Inside Information: How To Profit By
Sharing Your Expertise
by: Robert Boduch
Sharing inside information can boost your sales. It can make
your business much more profitable too, since valuable
information can be supplied at very little cost.
Quality, timely, relevant, and important information helps
prospects and customers make intelligent decisions. The right
information makes it a whole lot easier to choose with
confidence. Providing additional ideas, advice, insights and
resources is a great way to distinguish your product – and your
company -- from competitors.
What inside information of value can you provide to help your
customers and prospects?
Helpful tips, inside secrets, and other creative ideas help
to establish your expertise in the marketplace. When you give
away this kind of inside information, you create tremendous
value that’s appreciated by customers. These people feel
compelled to show their gratitude by continuing to buy from you,
time and time again.
Offering valuable inside information is easier than you may
think. Simply look at each product you supply and figure out
what collateral information prospects would like to know.
In other words, if you were a salesperson standing in front
of your prospect, what additional information of interest could
you offer her?
To sell a solid cherry dining room suite from a showroom
floor, you’d want to explain the exquisite finish and how to
preserve that “new” look. You would point out the quality
joinery used to secure the frame to the table legs. You might
even open a china cabinet drawer to demonstrate the built-in
quality, smooth-running hardware and fine craftsmanship that
went into it. It’s all inside information.
These are precious details that help educate potential
buyers. It’s information that might otherwise go unnoticed… yet
it could be the kind of detail that just might clinch the sale.
Pointing out all this inside information helps buyers feel good
about the true value of their purchase. It’s something they
could have easily missed, had it not been brought to their
attention.
This kind of detailed inside information is of interest to
potential customers and it’s something that could easily be
incorporated into a free brochure, booklet, report or videotape.
It also adds perceived value to the product itself by
establishing an exclusive “story” behind it. Don’t just give
them sales talk of hard-sell sales copy. Give them the facts –
good, solid, inside information about what it is makes your
product a better buy.
Here are some additional examples of using inside information
to inform and educate prospects – and increase sales as a
result:
A hardware store could offer a free booklet called “How To
Refinish Old Furniture Like A Restoration Pro” to all buyers of
furniture repair and refinishing items. This added value item --
offered exclusively -- should help boost sales of refinishing
supplies. It’s inside information that could only be provided by
someone who has done it before.
A travel agent could offer personalized commentary on popular
destinations in article format. “The 10 Must-See Spots In Las
Vegas”…. “The Top 7 Hottest Clubs In Nassau That Only The Locals
Know About”… or, “11 Spectacular Sites Of Costa Rica You’ve Just
Got To See At Least Once In Your Lifetime” might be great topics
for niche market vacationers. If you fit the market profile and
were planning a trip, wouldn’t you at least be curious about
this promising inside information?
If you plan to give your information away freely, prepare it
as you would a salable product. Don’t scrimp on quality in terms
of both content and appearance. When an information product
“looks” like something of value – it is. When you offer your
report or booklet free with purchase, it’s much more likely to
act as an incentive to the sale.
More resources at
www.makeyoursalessoar.com |