We have discussed how badly designed websites
can damage your reputation and drive away customers
so easily. However, websites are by no means the only
way to damage your reputation - there are other acts
of commission and omission that can sufficiently upset
your customer to dump you midway in a negotiation
or not respond to your offer at all.
Tragedy is, many of us either do not understand the
significance of such acts or are plain insensitive.
Selling in international market has never been simple
- with diverse language, geographical distance, cultural
difference and lack of market knowledge posing real
challenge to any manufacturer/exporter. The challenge
becomes even more formidable when buyer and seller
interact through as anonymous a medium as Internet.
This week, we take a close look at acts of commission
that can spread negative image about your company:
Mass Mailing or Spam
E-mail is a wonderful medium for communication -
its fast, reliable and at the same time inexpensive.
No wonder, e-mail has become so popular for individuals
as well as businesses in such a short time. A good
e-mail marketing strategy is essential to be successful
in international business.
However, indiscriminate use of e-mails can severely
damage your reputation. Badly constructed, non-personalized,
mass e-mails never gets you customers - only bad image.
With fast e-mailing software, sending same e-mail
to hundreds or thousands of customers may look cost
effective monetarily - but it also gets you negative
image and even blacklisting (fire walled) by ISPs.
Never fall for absolute numbers - look for quality.
Every mail that you send must be personalized with
not only individual name and address but in a specific
context relevant to the recipient. The recipient must
feel that you have addressed his/her concerns/requirements
in a one-to-one basis - not a shabby janta-mail type
general treatment.
Obviously - the above is impossible if you are collecting
e-mails from all and sundry and sending mass mails.
You must research for leads or get it from qualified
sources, send individual mails to prospective customers
addressing his/her requirement/concern and then follow
these up with more mails, telephone calls, chats etc.
Remember - mass-mailing or spamming is not only illegal
but is perceived as "poor man's marketing"
and a threat to privacy.
Mind Your Language
Your sales letter to a prospective customer is a
representative of your company. If it looks good,
customer may perceive you as professional. If it looks
bad - you may be perceived unreliable or unprofessional.
Here's few tips:
- Check your letter for spelling mistakes and silly
grammatical errors. All good word processors these
days have excellent tools for spelling check, grammatical
error and even statistical measures for reading-ease.
- Do not use abbreviations, as you would do in
a telex or telegram. For example, using "pls"
for please and "u" for you would not only
make your letter difficult to read but may even
lead the recipient to think you are lazy.
You may be quite conversant with cryptic abbreviations
and enjoy SMS lingo - certainly not everyone !
- Do not use obsolete, cumbersome sentences like
"Would you be so kind..." and "please
find enclosed ..." Use simple, short sentences
in direct conversational mode.
- Never push the buyer around - he/she may not
like it. Sentences like, "I am looking forward
to your favorable reply" are pushy and should
not be used. While communicating with buyers - avoid
words like "prompt", "ASAP",
"at your earliest convenience" etc. These
may be perceived as rude and too forceful. Remember
- your buyer responds to your mail because it's
the business-like thing to do, not because you push
them.