Building Your Dream Marketing Team

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The Fantasy: Your marketing budget is packed to the brim with money to help build your dream marketing team. You hire nothing short of the best and life is good.

The Reality: Your staff is overworked, your budget’s tight and you complete about half of the projects on your to-do list.

This reality is what many marketing mangers and small businesses face on a daily basis. Even so, you’re still expected to consistently produce better results - and the bar keeps on rising while you keep losing resources. It’s situations like these that call for the outsourced consultants and freelancers of the world to help turn your fantasy marketing team into a reality.

What can you outsource?

You can outsource just about anything. With the layoffs and budget cuts that plague marketing departments and agencies, there are a ton of freelancers out there ready and willing to take on your projects. Everyone from designers, to copywriters, to project mangers can be brought in to help with any number of marketing communications tasks. Many times, you can find a team of freelancers that regularly work together. Look for freelancers by doing a Web search, browsing the yellow pages or by referrals from colleagues.

Wanted: good copywriting and design

If marketing communications were a building, copywriting and graphic design would be the support beams. Without these critical components, you really don’t have a chance of communicating your message, making a sale or building your brand. Some of the best marketing communications pieces can come from a copywriter/design team, and most freelance copywriters and designers have a colleague they will refer to you.

A good copywriter/designer team should be able to understand your project quickly and get to work on it right away. In addition, they should be willing to work with you, your staff and any other creative partners you need involved in the project. However, don’t assume that any freelancer will be able to effectively work with your staff - make sure they have the people skills to do so by interviewing them and checking their references. Often in the freelance industry, you can run across so called “hermits” that enjoy working by themselves and don’t do well working with others. Not good if your project requires a lot of teamwork.

Thinking outside the box (or outside of your office)

One of the biggest benefits of working with a freelancer is getting their perspective on your projects. If they are a seasoned pro, they are used to giving advice to clients and should be more than happy to do so. Since you are so close with your industry and work with the same colleagues every day, your perspective can become skewed. Many “insiders” adopt their company’s perspective rather than their customer’s. A good freelancer can help you avoid this by asking questions and suggesting ideas that you might not have thought about.

No more drained resources

Your full-time employees generally have a full-time workload. Even if you have writers and designers on staff, adding more duties to their already overflowing to-do lists can cause burnout and make your department fall behind on important projects. Bringing in a freelancer can help even things out and give your staff some breathing room.

A dedicated worker whenever you need them and never when you don’t

When you hire a full-time employee, it is a big investment. A salary, training, insurance and office supplies are all part of the costs. When you hire a freelancer you pay them only for the project and nothing else. It’s like having a full-time professional on call 365 days a year.

You’ve made the decision, now it’s time to hire

When hiring freelancers, don’t just look for the best price and quickest turnaround times, look for someone that will be there for the long term and will become more of a partner to your company. Follow these steps and you should be on the right track to building your dream marketing team:

    1. First, you need to find a freelancer. Some of the best work will come from referrals - ask colleagues and other creative partners for referrals. You can also do a Web search, browse the yellow pages and check with local business organizations such as the chamber of commerce.

    2. Interview the freelancer and view samples of their work. This will help you determine if they do quality work, and if they will fit in with your company and projects.

    3. Request references from previous clients. When checking the references, try and get a feel for their timeliness, teamwork and professionalism.

    4. Develop a contract or a letter of agreement that details the scope of the project, due dates and payment terms. This will help keep everyone on the same page, and protect both you and the freelancer.

Most companies are looking for ways to reduce costs and keep their staff happy, while building their brand and increasing sales. Hiring a freelancer to help out with your marketing workload can help to accomplish this. You’ll put your company on the right track to success and put you on the right track to having your dream marketing team. So what are you waiting for? Start building your dream marketing team with freelancers today.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Greg Quigley is a professional business writer and owner of Q-Com Business Writing. He can be reached at 414-347-0660 or via his Web site at http://www.qcomnet.com

 

Translating Company Collateral to PowerPoint

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As a PowerPoint user, it is sometimes necessary to accurately translate a company’s marketing collateral to slide format. Often, this information arrives in the format of a company brochure, or copied blurbs from the website, or a long Word document bogged down with New Age sales jargon and irrelevant “stuffer” copy.

