Fundamental marketing theory was developed from psychology, and the human mind hasn't changed much in the last 50,000 years. Before we run after the newest social media or mobile marketing solution, let's make sure that we've got the basics in place.
In Marketing, the Customer Changes: We Don'tThe most fundamental fact of marketing is easy to miss: It's all up to the customers. No matter what we do, finally, our success all comes down to the customer making a choice. If enough customers buy at a reasonable price, we succeed. Otherwise, we don't.
All marketing activities should be based on that one simple fact. We can't decide to buy our products or services ourselves. Each customer must decide.
Successful marketing is all about creating an environment that keeps the customer focused on the decision, and then guiding them through the steps of making that decision.

Source: Thrive Global
Human decision-making is part of the study of psychology. To help our customers choose to buy essay and services, we must understand how they decide what to do. Then we can encourage the purchase decision. The fundamental facts of human psychology are essential to all successful marketing – whether you use the Internet, social media, mobile marketing, or a billboard!
When my small business clients want a good marketing plan, they usually come in expecting to hear about SEO or selling on Facebook or Mobile Marketing. They're surprised when I tell them that that's not where to start. But then they get it – if you want customers, start with understanding the customer!
If you want customers, start with the customer, not the technology.
Customers Make the Decision to BuyCustomers make the decision to buy in seven steps. These steps cannot be skipped, and they cannot go out of order. Every successful sale is these seven steps occurring in order. Even the so-called "impulse decision" to buy actually is just all seven steps happening very rapidly.

Source: Dynamic Business
Also, each of the seven steps is both emotional and logical. The seven steps are:
This seven-step process is everything each customer does every time a sales occurs. And when a prospect does not become a customer, and there is no sale, then that prospect went off in a different direction at some point in the seven steps.
If we can reach the right people (our target market) and guide them through the seven steps so that we close the deal, then we have a working marketing and sales process. The customers and money roll in!

Source: Digital Marketing Institute
Two Simpler ModelsMost businesses don't want to deal with seven-step processes. So they think in two simpler versions.
The Two Step Model: Marketing and SalesIn this model, marketing covers Steps 1 through 3, moving the client from Unaware to Interested. Sales starts with an interested prospective client and moves through steps 4 through 7, the close on the deal.
In a well-run organization, marketing professionals plan and do steps 1, 2, and 3 really well, and salespeople are well trained and get good support so that they can succeed in steps 4 through 7.
The Four Step ModelRobert Middleton, in his Infoguru Marketing System, which is one of the best tools available for small business and one-person business marketing for professional services, offers a four-step system. He compares it to baseball. I've slightly changed his model, as he talks about you (the business owner and salesperson) running the bases. As I see it, we're coaching our clients to run the bases.
Note that the focus is on the client moving forward from one base to the next, until the client makes the right choice for himself or herself, which we hope will be a yes!

Source: The News Minute
This four-step model is an excellent tool for creating a small business marketing plan and creating a successful marketing and sales system for your business. It is also very useful for training in sales skills. Many salesmen and women make the mistake of not identifying where the client is. They are using all the right techniques, but in the wrong order, and the sale fails! For example, suppose that a salesman is with a client, and the client is at Step 6, convinced. The right thing to do is wait, be silent, create a space the client can fall into. Asking a question like, "What do you want to do?" or "Do you prefer Option A or Option B?" and letting the client decide is the right action. But an inexperienced or anxious salesperson is likely to push things too fast, and say, "Sign here." In pushing to close (Acting, Step 7), the salesperson may trigger a reaction in the prospect who pulls back and says, "No, this just doesn't feel right." And the sale is lost.
Marketing and Sales – Internet and Social Media MethodsThe two-step process of marketing and sales is obvious on the Internet. Internet marketing is what gets people to our website. Internet sales is the design of the web site that gets them to put items in the shopping cart and buy them.
Marketing, that is, bringing people to our website, includes:
Web site sales has everything to do with site design:
Marketing and sales for social media is much the same as marketing and sales on the Internet. Let's take a look at social media marketing next.

Source: Salesforce.com
Social MediaSocial media, such as Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest, are tools for communication that can be used for marketing purposes. But we need to be very careful in how we do step 1, that is, how we make people aware of our existence and what we offer. People come to these locations to be social, not to have ads thrown in their face. When the phone rings, people expect to hear a friend, not a cold-call salesman. The same is true with tweets, Facebook posts, and Pinterest pictures. We can very quickly turn prospective customers into people who never want to hear from us again if we assume that social media are just like advertising billboards. We have to be social and give people what we want. We have to earn the right to let them know what we offer.
Once we do that, though, the social media process is very much like the Internet process. Through social media, we bring people to our website or Facebook page. At that point, the sales process begins, as above.
What about mobile media? Well, that's a whole different story!
Mobile MarketingThe seven fundamental steps of marketing and sales apply to Mobile Marketing, but in a very different way. Mobile means that our customers are on the move. We want to catch them as they fly by.
Imagine two people in a car. The driver says, "I'm hungry." The passenger pulls out her iPad or Android and gets to work. If you've done your mobile marketing well, then they see you and head for your restaurant to fill their bellies.

Source: Richtopia
Even when it goes this fast, all seven steps happened. The customers had a need – and didn't know I existed. They were at level 1) unaware. My mobile marketing presence got them: 2) Aware and 3) Interested by the time our co-pilot said, "Wow!" Seeing a photo of a pizza piled with a mountain of toppings got them to 4) Comprehending. "You up for pizza, sweetie" was step 5) Evaluating. "Sure, let's do it" was the sign of 6) Convinced. Following the GPS was the beginning of 7) Acting.
Marketing – It's the Same EverywhereAs you can see, the fundamental process of marketing is the same on the Internet and in Mobile Marketing as it is for traditional brick & mortar marketing and advertising. It has to be, because it all comes down to the prospect deciding to buy and becoming a customer. The mediamaychange, but the peopledon't.
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