Eight_Great_Ways_to_Fill_a_Workshop_in_a_Bum_Economy
| Eight Great Ways to Fill a Workshop in a Bum Economy
Yes, you can fill a workshop when spending is down and buyers
are wary. If your topic is clear, your marketing materials
well-done, your product solid and your title catchy, success
shouldn’t be tough. The fact is that people are as hungry as
ever for the inspiration and stimulus a workshop provides, even
when they’re nervous about money. And even though most bum
economies recover over time, you may find the following tricks
helpful enough to keep using even in good times!
1. Tailor the workshop to the economy. In other words,
acknowledge the problem. So if your workshop is about helping
women over 50 live their dreams, change it to Living Your Dreams
Over 50 … Even When the Economy is Down. Or make it about
finding your dreams after being laid off, or managing fear while
pursuing your dreams in a poor economy. Your fundamental message
doesn’t have to change … you just dress it up in slightly
different clothing.
2. Use unconventional marketing methods. Advertising and flyers
may not be the most effective way to enroll a workshop in lean
times. For one thing, affordable ads are not usually big enough
to effectively describe a workshop, unless it’s very targeted
and easy to ‘get’, i.e. quitting smoking, or stress-reduction.
If you’re teaching motivational or inspirational work, consider
using an affiliate program, viral email marketing, distributing
articles through targeted ezines, working your personal network,
or making yourself available as a guest on local TV or radio
talk shows. Best of all is a combination of all of the above.
3. Make your niche one with a pipeline. Be careful not to pick a
tiny niche market that is hard to access. Instead, a good rule
of thumb is to look for a niche market with marketing channels
already in place. For instance, one successful workshop leader I
know targets retirees on the RV-Camping circuit. Many US
campgrounds offer classes and other stimulating perks to
visitors, and since RV’ers often stay for several nights or even
weeks, this makes a workshop a likely hit. She simply has to
talk to management, and they put her workshop in place for her.
Participants magically show! Hospitals with neighborhood
‘wellness’ programs, bookstores with evening events, and
community center Teen programs are also good venues.
4. Pitch a co-operative venture with another business. One fun
way to reach your niche is to approach another business’s
clientele. For instance, if you’re offering stress-reduction
workshops, arrange a tie in with the local health club or weight
loss group. Look for businesses that attract people who would
logically be drawn to your product as well. Then approach that
business and offer something great. You can sell them your
workshop at a reduced rate (a special offer just for their
members, which they can use as a perk.) Or you could hold a
workshop on their premises at your usual fee, and pay them a
percentage of the gate. Or you could simply offer to exchange
advertising plugs for each other’s business’s. (This works well
if you communicate with your clients via an email newsletter or
direct mail.)
5. Offer a FREE mini-workshop. In tough times, people need more
convincing to buy. So offer a free sample of your workshop (a
forty minute talk, say) at a local venue such as a public
library or church coffee hour. Give participants time to ask
questions, and have lots of handouts available about your
bigger, more elaborate (paid) workshop to be held a few weeks
later. And be sure to make the occasional reference to it in
your free talk. Finally, make your free talk compelling and
packed with good stuff. It can be a very general overview or
‘taste’ of your more fleshed out paid workshop. (You don’t have
to give away all your goodies, of course, but don’t be afraid to
share a few key pieces.) Wary buyers cannot resist excellence.
6. Lower the price. Not always the most fun option, but one that
works – especially if you have a themed sale, such as Wipe Out
the Winter Blahs Special or a Kick Off the New Year With a Bang.
If possible, try to position your price reduction as a limited
time gift for your clients … one that ties in with a particular
need or time of year. This lets them know you are, in fact,
thinking of them and their best interests.
7. Offer bonuses. We all love something free, so come up with
some highly desirable bonuses that are just irresistible. These
can be free reports that get downloaded automatically, or sent
with registration info. Or it could be a tangible product, such
as a book, a mug,
8. Enroll a friend for a discount. Or if you don’t want to offer
a discount, encourage clients to bring a friend who can act as
an on-going supporter with the work of the workshop. (And, of
course, they can provide the same to their friend.) Such support
is actually one of the best ways to get your material to
‘stick’, so your client’s get more on-going value from the
workshop, so this plan is a real win-win. Consider tailoring the
workshop to pairs such as mothers and daughters, work buddies
(great for stress reduction!), married couples, fathers and
sons, or best friends. If you pitch it to couples, you could
market it to resorts as part of a Second Honeymoon or
Mom-Daughter Getaway package weekend.
If you’re interested in leading your own workshops, but don’t
know quite where to start, check out my How Much Joy Can You
Stand? Facilitator’s Home Study Course. You’ll learn how to
create, book, fill and lead your own workshop. Details and a
FREE sample are at http://www.howmuchjoy.com angfacil.html
About the author:
Suzanne’s free ezine, The Joy Letter, brings you a crisp, fresh
burst of inspiration for your dream every week or two. Sign up
at http://www.howmuchjoy.com/joyletter.html
|
|