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[INFOGRAPHIC] How to avoid the painful experience of bad clients!

Creative Powerhouse shows you how to learn from the lessons, recognize red flags, and avoid the painful experience of bad clients.

Photo credit: pexels.com

WARNING SIGNS

Wisdom comes to those who have experienced some of life’s most painful lessons. Unfortunately, many amateur digital marketers ignore all of the red flags and forage full steam into many avoidable mistakes.

Most of the time, these mistakes stem from having unrealistic expectations which results in productivity nightmares and the client demands which take up too much time. It is hard to trust your intuition or to be picky about who you work with when you are just starting out in your careers.

Seasoned professionals have honed their instincts, know how to turn down lucrative projects and can fire clients when they begin to take advantage of your abilities.

EXPECTATIONS

Problems stem from differing expectations between the client and you, the digital marketer. It is important to set the expectations from day one, and work towards achieving manageable goals.

Never tell your client that you are available to them at any time as that is not a realistic promise to keep easily. Accept responsibility when other projects get in the way of clients who are under similar deadlines.

ACTIONS/RESULTS

Your clients will appreciate when you are absolutely clear on expected actions and results. It is a good habit to be proactive and never complacent with every client’s deadline.

Always keep contact with clients after achieving their goals and be clear on what they are going to get. Clients will appreciate the needed attention and the clear explanation on deliverables.

CLARIFICATION

Do your homework (aka due-diligence) prior to taking on new clients or prior to starting a new project. The work that you do before projects begin is worth its weight in gold.

Have a complete understanding of who the client is, what their needs are, and what you’re able to provide them. Not doing so puts you at considerable risk of failure and establishing a negative reputation in the marketing community.

BUDGETS

It’s easy to become overworked and even easier to allow yourself to be under-compensated for the work. “Working yourself to death” as they say, is never a good idea and knowing that you can’t make every client happy is crucial to your own happiness.

Proposals should include a full list of your services and you should try to stick with the agreed upon plan. Money doesn’t solve all of your problems so if you are feeling overworked but properly paid, you may find it necessary to turn away income.

Photo credit: pexels.com

KNOW YOUR WORTH

Digital Marketers are in high-demand right now, so be sure to get paid what you deserve. The only way to know your real worth is to continually assess your skills, and conduct research on your industry’s salary ranges.

No one owns you. You decide when to stop service or ask for more money. Ethical business people understand this better than anyone else.

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Look for Part II of How to avoid the painful experience of bad clients! blog post coming soon to chrisfry.org.

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Infographic

The following Infographic is intended for the digital marketing freelancer or small startup design shop who seeks to avoid bad clients or learn what to do with them. This infographic chunks-out small pearls-of-wisdom to remember.

avoid-the-painful-experience-of-bad-clients-infographic

blog-masthead-persuasive-marketing-rhetoric

The Methods of Persuading Customers

The methods of persuasion includes
Ethos.,Pathos.,Logos.,Telos.,Kairos.

Discover the 2,300-year-old secrets from the greatest marketer who ever lived. Here’s why your “out with the old, and in with the new” reasoning is not convincing your customers. 

 

Aristotle

Greek philosopher

Born: June 19, 384 BC, Stagira, Greece
Died: March 7, 322 BC, Chalcis, Greece

Aristotle, the ancient Greek philosopher was not only one of the greatest intellectual figures of Western history, he was in many ways, the father of marketing. Most people are aware of his methods of persuasionethos, pathos, and logos — but there are lesser known methods of persuasion to include in the mix. Telos and Kairos are appeals that marketers would benefit in knowing, in order to persuade customers to buy product.

In Aristotle’s day, persuasive speech was a form of rhetoric in which young men were taught to win legal cases — these case often involved disputes over land and property. These ancient rhetorical techniques have been used throughout the centuries, in one form or another, and have found their way into modern advertising and marketing strategies.

Let’s take a look at Aristotle’s methods of persuasion and discover the ancient marketing secrets behind successful modern brands!

Ethos

The appeal to credibility. Ethos today can be found in many celebrity endorsed products and services. People by nature emulate those they admire and covet, so it is only natural that those same people will try to purchase the very items owned by celebrities.

Pathos

The appeal to emotion. Pathos is a powerful technique used by many charities and companies. Pulling at the ole’ heartstrings of your audience is sure to empty the wallets of your customers, if it is done correctly.

Logos

The appeal to logic. No one makes a better appeal to its customer’s logic like Apple, Inc. Each year they convince their customer’s to purchase new products using logic and reason. The logical appeal cites facts, statistics, charts, data, and graphs.

Telos

The appeal to purpose. Religious, spiritual centers, self-help organization and even the NASA, all make appeals to the audience’s sense of purpose. Believe, tithe, and convert more “tithers” is the purpose of the religious, spiritist, and the self-helpers. NASA wants you to believe our purpose is to colonize Mars and appeals to our sense of doom for our species if we don’t.

Kairos

The appeal to timeliness. Marketing is about delivering the right promotion about the right product, at the right price, at the right place, at the right time, and to the right person—hence, the proverbial 4 P’s of marketing (product, price, place & promotion) are found in this statement. Kairos is a crucial component in this mix because it draws from the audience’s sense of anxiety and anticipation.

13 of the
Most Persuasive Ads
We’ve Ever Seen

CLICK HERE

Wrap-up

Persuasive philosophy from 2,300 years ago has generated trillions of dollars in our modern times. If your “out with the old, and in with the new” reasoning is not convincing your customers, then it would behoove you to read up on Aristotle’s rhetoric. Discover the 2,300-year-old secrets from the greatest marketer who ever lived, could help your business generate dollars through the methods of persuasion.

 

How do you make your marketing and advertising more persuasive? Let me know in the comments below…

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Heidi Cohen, Chief Content Officer at Heidi Cohen’s Actionable Marketing Guide and President at Riverside Marketing Strategies

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