 +0000 http://ducttapemarketing.com/blog/?p=14978#comment-65532 In reply to michelle.

I disagree. Sure, there are nice people and mean people everywhere, and you run into some of each in business. I don’t think this is what this is about, though. I used to be a fitness trainer. I found a sweet spot in people who were going through LIFE changes (career, marriage/divorce, pregnancies) and, for whatever reason, coped with that by pursuing physical change through exercise. These people varied in how much money they actually had. The common thread was where they were psychologically. Now these people weren’t EVERY trainer’s Ideal Client. They fit my particular style, philosophy, and how I liked to relate to people. I learned to vet for this state of affairs when I interviewed clients. I took the kinds of continuing education that built the skills most applicable to these clients. These people were less price sensitive because they wanted exactly what I had to offer not just in the vicinity of what I had to offer.

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By: Nathan Jansch https://ducttapemarketing.com/ideal-client/#comment-65531 Wed, 25 Sep 2013 16:01:00 +0000 http://ducttapemarketing.com/blog/?p=14978#comment-65531 Hi John… great article, as usual. Just a note for you, in the 4th paragraph beginning “The path to this…” you have a small typo. “(T)he maim reason to” should probably be “the main reason to…” Just thought you might want to know.

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