Have You Checked Out the Competition?Written by Susan Dunn, Marketing Coach
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©Susan Dunn, MA, Marketing Coach, http://www.webstrategies.cc . Let us help you market on the Internet. Web design and critique, article-writing and submission service, marketing plans. Mailto:sdunn@susandunn.cc for information. For free marketing ezine, email with “checklist” for subject line.
| | Top Ten Ways for Start-up Entrepreneurs to get Free PublicityWritten by Tara Kachaturoff, Executive Coach
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6. Donate your coaching services. Each year, many private and charitable organizations host events to attract contributions to their cause. To raise money, they usually auction off goods and services donated to them by local businesses. Donating a one- or two-month coaching package is a wonderful way to contribute to a cause you support. It’s also a wonderful way to showcase your business and services that you offer. 7. Volunteer to speak. Contact your local chamber of commerce as well as other community clubs, like Rotary or Optimist Clubs, and volunteer to speak on an interesting topic. Create a short one- or two-page proposal that includes four or five titles and summaries of speeches you’re eager to present. Include a short, professional biography as well as detailed contact information. 8. Offer a complimentary coaching day. One day per month, offer complimentary coaching to everyone! Send out flyers or postcards to local chamber directors, to local businesses, and to residents of community. Conduct 15, 20- or 30-minute coaching sessions. Be sure to coach something simple and tangible so that recipient can walk away with an experience to remember. Ask customer to take some action by end of next week. If you’re coaching in person, hand them your business card and ask them to call or email you in one week to report their progress. If you’re coaching on phone, ask them to call you to report their progress. 9. Contact your local television news station. Send or email your professional biography as well as a few news story ideas about your coaching practice to lifestyle editor. If you have a local client who is willing to tout rewards of having you as a coach, work them into story. The key to gaining editor’s attention is presenting a compelling, human interest story about how coaching has changed your clients’ lives. 10. Teach a class. Offer a free or fee class through your local community education program. If your class is accepted, it will be published in course catalog, usually with a short biography, which is then distributed throughout community. In some cases, this can translate to being publicized to tens of thousands of households – a great way to become well-known. Copyright 2004 by Tara Kachaturoff.

Tara Alexandra Kachaturoff is an executive coach, trainer, consultant and professional speaker with over 15 years of corporate experience. She coaches executives, professionals, and entrepreneurs on leadership, business and lifestyle issues and has been featured in radio, print, and television. She is the owner of CoachPoint(tm), www.virtualleverage.com,and www.relationshipplanning.com.
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