• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content

Marketing Advisor, Mentor, & Educator

Kevin C. Whelan

Subscribe
  • About
  • Services
    • 1:1 Mentoring
    • Pick My Brain
    • Consulting
  • Products
    • Membership
    • Advisor OS
  • Resources
    • Mailing List
    • Letters
    • YouTube
    • Podcast
    • Manifesto

All Audiences

January 9, 2021

What to do when your consulting work dries up

I was speaking with someone recently who has been a marketing consultant for a few years but has seen their advisory work drop off recently.

When you lose most of your clients, you definitely begin to panic.

After all, it’s not a quick and easy process to get advisory clients. You need to be marketing yourself continually to keep opportunities available for when you need them.

So what do you do when your advisory work dries up?

To me, this is an opportunity to do a few things.

1. Go back to your core skills

Being a marketing advisor or fractional CMO requires knowledge of a wide range of marketing strategies and tactics.

Most marketing consultants (all) are somewhat T-Shaped. We are deep experts in one or two areas and have a wide range of knowledge on the rest.

When the opportunities are not around, it might be time to go back to the things you do best and cut the rest, focusing the what you offer so that you are clear about where you add the most value.

This will help reframe you as the ideal candidate for someone who needs exactly what you offer.

2. Start doing implementation work

If I lost all my clients tomorrow and noticed I was having difficulty getting new ones, I’d probably go back to making websites and build back up from there.

It’s a lot easier to sell implementation than it is to sell advisory work. Rebuild from your core skills, do the implementation work people need, then layer in advisory options in your proposals until people start to buy them again.

For me, I went from doing freelancing, to running an agency, to a “fractional CMO” role with a project management piece, to eventually pure advisory work.

Getting back into implementation work can be the quickest way to get your business going again.

Keep offering advisory work as well until people start buying it again.

3. Use your implementation skills as a sub-contractor

The most important thing you can do if you’re not earning enough money is to find some kind of work.

You have a responsibility to yourself and your family to keep getting paid—otherwise you’ll find yourself in a job quicker than you can say “CLIENT”.

When I was just starting out on my own, I did a lot of sub-contractor work for other agencies. Design agencies, IT companies,  digital marketing agencies all needed things like web development and content marketing to fill their gaps. I had those skills and more.

Sub-contracting is not a place you want to live forever. But if you have no other choice, one or two agency relationships can bring a bunch of client work if you stick to the things you do best.

4. Consider broadening your positioning

Another thing you can do, which is not what I would normally recommend, is go back to a more generalist positioning.

If you’re doing implementation work, and you focus on your narrow area of specialty (i.e. design or SEO), you’re bound to run into people who need a talented individual at that thing.

This is called horizontal positioning. It means you’re not focused as much on who you serve but what you offer. Keep it broad and/or mention several industries of expertise.

This isn’t a long term strategy, but sometimes you need to broaden yourself to make yourself more appealing to your general network, then build a tighter positioning on the side again.

But definitely build that tighter positioning on the side ASAP so you can get back to running a proper advisory business,

5. Ramp up content marketing efforts

I’ve succeeded primarily through content marketing.

It’s why I blog daily and will continue to put out as much content as I can. If things aren’t working, try ramping up your blog and social media presence.

Broaden your surface area.

You may also want to start a podcast and invite your ideal target market onto it as a guest. I know a few people doing this and they seem to rave about how effective it is.

It helps to have a niche, though.

6. Talk to people 

The next and final step I’d recommend is to simply talk to people in your network and let them know you’re looking to take on X type of implementation work or even do sub-contracting if they wanted to mark up your time.

If you have relationships, this can go a long way towards getting money in the door to let you build your advisory practice back up in a niche where you can be effective.

I’d also talk to people in your ideal target market. See what they are working on, add value for free if you can, and be first to come to mind when work becomes available.

In closing 

If your consulting work dries up and isn’t showing signs of improvement, go back a few steps in the ladder and build things back up the way you did the first time. Try some of the ideas I mentioned, too.

