The Art of Business: Six Ways to Drum Up Business, in Good Times or BadBy Eric J. Adams, creativepro.com contributing editor The phone hardly rings anymore, your Web traffic counter stays unchanged unless you visit your own site, and that queasy feeling in the pit of your stomach doesnt go away when you shut down the computer for the evening. If these symptoms sound familiar, take solace in knowing youre not alone: These are the sure signs of the gravy train chugging to a halt, and the gravy trains generally dont run as frequently, as fast, or as loaded as we might like when the economy slows. Operating in lean times is no fun, thats for certain, but any creative who has worn through a few portfolio cases over the years can attest that down markets come and go. And you certainly dont have to let lean times beat you down. Here are a few techniques that for years have been the proven tools of business development -- and a few new techniques to boot. 1: Talk to Your Clients Call up your clients and ask what other projects might be on the back burner or what new projects may be coming up. Ask questions, offer helpful insights, and make sure to relay your availability. No hard sell here, just a call me when youre ready. If you have the time, pay your clients a personal visit. Even in our wonderful world of e-mail and virtual white boards, a personal visit remains the most powerful relationship builder youll find. If youre in the town of even a minor client, make arrangements to stop by to say hello and shake a hand. Thats how salesmen get insignificant customers to become significant ones. 2: Make Warm Calls So fire up your contact-management software and start calling people you know (at least the ones that wont hang up on you) -- clients, vendors, colleagues, and college chums -- until you get to the bottom of the list. Strike up a conversation, and dont be afraid to ask for referrals, even casual referrals. Then follow up on those as well. Warm calling can be a tedious and time-consuming experience, but so can worrying about having no work. If one warm call leads to one significant job or new client, all your warm-calling efforts have been worthwhile. 3: Search the Online Job Boards The list is long, but spending a slow afternoon exploring the sites should help you identify which might work best for you.
And of course theres creativepro.coms own Freelance Exchange, through a partnership with Bullhorn. One caveat: Youre wasting your time if you approach these sites haphazardly. The trick is to find a site you like and then to stay with it long enough to become intimate with its workings, and perhaps even to show some staying power. And once you understand well how a site works, visit it often so you can react swiftly to new RFPs. It often takes a serious time investment before the payoff begins. 4: Network, Network, Network Online, get back on those graphic arts bulletin boards that once were so popular and poke around other industry-specific boards in the industries you work in regularly. Add your two cents to discussion threads, and youll be amazed at the conversations you can strike up (some scary, for sure). You can network even more proactively by teaching seminars and workshops. Its unlikely that potential clients will come to your classes, but just having your name in course catalogs can help. And teaching adds a certain legitimacy to your resume that can be helpful down the line. Networking is not a selfish technique. Its a two-way street. And you can be a friend simply by clipping articles you come across and sending them to people you know. Send a lot of birthday cards or call people out of the blue when something reminds you of them. Give genuinely to the people you know, and good things will come back to you. Karma is still cool. 5: Get Some Publicity Trade magazines and newsletters are always looking for contributors. Declare yourself an expert and write an article about design or marketing, or whatever your expertise is -- as it relates to the trade magazines field of interest. Even if you do it for free, youll have another piece to add to your portfolio that shows you are more than just a wannabe-artist. Publicity begets publicity and before you know it, you might have journalists calling you for interviews. 6: Dont Get All Depressed And, if by some cosmic curse, still nothing comes your way, create the art you love, if for nothing more than to remind yourself why you got into this business in the first place. Renewal doesnt have to come from money; thats the benefit of being an artist. Read more by Eric J. Adams. Go to Business Tips Index to read other articles! |