The only way businesses survive is to generate revenue in excess of their costs, consistently.
Common sense.
One of the oldest adages in revenue generation is that people do business with those they know like and trust.
It was correct, and to an extent it still is, but with a huge, game-changing wrinkle.
Most of us by now have done some sort of transaction electronically.
You have most likely moved to that transaction without ever meeting the person on the other side, so you certainly do not know them, and have no idea if you would like them, but you trust them to complete their side of the transaction.
One out of three now seems to be good enough?
Not really when you think about it.
In most cases there has been some interaction that you as the purchaser have undertaken that the seller knows nothing about.
You have looked at their website for technical specifications, prices, service promises, you may have downloaded some of the free stuff from their site, often to a junk email address so you do not get bothered with the following auto-marketing. Depending on the product you may also have checked out the various product forums, and review sites, and you have compared all this to the competitive offerings.
The summary of all this is that when you get to the point of initiating a transaction, you have come to value and trust those you do not know, sufficiently to decide to do business with them.
Value and trust. Key words.
Trust is mutual and earned by performance over time, value is delivered.
The challenge now in revenue generation is therefore to reach out to those who do not know you, but who may have some problem you can solve, some irritation you can remove, and demonstrate your value to the point where they trust you sufficiently to do business with you.
A complete turnaround from the days where you did business with people you got to know like and trust while walking the golf course.
Wherever I go, the question of Trust emerges.
How do i build it, how do I keep it, how do I leverage it, why should i give it, and so on.
As we become more and more disconnected physically, it becomes a progressively more important question, and one that just never crossed our minds in the days when we knew personally all those we did business with.
Agree. Knowing and liking are almost redundant, with trust (often based on assumptions) at the top of the list.