How to Increase Your Income - Marketing Advice by:Christopher P Music
You've got to make money before you spend money
. If you think of the kind of financial advice you usually get from financial advisors, you'll probably find that it's pretty much entirely focused on the second half of that sentence: saving and investing money.
That's certainly a legitimate approach, but it's severely limiting. How much can you really save and invest when you're dealing with a limited amount of income? Read on to find out about another approach.
A company's financial situation has two aspects: what comes in and what goes out. Obviously, it's important to keep track of what goes out and make sure you get a fair return on your investment.
But no matter how much you scrimp on expenses, you can only save so much.
So why not look at the other side of the equation--how much comes in? Why not focus on increasing your income? After all, there is really no limit to how much income you could make.
Not that it's necessarily easy, but it's much easier than saving more when there's nothing left to save. That's why I focus on helping my business-owner clients increase their company's income. By increasing the business revenue, more money flows to the household and the net worth increases.
And increasing the business income isn't really rocket science either: think about your own business. Increasing income really comes down to four main functions which are closely connected:
1. Create demand for your products
Improve your marketing functions--get bright ideas on how to create more demand for your services or products. Improve your internet presence, your brochures and company image. Open new lines of communication with your public, such as surveying them to find out what is desired.
2. Promote yourself
Get out there to let people know who you are. Make phone calls, send letters, join referral groups, be active in the community, and get your face known. For the best effects, make sure you're dressing well and smiling. If you do that, people will think, "Hey, I like that person." And we all like doing business with people we like.
3. Sell your products
How well do you close the people who responded to your marketing? You can market all you want, but if you don't close, you aren't going to get paid. Look for ways to improve your sales process: take a course in sales techniques, attend seminars, standardize and drill your sales process with friends to get their feedback.
4. Improve the quality and delivery of your product
You also need to make sure that your products live up to people's expectations. If you don't have good product, you won't survive very long. Look for ways to improve the quality of your product and how efficiently you deliver it to your customers.
All of this may seem outside of what you'd expect from a financial advisor, but if you think about it, it shouldn't be. People come to get advice on how to improve their financial condition, and increasing their income is the most important thing they can do. And if an advisor can help them look at their business and make it grow, that will help them achieve their goals all the more quickly.
And if you feel that you need to increase your income, maybe it's time to do something about it. Christopher Music has helped many professionals gain control over their finances and achieve financial freedom -- or at least move steadily in that direction. For more information on how you too can increase your household income, visit Christopher's website at
http://www.wealthadvisoryassociates.com
Wealth Advisory Associates, LLC is a Florida Registered Investment Advisory Firm.
Wealth Advisory Associates only transacts business in states where it is properly registered or notice filed, or excluded or exempted from registration requirements. Follow-up and individualized responses that involve either the effecting or attempting to effect transactions in securities, or the rendering of personalized investment advice for compensation, as the case may be, will not be made absent compliance with state investment adviser and investment adviser representative registration requirements, or an applicable exemption or exclusion.
About the author
P. Christopher Music began his financial planning career in 1992 in Columbus, Ohio. He graduated from Mount Union College with a Bachelors Degree in Business Administration (BA) in 1990 and completed a Masters Degree in Business Administration (MBA) from Kent State University in 1994
Proving You Have a Heart is Just a Cause Away! by:Amruta Bhadkamkar More Expired Real Estate Scripts: Avoid the Traps by:Cheri Alguire Top 10 Reasons To Use Promotional Products by:Kim Patton 3 Ways to Be Successful in Marketing Your Business by:Kristie Lorette Testing is a Marketer's Best Friend by:Kristie Lorette How to Adjust Your Email Subject Lines to Increase Your Open Rates by:Kristie Lorette 3 Technology Options for Communicating with Your Subscribers by:Kristie Lorette Web 3.0: The Future of Internet Marketing by:Kristie Lorette The Four-step Method to Creating Marketing Pieces that Sell by:Kristie Lorette Are You Throwing in the Towel Too Soon? More Musings from the Marathon by:Michele Pariza Wacek Musings from the Marathon (and How it Can Help Your Business) by:Michele Pariza Wacek How to Promote your Local Business Effectively by:Nick Kakolowski Targeted Marketing Campaign Generates New Leads by:Todd Paton