Usually, if you’re not selling advisory work, it means there is an awareness, positioning, or trust problem.

Go back to the basics, do whatever work you can to stay in the game, and rebuild your business again from scratch, tightening your focus as you go.

 

P.S. If you’re a marketing professional and need help with your consulting or freelance business, definitely join Mindshare, a private podcast and community with resources that will help you do great work for better clients.

January 8, 2021

The tricky part of calculating customer lifetime value

The only way to know the ROI of your marketing is to know two things: customer acquisition cost and lifetime value.

Your acquisition costs are relatively easy to determine. It’s ultimately the total amount spent on marketing divided by the number of new customers you signed up.

Where it gets tricky is the lifetime value.

As a marketing consultant, you need to know this stuff for your clients. So let’s let into it.

There are several ways to calculate lifetime value. It varies depending on whether you have a recurring revenue business, sporadic repeat purchases, one-time purchases, or several other factors.

Your goal is to create a fair estimate at the total amount your clients or customers will net your company over the lifetime of their relationship with your business.

That is your lifetime value.

But most people stop the calculation at the expected lifetime revenue or profit of that new customer. They don’t account for referrals. 

Referrals are a funny thing. One customer may refer you to two people over the lifetime of their relationship with you.

And then one of those two people may refer you to two more people over the lifetime of your relationship with them.

You get the picture.

Suddenly, the lifetime value is not anything near the original revenue- and profit-based models.

Each client has their own lifetime value, and the initial referrer has a much higher one.

The real question is, should you calculate those into your lifetime value calculations?

Maybe, but I’d rather not put it into any spreadsheet or budget calculations, personally.

I’d rather aim for a positive return on investment scenario even if nobody ever refers anybody.

Why? Because then it gives buffer if things go wrong or you miscalculate. 

Referrals are an extremely valuable and important source of new customers, regardless of who you are.

You should absolutely know how many of your new clients come from referrals, and if it’s a lot, you might justify adjusting your customer lifetime value accordingly.

But for the most part, I like to plan ROI scenarios conservatively and treat referrals as a bonus.

That might just be

January 7, 2021

How to create stuff people want to buy

The more marketing you do, the bigger your surface area becomes, and the more people will likely find you.

But there’s another half to the equation that is equally important. And that’s selling something people actually want.

It doesn’t matter how broad your surface area is, if what you’re offering isn’t compelling to the people who discover you, you don’t have a business.

And while positioning is very important, it takes more than good positioning to attract clients and customers.

You need to also have a compelling product or service. 

Luckily, there’s a straightforward approach to creating products and services people want to buy.

Here’s how it works, in very specific order:

  1. Get clear on who you want to serve
  2. Learn everything you can about them
  3. Create solutions to their problems
  4. Evolve your offerings and/or adjust your target market (if needed) based on what works best

A lot of people skip to the part where they create solutions and then look for people who have problems they can solve.

That’s a recipe for failure, and yet it’s our first instincts as entrepreneurs.

As Seth Godin says, and I’m paraphrasing, ‘don’t make a key then look for a lock that fits’.

Pick your ideal target marketing, get to know them extremely well, create solutions they want or ask for, and then iterate forever in a continuous loop. 

That’s what customer centric means.

January 6, 2021

Own it and move on

There will come times when things won’t go your way.

Your work won’t land or you won’t get the results you intended.

The best thing to do is take responsibility, own the outcome, seek to make it right if you can, then move on when it’s time.

Leadership isn’t about always winning. It isn’t about always being right, either.

It’s about making choices and owning the consequences. Even when you feel like it’s not your fault, it’s still your responsibility. That’s the role leaders play.

Sometimes, it’s about accepting a defeat and moving on.

Own your losses and move on.

January 5, 2021

Be oddly specific

I was looking for a camera lens the other day for my Zoom calls and webinars. Something to up my video game a bit.

After all, I get paid to talk on Zoom all day—I might as well make it the highest possible quality!

So, I took my search to YouTube to investigate the best lens for this situation.