It is your job to find the needles of information in the haystacks of hype, to reduce lengthy paragraphs to mere phrases, to provide your audience with only the information they need to know. Brevity is your goal, bullet points your craft.

When tackling these projects, which can be nothing short of arduous for lengthy documents spread across multi-page presentations, there are some best practices and tactics to make your life easier and the final product better.

1. Read the content several times. Sometimes it takes a few takes to understand exactly what is being said, especially if the copy is technical in nature. This step is especially critical for freelancers, who might not be as familiar with the corporate messaging as an in-house designer or marketing support person.

2. Print the document out and read it from paper. This can help comprehension, and makes it easy to highlight passages or make notes.

3. Highlight key passages. Look for “power words.” These are the words or phrases that pop off the page, are descriptive, and reinforce the message with color and purpose. Use these words in your PowerPoint slides. For instance:

“In the past year, the company sales team has achieved a ten percent increase in numbers, well beyond initial projections. Leveraging our recently implemented database, profit margins continue to rise despite several personnel additions and our office expansion initiative.”

Could be:

* 10% in sales over last year
* Better than projections
* Profits rise despite expansion

4. Bullets are always better than full sentences. They are punctual and easy to digest. Never use full paragraphs unless you specifically want your audience to not read what you have to say.

5. Trim copy to get to the core message. Eliminate frivolous and clich

 

What if You Could Design the Best MLM Pay Plan

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Here is the Challenge. You need to design an MLM Pay that will appeal to the Builders (Heavy Hitters) as well as the average person. Would you use a Unilevel, a Binary, a Forced Matrix or perhaps a Hybrid of all the above.

Here is a strong candidate for the Best MLM Pay Plan Ever Built. It combines a Unilevel (To appeal to the Builder). A 2×20 Forced Matrix with the Possibility of Infinity Bonuses (to Appeal to the average Joe), Fast Start Bonuses and Infinity Bonuses on the entire organization.

Now let’s examine each part in a little more detail

The Forced Matrix

A 2×20 Forced Matrix is really the best of a Binary combined with the Best of a Forced Matrix. Unlike a Binary you earn money on both legs each and every month. Since a full 2×20 Matrix would have over 2 Million People for 99% of your membership it might as well be an Infinite deep Pay plan.

The Unilevel

You could pay a Sponsor bonus each and every month to Directly to the sponsor or you could create an Infinite wide 3 Deep Unilevel matrix where you pay 1/3 of the sponsor bonus on each level. So Instead of paying $3 to the sponsor (If You sponsor 10 People you earn $30 Monthly), you pay $1 on each level for 3 Levels (So if you Sponsor 10 who sponsor 10 each who sponsor 10 each (You Earn 1,110 a Month).

Fast Start Bonus

You would of course pay a Fast Start Bonus.

Infinity Bonus

Use the Breakage generated by the Forced Matrix and Unilevel to pay an Infinity Bonus based on Production. This would allow team members to earn on the Entire Organization not just on their own Team.

More Fun Extra’s

Now Imagine if you could have

  1. A Mortgage Bonus
  2. A Vacation Bonus
  3. A Car Bonus
  4. Advertising Co-Op Bonus Pool
  5. Special Awards Bonus Pool
  6. A $200,000 Down Payment Bonus toward your Dream House Bonus

Now If you could only find a program with the above pay structure at an Affordable with a product everyone Wants, Nirvana, Sheer Nirvana.

About The Author:
Mike Makler has been Marketing Online Since 2001 When he Built
an Organization of over 100,000 Members

Nirvana The Perfect Plan Meets the Perfect Product
http://ewguru.com/sheer-nirvana

Get Mike’s Newsletter:
http://ewguru.com/newsletter

More Articles by Mike:
http://ewguru.com/tips

Copyright © 2005-2006 Mike Makler the Coolest Guy in the Universe

 

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