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Ian Brodie

Ian Brodie is the best-selling author of Email Persuasion and creator of Unsnooze Your Inbox - *the* guide to crafting engaging emails and newsletters that captivate your audience, build authority and generate more sales.


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My Odd Job Man: Marketing Genius

Posted on 23rd February 2012.

We have a guy called James who comes round to our house and offers to do odd jobs every now and then.

Youngish guy, big grin, the odd tooth missing. Looks like he's had an interesting life.

When he came round last week it struck me that in many ways he's a great role model for marketing.

We first met James a year or so ago when he knocked on our door offering to clean our gutters for £20.

Now we didn't know him from Adam at the time. But the gutters really did need doing, it's a tricky job getting up on ladders to do it yourself, and for only £20 – what did we have to lose?

So we said yes.

He set off to clean them, and as it was a pretty sunny day, he chatted to us as he did it.

When he'd finished, as we were paying him, he said:

“You know, your decking could do with a bit of wood preserver on it”.

He was right, it could. But it's a big job – we have a lot of decking surrounding the extension to the house we built a few years ago.

So he quoted us a very reasonable price (not that we checked or got any competitive quotes – but it seemed cheap for the amount of work) and we agreed for him to do it.

A couple of days later he was back to do the decking. He worked like a dog for 2 days – sanding the decking down and hand painting it all with the wood preserver.

As we paid him, he said:

“You know, if you've got any other jobs need doing – painting, repairs, anything, just give me a call”.

And as it happens, we'd been thinking about getting the main room in the extension and the hallway painted.

So guess what? James ended up doing that too.

So from what started out as a £20 job to clean out our gutters, he ended up with a small 4 figure sum.

Not a bad bit of business development work really!

How to become a Marketing Genius

What were James's “secrets”?

Well, firstly, he had a low cost, low risk entry level offer.

When we first met him, we didn't know if he could do a good job or whether we could trust him. But for £20 it wasn't much of a risk.

When he did a good job, and when he chatted to us as he did it, he built his credibility and his relationship with us.

Next, he used his eyes, ears and common sense to spot something else we needed doing – the decking.

By working flat out on it and charging a good value price, he built his credibility and relationship further.

Having built his credibility, he'd earned the right to ask if there was anything else that he could help with. And there was.

Now here's the thing. James is “just” an odd job man.

But how many of us highly qualified professionals have that low cost, low risk entry level offer where we can prove ourselves?

Not many.

How many of us professionals keep our heads up and our eyes and ears open to spot other areas we can help our clients in – rather than just knuckling down, doing the work and getting out?

Not many.

And how many of us have the confidence in our own capabilities to know that after having done good work, offering to help in other areas is not being pushy or salesy – it's actually appreciated by our clients who need that help.

Once again, not many.

The next few years are probably going to be pretty tough for many professional firms. But I suspect James is going to do OK.

If you'd like to discover the practical steps to making your next year successful too, check out the $1 trial of my Momentum Club by clicking here.