WHAT IF NO ONE SIGNS UP?
C.J. Hayden, MCC
It's
the nightmare of every professional who offers group programs. You
design a powerful workshop, schedule a date, broadcast your marketing
message… and no one registers. Then what?
Let's
assume you have the basics down. You've chosen a compelling
topic, identified a likely audience, and clearly described the benefits
of participating in your program. Even the price is right. You've
already sent information about your program to a list of strong
prospects. What else can you do?
-Preventive
Measures-
First, let's
back up a step. There are several measures you can take early on
in your promotion that will improve your chances of full enrollment:
1. Offer your
program in house instead of to the general public. Selling your
program to a company, association, or learning center with an established
base of employees, members, or students can be much easier than
trying to sell each seat yourself. You could also partner with an
existing organization with a track record of filling programs, and
share the profits in return for a full house.
2. Build your
prospect list to equal 20-100 times the number of people you want
to attend. A typical response rate from a postal mailing is 1-2%.
Response to opt-in email is often even lower. (Don't even
consider using unsolicited email.) In general, expect no more than
1% to respond if they don't know your work and rarely more
than 5% even when they know you well. Make it a habit to capture
the name and address of every prospect and get their permission
to mail or email.
3.
Plan to promote on multiple channels. Your promotion plan should
include announcements in your ezine or newsletter, a description
on your web site, postal mail, a brochure or flyer to distribute,
calendar listings, and personal invitations. Don't rely on just
one or two avenues -- students are much more likely to enroll when
they see your program mentioned in many different places.
-Emergency Enrollment-
If your program
has low or no registrations as the date approaches, here's
what you can do to increase enrollment:
1.
Call everyone on your prospect list and invite them personally.
Don't count on mail and email to do the job. Place a phone call to
each person you have a phone number for, give a brief description
of the program, and invite them to attend. You'll be amazed how
many people will say, "Thank you for calling -- I've been meaning
to sign up."
2. Ask clients
and colleagues to make referrals. Just mailing an announcement to
potential referral sources isn't the same as asking for their
help. Call or email people who respect your work, and ask them to
suggest two or three others who could benefit. If they have suggestions
for you, ask if they will also contact those people themselves to
endorse your program.
3. Make a special
offer. Tell the people who are already registered they can bring
a friend for half-price. You're not losing any revenue that
way if the space would otherwise be standing empty. Offer a bonus
gift with minimal cost to those who enroll -- 30 minutes of your
professional time, or an ebook, audio, or report you've produced.
To encourage people to spread the word, offer the same gift to people
who refer students to you.
-If All Else
Fails-
In the last
few days before your program, if you still have only a handful pre-registered:
1. Hold your
program anyway. Invite people to attend for free if necessary to
have good participation. Your clients will enjoy the chance to spend
more quality time with you; colleagues will benefit from the opportunity
to see you work and meet other attendees. Ask people who attend
at no charge to write you glowing testimonials and refer paying
participants for the next time.
2. If you can't
fix it, feature it. The meaning of this classic sales maxim is that
if your product has an obvious flaw, make it a positive selling
point. When only six people enroll in your big seminar, convert
it to an intimate group experience. If you have only two people
for a group, turn it into a success team. Your participants will
be thrilled to have more individual attention. Never apologize for
a smaller-than-expected turnout.
3. Plan ahead
to do better next time. Analyze what went wrong with your marketing
and strategize how to do it differently the next time around. Should
you have allowed more lead time? Does your mailing list need to
be larger? Do you need to factor in more promotion channels instead
of relying on mailings or email alone? Make a list of all the key
elements you think are necessary to successfully promote your next
program.
Filling group
programs becomes easier when you offer them regularly. When students
see the same program advertised two or three times, they are much
more likely to enroll. Think of all your marketing efforts as part
of a long-term plan to make more people aware of your business.
If the outreach for your workshop introduces your business to many
new people, you may ultimately find that much more valuable than
just filling one program.
Copyright
© 2004, C.J. Hayden
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