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MYM Overview
The Landscape of Business Has Changed
In order to explain the "Monopolize Your Marketplace"
system, we have to start by defining the importance of
marketing. A special yearly issue of Success Magazine called "The Selling Issue" quoted Scott DeGarmo,
"The big money goes to those companies with superior
marketing operations. Entrepreneurial companies of today
must evolve from being sales oriented to being marketing
oriented in order to now win the consumer."
Let me explain why it's important to focus on marketing
instead of selling. There was a time known as "the
days of simple selling." The days of simple selling are
generally considered the days before 1980 or, in some
industries, before 1990. In this period of selling, it was
a lot easier for a salesperson to go in and sell to a
buyer. The reason was simply because the marketplace was a
lot less crowded.
For example, in 1980, if you wanted to buy a Ford pick-up
truck, where did you go? You went to the dealership. This
was the only way to see your choices and ask your
questions. You couldn't go online or to Barnes & Noble and
read fifteen magazines that compared and contrasted new
trucks and cars because these sources of information
didn't exist. The dealership was the only source of
up-to-date information. In the days of simple selling,
there was less competition, fewer choices, and it was
easier to make a buying decision. Let's wrap this up by
saying, "in the days of simple selling, the seller had the
power because the buyer had very few options."
The Days Of Simple Selling Are Over!
Now we've got a new situation; buyers no longer have to
rely on limited sources of information about a product or
service. The landscape of business now involves increased competition, information, choices, and more
resistance. It has made buying cycles longer. There is
now price competition that didn't exist before. Products
are becoming commodities and a lot of the marketing
messages are identical. Because of all of this, a wedge
has been created between the seller and the buyer. This
wedge is called "The Confidence Gap."
"The Confidence Gap" is the consumer's inability to
determine whether any of the products or any of the
services are any better or worse or any different than any
of the others. This creates a big problem. What you need
to understand is that people, who will be buying from you,
have all these different choices. It's very difficult for
them to determine whether you are any better or any
different from anyone else. So your marketing goal needs
to be to narrow the Confidence Gap and restore the
consumer's trust and confidence.
How Do I Fix This Problem?
The questions you may be asking yourself
are "How do I figure this out?" and "How do I fix this
problem?" Go to the business section of any bookstore and
you'll find all kinds of books on this topic. You'll find
things like "Better Customer Service." The theory is if
you have better customer service, you'll have more
customers. The problem with this philosophy is you must
have a customer in order to give them service. You can't
just say, "I've got great customer service." It doesn't
work that way; you must have a system that will drive the
customer to you! One of the things you might hear business
gurus say is, "If you have more sales training and if you
are better at sales, then you'll be able to get more
customers." The problem with that is, again, you've got to
have prospects in order to use your sales skills. If you
look at all the sales training books and all the sales
training seminars, they are all short on advice in this
particular area, which is: "How do I find someone to
sell to in the first place?"
There is another way that business books and business
gurus tell you how to overcome this thing we call the
Confidence Gap. "Use advertising tricks and
techniques." "You can trick people through misleading
advertisements to call you or come in." For example, I saw
a car ad that said, "Pay no tax on all new vehicles." Do
you think that sounds like a pretty good deal? If I
weren't paying any tax, then I'd probably save a couple
grand. The problem is when you looked at the fine print,
it said, "Customers responsible for all sales taxes,
state, and local. The dealer will pay for the inventory
tax." This is a sales trick. It does nothing to build
trust and confidence. Instead it builds contempt, hatred,
and suspicion. The result is a widening of the Confidence
Gap when the goal of the advertisement should have been to
narrow it.

These examples reveal a problem. We used
to have the days of simple selling, now we have The
Confidence Gap. You, as a business owner, need to overcome
this in order to be successful. You need to find a
solution to the problem.
How Do I Get The Customers To Actually Want To Do
Business With Me?
I don't know if you are familiar with
Napoleon Hill; he wrote the book, Think and Grow Rich.
He had a saying that went like this: "It is as useless to
try to sell a man something until you have first made him
want to listen as it would be to command the earth to stop
rotating." Do you believe that? Think about it; if they
don't want to listen, trust me, they are not going to want
to buy what you are selling. They are going to view you
as a pest. That's where the difference between sales
and marketing come into play.
In sales, what you are doing is trying to make people want
to listen to you in a sales situation. What we're
presenting is a marketing program that does the job of
making people want to listen. It prepares the buyers so
they will come to you and you will have an opportunity to
sell. Sales skills are still very important, but your time
is used more productively in closing sales rather that
chasing them down.

Marketing Is The Tool You Must Use To Bridge The
Confidence Gap
Marketing needs to be concise, well
articulated, and powerfully stated. It is low or no
pressure. Marketing is one-way communication. It's
not afraid of rejection. It's not obtrusive. People can
review marketing at their own pace, when it's convenient
for them. And, if they aren't interested, they can ignore
it altogether. No commitment. That is why we need to talk
about a marketing program.
In the Monopolize Your Marketplace system, we teach and
implement a Marketing Program that helps businesses
overcome the Confidence Gap. It accomplishes this by
addressing two points-the Inside Reality and the Outside
Perception.
The inside reality is everything your business does that
makes you valuable to your customers. It is what gives you
a competitive edge in the marketplace. It is all of your
skills, your passion, your systems, the way you conduct
your business. The outside perception is how customers and
prospects perceive your business. It is the ideas and
impressions consumers gain from your direct and indirect
communication with them.
The Outside Perception Of Your Business Should Match
The Inside Reality
To be successful in business and to
continue that success, your inside reality and outside
perception should match. If you spend all your resources
developing the inside reality and neglect the outside
perception, you will be frustrated wondering why you are
having minimal results with your superior product or
service. On the flip side, if you focus solely on the
outside perception and neglect the inside reality,
prospects will soon find there is little value in the
product or service and you will get little, if any, return
business.
To conclude this introduction to the MYM system, I would
like to reemphasize the point just made. I paraphrase Jim
Rohn, a great business philosopher, in a lecture about
personal communications he said: "First, have something
good to say. Second, say it well and third, say it often."
The Monopolize Your Marketplace system incorporates all
three of these communication elements thoroughly. About
25% deals with having something good to say or the inside
reality, the remaining 75% deals with saying it well and
saying it often or the "outside perception."
Learn more about the MYM system by
requesting one or more of our free resources: Click here
-> Free Resources.
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