5 Blogging Tips for Financial Advisors

The data truly shows that blogging increases leads and sales. The ability to demonstration your expertise and value in the marketplace is invaluable to marketing.

This article hits most necessary points when blogging as a financial advisor or any service professional. Each point in this post will lead to success.

My only addition would be blog regularly. If you follow the steps in this post you will start to attract followers that are potential clients. They will start to look at you as an authority. To enhance that authority, consistent posting is important. So follow the advice in the post and post regularly

Amplify’d from theinteractiveadvisor.com

1. Know your audience

Before you do anything, be sure you know who your target audience is.  Do a little research on the demographics of your current clients and those you hope to reach.  Knowing who your audience is will guide your blog’s purpose.

2. Have a purpose

The most arduous task for many bloggers just starting out is establishing a purpose.  Why would someone want to read your blog?  As a financial advisor, you already know your general purpose: to provide solid financial advice.  But why would someone read your blog for advice over another financial advisor’s blog?  Your purpose should be tied in with what you know.  And that brings us to#3.

3. Capitalize on what you know

You are where you are because you have an area of expertise.  Showcase that in your blog posts by providing your readers with the valuable insight that expertise can offer.  If you try to broaden your subject area so much that you provide content that isn’t useful or interesting, your readers will not come back.

4. Establish an honest voice

Do not try to be someone you are not.  There is a lot of chatter and content on the web.  Provide a consistent tone and voice, so readers know what you are about.  Returning readers are interested in who you are and your unique perspective.

5. Keep it brief and organized

Blog readers do not want a white paper.  They want to quickly get the information they need or want.  The average blog reader will not stick with your post long enough to scroll through pages and pages of pontification, no matter how brilliant it is.  In addition to reigning in your volume, organize your content to be easy on the eyes.  Post a picture or graphic. Use bullets. Highlight quotations or important points.

Read more at theinteractiveadvisor.com

 


How Much Should You Pay For a Client.. As Much as Possible.

This article is a good reason to understand the metrics around acquiring leads and customers for your practice. The article is about how much you should pay to acquire a customer and gives an example of why. One of the additional reasons is when you spend as much as possible to get a client, it forces your competition to spend more even if they can’t afford too.

The important takeaway from my perspective is simple, KNOW YOUR NUMBERS. Know how much it costs to generate a lead and to nurture that lead to close. Once you know your costs, find additional ways to outspend your competition when buying a client.

Amplify’d from www.bnet.com

Most small business owners back into their sales budgets. They estimate total sales, subtract fixed and variable costs, and grudgingly decide based on whatever is left what they can afford to spend on advertising and sales.

That’s why sales budgets are often based on, “Well… that’s all I can afford.”

That’s also a mistake. You should almost always spend more to acquire new customers than you think, especially if you can land the right customers.

We’ll use me as an example. I’m a ghostwriter and I also photograph weddings. (If you’re curious why I do both, this is why.) To keep things simple, assume we spend $5,000 a year on sales, we book 20 weddings a year, and the average price of a wedding package is $4,000. Quick math:

Sales: $80,000

Sales cost per transaction: $250

Sales cost as a % of sales: 6.25%

Are we happy with those results? Let’s start by calculating whether we generate a reasonable short-term return on our sales investment; the definition of “reasonable” is the minimum we’re willing to make. We add all our fixed and variable costs (including cost of sales) and spread them across the 20 weddings. Say we want, at minimum, to net 20% on each wedding; if we do, we’re content — and shouldn’t spend more on sales, right?

Wrong. There’s a lot more at play:

  • Couples often spend more than what they originally paid for a package; on average, about $500 extra per wedding. (More albums, extra photographer time, additional photos, etc.)
  • Family and friends typically order photos and albums after the wedding; on average, about $600 per wedding.
  • Couples often contact us, sometimes years later, for family portraits, sessions with their children, etc.
  • About 70% of our bookings come from referrals from past clients.

What is the cost of sales for the items above? Roughly speaking, zero. We already spent the money to land the client so follow-on sales and referrals are in effect free. Adding in just the post-wedding sales ($500 from couples and $600 from their families) bumps the average wedding sale to $5,100, reduces our cost of sales to 4.9%, and increases our overall profit margin. Plus each booking is the gift that keeps on giving, since over half the time we get new bookings through referrals, which further reduces our selling costs.

So what do we actually spend to acquire new customers? Contrary to the title of this article, currently almost nothing: some website expense and a little labor when potential clients call to inquire. Why? Because we spent a lot in the early years to land clients. We spent more and targeted a reasonable profit level per wedding because we knew:

  • If we did a great job clients would purchase additional albums and photos
  • If we did a great job clients would contact us in the future
  • If we provided great service clients would refer us to others, allowing us to eventually reduce customer acquisition costs

The same logic applies to your business. Very few customer relationships, regardless of the industry, are one-off, unrepeatable events. Say you run a restaurant: if a new customer tends to return at least two times, shouldn’t you be willing to spend more to acquire that customer since you’ll spread their acquisition costs over three or more visits?

First determine the reasonable short-term return you are willing to accept. In some cases, reasonable can be as low as break-even; as long as the likelihood of future business is high your initial costs will be offset by future revenues. Then focus on ways to expand your products and services — and consistently deliver great service — so you can further leverage the value of an acquired customer.

Above all, don’t see customer acquisition costs as simply a cost or line item. Analyze the big picture and view the cost of sales as an investment.

If spending more returns more… what are you waiting for?

Read more at www.bnet.com