The videos were endless. But the ones I was constantly drawn to were oddly specific about the use case (Zoom calls), the hook/core topic (i.e comparison), and the technology they were highlighting.

For context, my camera is a Sony a6400. I wanted either a Sigma 30mm lens or a zoom lens, like a Sigma 24-70mm.

None of these are affiliate links, btw. 😉

The ones that drew me in had titles like, “The best Zoom setup for your home office”, “My HIGH QUALITY Live Stream Setup!!”, “Sigma 30mm 1.4 lens review”, etc.

The videos were circling around my specific area of interest. But nothing was as exact as I was looking for.

Then I found one: “How to get the absolute best telework setup – Elgato Camlink 4k + Sony A7R4 + Sigma 30mm“.

Now, I have a different camera but it’s the same brand and not too dissimilar.

I also have an Elgato Camlink 4k (lets you plug in your DSLR camera to your computer) and I have been thinking about purchasing the 30mm Sigma lens for some time.

The point is, the title was almost written for my exact question. It was oddly specific around what I was looking for.

And that’s how you want to position your services. Especially if you’re able to serve a global audience.

The world is full of options that look the same.

At the same time, the Internet has brought all of those options to the forefront, making it harder and harder to stand out.

The good news is, you get to be oddly specific, too.

The best things for sale are the ones that fit like a glove. If we can’t find it, we will settle for less-than-ideal.

But we always want the thing that feels like it was made precisely for us.

Marketing consultants are everywhere. Be oddly specific what what you do and/or who you do it for. Everything gets easier when you do.

The hardest part is taking the leap and trying it out.

January 4, 2021

What happens when you aren’t charging enough

My last accountant charged way too little.

She charged a fixed fee, but my business was growing quickly so I outgrew it within a few months.

As my workload grew, her price remained the same. But she didn’t address it by asking for more. It eventually became a problem.

After a while, it took longer and longer to get responses from her. My books were taking longer to be reconciled and the quality of her work went way down.

I could tell I became a “second class citizen” in her client world. I even offered to pay more a few times, of which she accepted once.

There’s a lesson here.

By not charging your clients enough to do the work AND make a profit, you’ll eventually run into a few scenarios—none of which are good.

  1. You’ll get better clients and make them the priority
  2. You’ll stop doing good work for your lower-priced clients
  3. You’ll start de-prioritizing their work
  4. You’ll start to resent them
  5. They’ll start to notice
  6. They’ll start to resent you
  7. They’ll replace you with someone who makes them a priority
  8. They’ll never work with you again
  9. They’ll tell people about their negative experience

I’m not looking for low-cost suppliers in my business. Most businesses aren’t.

Instead, I want professional-quality work from people who charge enough to make time for me and do good work.

It might be tempting to keep old clients around who are paying old rates because they represent “safe” and “predictable” revenue. But what ends up happening is they become after-thoughts when you get better clients.

You’ll get busy to make up for lost revenue potential, and with that, your relationship will eventually deteriorate along with the quality of your services.

Some people want the cheapest rate possible. Don’t work with people like that.

Instead, charge a rate that gets you excited and then do good work for them!

Don’t justify poor-quality service because you’re not charging enough. That’s on you to fix.

Either charge enough to get you excited to work with them, or refer them to someone who can do the job instead.

December 31, 2020

How to make any marketing piece more effective

No matter what piece of marketing you’re creating, you always want to keep two things front and centre in your mind:

  1. Who exactly am I making this for?
  2. What exactly do I want them to do?

It could be your home page, a blog post, an ad, newsletter, or anything else.

Knowing the answers to these two questions instantly improve the effectiveness of whatever you do. Clarity on these answers is key.

No vague generalities or you’ll get weak results. Be specific.

And by the way, happy New Year! May we put 2020 swiftly behind us.

December 30, 2020

The tendency to overcomplicate

When you can do a lot of things, your tendency is… to do a lot of things.

But in so many cases, doing a few things well is better than doing many things poorly.

Complexity leads to breakdown, stress, and resource depletion. Simplification leads to focus and results.

