Is the creative approach appropriate for the target audience?

I have a startup plan. How do I find my target group of customers and approach them?

  • I am planning a design studio (Web development and Graphic designing consisting everything under digital graphics). How do I come to know that which particular group of people/company falls into my target audience category? After the identification, how do I approach them and get into some serious business?

  • Answer:

    It's best to start with a vertical that you are familiar with, or where you have an easy entry. I'd even suggest for the first couple of jobs, you just hustle in your personal network. Once you have a couple of customers under your belt, look at your best customers. Who got the most value out of working with you? And from whom did you get the most value? (Look for the biggest win-wins) Then look at what these people have in common (industry, size, location, needs, etc), and http://blog.close.io/b2b-lead-generation-for-startups LEAN SALESIf you haven't validated your idea properly yet, or don't have existing customers, a lean sales approach will provide you with valuable insights. 1. Meet potential customers Go out and talk to people who could be potential customers. Spend a whole afternoon walking into 10 different businesses, and say: "Hi, I'm ..., can I talk to the manager/owner." When you meet the owner, say: "Hi, I'm an entrepreneur about to start a new business to fix a problem that I think you have. Can I get three minutes of your time to see if this is something that you might want?" This is the best way to get started. The big advantage here is that you're going to be able to get very valuable feedback, you're going to be able to see people's responses, it's very visceral, you will get a real sense for how they run their operations. Although you can't do this kind of market research on a big scale, the quality of the responses/insights you get is really powerful. 2. Call potential customers The next thing to do is to call potential customers. Even though you're missing out on a lot of visual clues about them and their business, you still get to have one-on-one conversations that will help you understand their wants and needs really well. This obviously scales better than in person interactions. 3. Email potential customers The next higher tier is to email people. You can email a lot more people, but the quality of the insights you get will be different. You'll be able to see open/response rates and read people's responses. Written feedback often times is a bit more "filtered" than what people would tell you over the phone or in person. The great thing is that you can aggregate and analyze results at scale. 4. Separating real buying intent vs. "lukewarm interest" When you're an entrepreneur just starting out, lots of people will tell you that your idea is great, just because they like you or want to encourage you. But there’s a big difference between saying they would buy your product and actually paying money for it. How do you find out if they would have real intent to buy? One way to test this is to try sell your product even before you have build it. Here’s a simple question you can ask people to find out if they have real buying intent: “What are all the steps I have to make for you to become my customer?” I call this the “virtual close”. Listen carefully, watch out for red flags and make sure you get a very specific answer. Once you reach a point where the “virtual close” has occurred, do a test closing. There are different approaches to do a test close, find one that works best for you: We want to start in 4 weeks - does this work for you? The beta program is heavily discounted. If you sign up now, you’ll get it for half the price for life. What is the decision making process in your company? How quickly can we make a decision on this? And then ask them for money. Tell them: “Can I take your credit card info to process the payment?” Make it risk-free. Tell them their payment is 100% refundable, if they’re not happy with the product, they can get their money back at any point. Not everyone will be willing to give you money. But you can get at least some of the people who say they want your product to actually pay you in advance in order to get a discount in return or move the timeline up. Summarizing the 4 steps to validate your startup idea with sales: Get a deep understanding of the environment your potential customers are working in by talking to them face-to-face. Talk to more potential customers by phone to see if the early problems you've discovered are validated with a larger test group. Email more potential customers to test your early findings at scale/gather more data and build up a list of prospects. "Test-close" prospects to determine whether they are just "curious" or real prospects with real pain points and willingness to buy your product/solution. HOW TO APPROACH COMPANIES (AND GET THEIR BUSINESS)Cold email -> Schedule call -> Get Meeting -> Close the deal. Get started with cold emails: http://blog.close.io/six-simple-steps-to-getting-started-with-cold-sales-emails http://blog.close.io/5-cold-email-templates-that-will-generate-warm-leads-for-your-sales-team

Steli Efti at Quora Visit the source

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At the initial level you need to understand your target market that which are the industries you are looking forward to say you can start with food industry (targeting local restaurants, cafes) try and analyze their current graphics what is missing, where is the scope for improvement and then write to them with your value adds and research. The best thing is give them a free demo of your services which showcases your approach or some design elements, this will give you a starting point may be a sales call or a meeting with the person then explain him your approach and even if they pay you less take the work and deliver it with your full diligence and dedication, once you complete your work then ask for referrals. I am in the Digital Advertising industry for the past 4 years and believe me 95% of our company's business is built through referral, you do good work, you get more work :-) My best wishes are with you. And remember Always - "WHEN YOU FALL, YOU FALL ONE STEP AHEAD".

Nitin Jain

This answer helps only if you are willing to approach another company for help........... use Inc 42 .  It is a start-up from Bits Pilani Hyderabad  which helps you link up with related start-ups. It is widely used and its founder(s) was (were) invited to many prestigious start-up related  global events.(It is one of the best start-ups from India ).

Kandrika Aditya

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