Selling UX to Small Business | UX Booth
Usability has come a long way in the past few years – small and medium businesses (SMBs) are finally beginning to “get it,” and the tools of the trade are cheaper and more accessible than ever. This should be good news for companies and consultants selling services to small businesses, but if you’ve ever tried to sell to the SMB market, you know that it’s not quite that simple. Selling entry-level services often takes a lot of education and legwork, and by the time it’s done, you may have spent so much time (and money) selling that even a “yes” ends up being a loss. It isn’t just about making the sale – it’s about finding the right projects that can lead to long-term relationships and steady work.
Finding the right projects starts with getting the right leads. When you start out selling to small businesses, it’s easy to think of it as a numbers game. The inevitable self-delusion goes something like this:
If I can just manage to sell 100 reports this year, and I charge $750 each, I’ll make $75,000. That’s only 2 reports per week. It’ll be easy!
Your math may be right, but leads are hard to find and you can’t afford to invidually hunt down every $750 project. You also can’t waste time with prospects who string you along for months. Here are a couple of tips for getting started:
EDUCATE THE MASSES
Every prospect requires some convincing, so how do you educate potential clients without eating up all of your time? Think big – there’s no reason to spend hours on the phone reciting the same message over and over when you can educate on a larger scale. Here are just a few suggestions:
- Blog on small-business topics and case studies
- Write a free resource, such as an e-book
- Speak at local events or run a free seminar
- Answer questions on forums, LinkedIn Q&A, etc.
Not only can you communicate to dozens or hundreds of prospects this way, but when someone finally does knock on your door, they’ll already understand what you can do for them.
SKIP THE DOUBTERS
When you’re selling an entry-level product, you have to weed out bad prospects quickly. Let’s say that your $750 report takes you 10 hours to complete, on average. If you’re just getting started, making $75/hour probably sounds pretty good. What if that report takes you 20 hours to sell, though? Your paycheck just went down to $25/hour.
To put it bluntly: Don’t waste your time on people who don’t get it. Most sites, even small ones, can see real benefit from usability, but consulting work is like therapy – people who don’t buy into the process probably won’t see results. They’ll fight you on price, they’ll fight you on implementation, they’ll eat up your time, and they’ll never be a long-term prospect. It’s hard to say “no” to cash-in-hand, but try to take a long-term view. If you smell a bad prospect, move on.
You’ve got your foot in the door – now you’ve got to decide whether this project is a good fit (for both you and the client) and convince them to pull the trigger:
DO THE MATH
Let’s get something out in the open that none of us like to talk about. We UX folks like to think that there’s a certain altruism to what we do, and that’s great, but we don’t do our clients any favors when we start ignoring their financial reality. Let’s pretend that you sell a usability audit geared at small businesses for a one-time fee of $750. Now, let’s say that your prospect has a total budget of $1,000. You’ve got room to spare, right? Not so fast. After paying for your report, your client is only going to have $250 left for implementation (design and coding).
The best advice in the world is worthless if you can’t act on it. Make sure your potential client has the budget to implement and get results.
35 new and stunning black wallpapers for your desktop
Desktop wallpapers always are the first thing that inspire us as we switch to the Digital world. The more inspirational, beautiful and elegant they are, the better they can challenge our imagination. Wallpapers never fail to provide a fresh perspective of our imagination and it does so in a monotonous work flow. However, desktop wallpapers sometimes can go far beyond offering a colorful energy. They symbolize the personality, invigorating nature and mentality of our being.
In this article, I have chosen ‘Black‘ to take the honor of being the most stunning color that can ever be perceived. Technically speaking, Black is considered the negation of all colors. It also has conflicting connotations. It can be serious and conventional, it can also be mysterious, sexy, and sophisticated. Black can be seen as the color of authority and seriousness.
In the Japanese culture, kuro (black) is a symbol of nobility, age, and experience. Ergo, the black belt is a mark of achievement and seniority in many martial arts
So, to appreciate the true beauty of ‘Black’, I present here, 35 stunning desktop wallpapers that are inspired by the color. So, go ahead and click on it to go to the source file and download it.
http://richworks.in/2010/03/35-new-and-stunning-black-wallpapers-for-your-desktop/
Write and design with the dingbats
If you think that the dingbats, or to be more precise the fonts composed by symbols are not so serious and almost useless, you have to start changing your mind. Elegant, nifty, humorous…there are for all tastes and needs. They are easy to use, modify, resize and able to aesthetically enrich every single graphic project.
Thus, a selection has to be made in order not to fall into amateurial work, given that not all the dingbats are of a high quality: some are imprecise, others if resized could become jagged and so on.
For not to mention the dingbats already used&abused to the extreme.
I have tried to gather into this mini collection some of the dingbats I believe you might find useful: some that I have personally used in certain works (like the wonderful Nymphette), and others that I have become aware of through reflex thanks to certain sites that make a skillful use out of them.
http://www.yourinspirationweb.com/en/write-and-design-with-the-dingbats/
7 Extremely Useful Chrome Extensions for Web Developers (with quick tutorials for each)
Web developers, you guys are really lucky. The tools available for you as a group are very powerful and they come in all shapes and sizes. With the introduction of Google Chrome, the community has made some amazing extensions which are very easy to use for every day work. Below you have the ones I consider most useful (starting with the best, of course
).
http://aext.net/2010/03/extremely-useful-chrome-extensions-for-web-developers/
