Pay Mark First

In the early days at Infusion, we did very little marketing.  Consequently, we got very little business.  We did, however, excel at Unreal Tournament.

That’s why we hired Mark.

Mark was on the payroll for a couple of years and helped us out tremendously with our marketing efforts.   During his employment with us, we dramatically increased our lead flow and the number of deals we closed.  The thing about Mark was that he didn’t know anything about marketing – he didn’t  really know anything about anything because he wasn’t a real person.

Shortly after Clate Mask joined the company, he came to us a bit puzzled as to exactly who this “Mark” guy was that we were paying $3,000 a month.

So we explained to him:  “Mark” was the persona we had given to marketing.  We knew that marketing was critical to the success of our young business, but like most start-ups, we didn’t have a CLUE how to market ourselves or our product.  So we decided to start by budgeting $3,000 each month to marketing and that we’d figure things out from there.   Our only rule was that we spend all the money.  Kinda like Brewster’s Millions, only with $3,000 instead of $30,000,000…

And we put him on the payroll to make sure that “he” got paid before we did.

Of course, Clate turned that $3,000 budget into a successful pay-per-click campaign and with the help of influential marketing coaches like Reed Hoisington, Dan Kennedy, and Bill Glazer, we were off and running.

What was your first experience marketing like?  Did you have a coach?  Did you just figure it out?  And what have you found that works for you?

You might also like these other posts:

  • I've been fortunate over the years to have attended a great deal of training about marketing, but in the beginning I could only afford to read books :-) So I created a virtual mastermind group. I had the best and the brightest minds available to me in the world, and it only cost me the time it took to read.

    Today it always makes me smile when someone says "Nice work James, that's very much like ..." and then they name some respected world expert. Pretty cool I think.

    So yes, I enjoyed your Mark story and I think I might "borrow" it for the next time I'm teaching a group about the importance of marketing their business. Cheers! - James
  • mikevutler
    During his employment with us, we dramatically increased our lead flow and the number of deals we closed.So putting aside marketing money every month is an excellent way to boost your business to the next level.we didn’t have a CLUE how to market ourselves or our product. So we decided to start by budgeting $3,000 each month to marketing and that we’d figure things out from there.


    Mike


    Crack Cocaine
  • Great marketing idea.
    Marketing is everything in business.
    Even if you have a crappy product but excellent marketing you can become successful.
    Not that I recommend you try to build your business with a crappy anything, but marketing works everytime.
    So putting aside marketing money every month is an excellent way to boost your business to the next level.
    And there is no better marketing tool that works as well as a book. If you want to market with a book check out http://www.ExpertSelfPublishing.com
    Matthew
  • Eric,

    That's a funny story about marketing! I've spent many years struggling to run my business and then a good friend said,"Michael, you do fantastic work! But, if no one knows, no one buys." Marketing has not been my strength. And, if a business struggles, it doesn't have much to put back into the most important element, marketing. I'm finally getting it figure out. This blog is insightful. And I'm interested to see what Infusionsoft tools are all about.
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