Apr 28
If you have ever encountered this error when using Visual Studio 2005 to build reports there is a hotfix available which should fix the problem. It is very annoying and is one of those problems that can manifest itself occasionally or multiple times in one day. You can get the fix here and you can use your passport sign-on (i.e. hotmail sign-in details) to access the download area.
Apr 14
The flippent answer would be one that generates a definative and repeatable return on investment! There is going to be a cost for any email marketing, whether it be the design of the layout of the email if you need to make it look enticing, or using a third party service which charges a subscription fee. Before you do anything though consider;
- How targetted are the prospects on the list?
- How well written is the copy? Are you starting with a compelling, benefit oriented headline?
- How compelling is the actual offer?
Always remember to do small scale tests first. if you have a list of 10,000 prospects why not come up with two different emails (same offer, different copy in the email) and send email A to 100, and B to another 100 and compare the results.
If you are going to use a third party service then check they offer costs on a ‘per subscriber’ and not ‘per email’ basis. If you are being charged per subscriber it means you can email the list several times for no additional cost. One great service which does that and offers a whole lot more besides is GetResponse
Apr 09
You may have a problem running an SSRS report and get the following error “For more information about this error, navigate to the report server on the local server machine, or enable remote errors”. Now chances are if it is a production report server you wont have machine access to run the report as a local administrator. So the only other option is to enable remote errors. How do you do that? Simple! Download this file and then from a command prompt enter the following;
rs -i EnableRemoteErrors.rss -s http://servername/ReportServer
Now when you run the report you should get detailed enough information to allow you to find the problem.
Apr 07
There has been a huge uptake in customer relationship management (CRM) systems over the last couple of years. All businesses from small to large have been clamouring to select, buy and implement CRM as it is seen as a ‘must-have’. But I wonder, how many businesses have actually measured their return on that investment? How is your CRM system delivering benefit not just in operational process but in additional sales and new customers? Sure your CRM will tell you how many leads have been won, the status of those leads, which salesperson brought in that lead. It will also tell you how many and the potential value of any opportunities arising from that lead. But of course the real crux of the matter is you need to measure/test/refine/repeat the effectiveness of your campaigns.
And there lies the problem, whilst most CRM systems on the market allow you to create a campaign against a list of customers it is the segmentation of your customers that falls down. Why? because even if you do have an integrated CRM and financials system the chances are you cannot create what I would term as dynamic campaigns. I had this very request a few weeks ago from a Sage CRM customer. “We want to be able to create a campaign based around customers who have bought product x”. Can the system do it? No! Can it be made do it? Absolutely. Here are 4 examples, from hundreds of possible, dynamic campaigns you could be using (but probably won’t be);
- Customers who bought product x
- Customers who have spent more than (or less than) x pounds, dollars, euros
- Customers who have bought within the last 180 days but not within the last 90 days
- Customers who have only bought once from you
So the key is getting at your financials data and using it to create customer segments that are meaningful (and hopefully responsive!) to an offer in the campaign.
Apr 04
This is an often asked question and is a constant challenge for start-ups/small businesses on a tight budget. Having spoken to many SME business owners the same word keeps cropping up…..Referrals.
Why? well for a start the cost of acquisition is virtually nil, unless of course you have had to provide some form of incentive to get the referral. Secondly you have been recommended so your prospect hasn’t been given the hard sell but has received a more gentle approach. You can actively seek out referrals, the marketing guru Jay Abraham actually wrote a book that details 93(!) referral systems that you could, and should look to implement in your business.
The other area to look at is existing business. How often do you communicate with your customers? Do you communicate with your customers? What triggers do you have in place to monitor if a regular buyer stops buying? Running a business is a time-consuming thing and our best intention is to make regular contact but this normally slips. Many business owners ask “Won’t my customers get fed up with me keep sending them stuff?”. Potentially, yes, but you can minimise this. How? Make sure your communications are relevant, informative with a genuine and compelling offer.
Apr 01
Here it is, post #1 of my new blog. I hope you will find useful articles, free downloads and utilites that all have one common goal; to help to acheive more with your Sage accounting or Sage CRM system and to actually reduce or eliminate current manual process time and generate additional revenues from new business (acquired in the most cost effective way) or by intelligent communication and compelling offers into your existing customer base.