This principle applies almost anywhere else you look. But I see it most often in people’s marketing strategies.

It starts small. But eventually, there becomes too much noise and activity.

You begin to lose focus. Everyone is exhausted. Things stop working.

So what do you do if you find complexity creeping into you or your clients’ marketing program?

Evaluate it from an 80/20 perspective.

There’s always something that is bringing 80% of the results for 20% of the effort. Do more of that if it aligns with your goals.

On the flip side, there’s always something causing 80% of the headaches making up 20% of your time, energy, or resources. Stop those things immediately, even if it hurts.

When you find complexity creeping in, and it always does, look for the 80/20.

And then as Stephen King says, kill your darlings.

December 28, 2020

Reflecting and planning for the new year

Every year around this time, I reflect on the last twelve months to determine what worked and what didn’t.

This year is no different, but I’m also looking at it from new perspectives.

At a high level, I’m reflecting on things like:

  • where most of my revenue came from
  • where and how I spent money (and if it was spent wisely)
  • which projects I enjoyed working on vs. ones I didn’t
  • what my wins and lessons were for the year
  • what kind of work gave me energy vs. depleted it
  • what made me feel good vs. what made me feel bad

Ultimately, I’m looking for ways to make my business better.

So what does a “better business” look like?

For me, it looks like continuing to focus on higher-income activities, more leveraged products and services, more energy-producing work, and generally seeking to enjoy most of the work I choose to do.

If it were up to me, I would do mostly mentoring and teaching. And yet, those things are the least “profitable” to me right now.

Nonetheless, I’m seeing signs of life with Mindshare and I enjoy it a lot, so I plan to follow that.

But I also have to make sure I’m in a good financial position, which means analyzing the best business opportunities while balancing the more subjective targets.

My plan for the new year

My plan for the new year is to continue focusing on the few clients who bring in the most money (multi-location coworking spaces), give me the most energy (mentoring work), all while doing work that aligns with what I want for my future.

Each part is important, but the last part is probably the smartest area to focus on.

We get so caught up in the days, weeks, and months that we forget to look five to ten years down the line to make sure we’re aiming in the right direction.

I also want to spend more time tinkering. One of my early mentors was a big tinkerer and he still runs a highly profitable consulting business around his free time.

I’m a big believer that tinkering and learning is good for business—especially one dependent on your expertise.

Too many people neglect that part, I think. And that’s what makes this year’s takeaways a bit different than most.

So that’s my thought process. It’s a blend of rational and qualitative. Just like real life.

What’s your year in review looking like? Hit me up on Twitter.

December 25, 2020

The trick to daily blogging

I used to go running first thing every morning.

I’d get up early, put on my running shoes and appropriate clothing, and get running. I’d be on the road before my brain even realized what was happening.

No matter what happened, I ran. I ran through rain, shine, show, ice and everything in between. Usually in the dark.

I did that for the better part of 6 months without skipping a day. I look back at photos from that time and I was noticeably leaner than other periods before or after.

The results were showing. Consistency was working for me.

The trick to running daily was to do without thinking too much about it. I would just put on the clothes and run for at least 20 minutes. That was the rule.

And because I did it every day, I didn’t have to think about it. I just did it.

I now see similarities with daily writing. It’s Christmas Day, and I’m writing this letter to you because that’s what I’ve committed to do. I don’t have to think about it.

This is day 48 of my streak. It works because I don’t overthink it, I just write and publish. The results will follow. I know it.

If you want to write daily, the trick is simple: don’t overthink it.

Keep it simple, keep showing up, do it no matter what (even on Christmas) and see what happens. You can’t help but create opportunities and if nothing else, it’s a fun challenge.

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 16
  • Go to page 17
  • Go to page 18
  • Go to page 19
  • Go to page 20
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 22
  • Go to Next Page »

More:  Consulting · Podcast · Twitter · Contact

Member Login

Please don’t reproduce anything on this website without permission.

Copyright © 2025 · Kevin C. Whelan · All prices in USD.