How To Make Sure Your Boosted Facebook Posts Actually Reach Your Dream Customers

Recently, I came across a post in a Facebook group for Boss Moms (because yes, I am a Boss Mom too).

She was asking about boosting Facebook posts on her business page, which is something I’ve been doing recently, so it caught my attention.

She said:

“So I decided to Boost a post on my FB page to try it out. I paid $2, got 60 likes. As I was going through them to invite to my page, I noticed most of them were very similar names and 4 the same last name. All looked to be foreign names (nothing wrong with that but I can’t imagine so many Russian last names when I am targeting the Deep South). Does this sound odd to any of you?”

Many people told her that boosting posts is a waste of time and money, and she should just do ads.

I agree that Facebook ads are good, and often are the right solution.

But, boosting posts can also be an effective strategy, if you do it right, and make sure that you’re targeting the right audience.

If you just click that blue “Boost Post” button and tell Facebook to GO, you’re missing a big important step of reaching your target audience with that Facebook boost, and you’re probably not reaching the right people with your message.

Traffic is the act of putting your offer or message in front of your target audience.

This is a quote from the Digital Marketer Paid Traffic Mastery course I completed recently, where I became a Certified Customer Acquisition Specialist.

But, I’ve also been getting a lot of hands-on experience recently with this concept by boosting my own Facebook posts, as well for a client I’m working with to build her new private yoga client business.

There are two parts to creating traffic for your page:

  1. Your Offer or Message: What you actually are saying to your audience (which I believe should be a combination of Edu-tainment, Customer Success Stories, and Offer Content).
  2. Your Target Audience: The people you’re actually trying to reach.

You need both pieces, otherwise you’re not going to get the traffic you need to grow your business with your content.

So, how do you figure out who your target audience is, and how do you create that audience in Facebook, so you’re boosting your posts to the right people?

5 Steps To Help You Actually Reach Your Dream Customers With Your Facebook Boosts

  1. Dream About Your Dream Customer
  2. Set Up Facebook Business Manager
  3. Create A Saved Audience
  4. Boost A Post To Your New Saved Audience
  5. Test It Out & Adjust As Necessary

Step 1: Dream About Your Dream Customer

Before you can dig into Facebook and create that audience, first you need to do some dreaming.

via Gfycat

Honestly, this is the fun part. Do some dreaming, some brainstorming about who you want to work with.

Who do you want to serve?

Who do you want to help?

Get as specific with this as you can. It will help you later, I promise!

You can even name this person, if you’d like, and draw or find a picture of what you think your dream customer would look like.

It will help you to really visualize who you’re talking to when you’re creating content, and targeting your audience.

I’ve created a free worksheet to help you with this process. You can download it, fill it out, and then print it and post it up so you know who you’re trying to reach when you’re creating your Facebook audience later.

It can also help you when you’re creating content to share with your audience that they’ll appreciate. It may even help as you’re creating (or updating) your products or services for your customers.

Here’s what you should ask yourself about when you’re visualizing your dream customer:

Demographics:

  • Age
  • Gender
  • Marital Status
  • Number/Age of Children
  • Location
  • Occupation
  • Job Title
  • Annual Income
  • Level of Education
  • Any other details to note

Bonus: Write down a quote that you think your dream customer would say (or if you have a dream customer already, something that they’ve said to you before that sums up who this person is and what they need from you).

Goals & Values

  • What are your dream customer’s goals?
  • What are their values?

Sources of Information

  • What kind of books does your dream customer read?
  • Magazines or publications they read?
  • Blogs or websites they read or follow?
  • Organizations they belong to or conferences they attend?
  • Tools or resources they use?
  • Gurus they follow?
  • Other?

Get specific with this section.

List actual books, magazines, blogs, etc. that you think your dream customer would read.

Don’t know? Then Google it.

Look on Amazon for the top rated books in your niche.

Search Google for top blogs in your industry.

Try to get as specific as you can with this section — I promise it will help you when you’re creating your audience later!

Challenges & Pain Points

  • What are your dream customer’s challenges right now?
  • What are their pain points?

If you don’t know, then start asking.

If you already have customers, ask them what their challenges are right now.

If you don’t have customers, then talk to people who could be customers of yours.

Start having conversations with potential clients and ask them what their challenges are and where they need help.

Join Facebook groups that your target audience would be a part of and start reading and commenting on people’s posts.

Google your target audience and see if you can find forums, LinkedIn groups, or just discussions online where people are asking questions about the kinds of things you’re trying to help with, and see what they’re saying.

Another useful tool for this research is the website Answer The Public. You can type in a search term, like “yoga,” for example, and see all the different things that people search for on Google with that term in it.

All the questions people Google with the word “yoga” in the search term. Click image to enlarge.
Source: https://answerthepublic.com/

Objections & Role In Purchase Process

  • Objections to the sale
  • Role in the purchase process

If you’ve had customers (or potential customers) before, then what have they said to you in the past about why they won’t buy?

If you haven’t, then what do you think an objection would be? Again, if you can actually start talking to real people, this helps a lot.

And, are they the decision-maker for making this purchase, or do you think they’d have to include someone else in their decision-making process (even a spouse or partner)?

Take some time to go through each of these questions.

Download the free worksheet I created to help you start visualizing your dream customer before you move on to the next step.

Step 2: Set Up Facebook Business Manager

Okay, now we’re moving out of dream land, and down into the technical details.

via Gfycat

First, you have to make sure that you have Facebook Business Manager set up for your Facebook Business Page.

And, even before that, you have to have a Facebook Business Page (not just your personal Facebook profile).

If your business is just getting started, and you don’t have a Business Page set up yet, you can follow these easy instructions from Facebook to get your Page set up:

How To Set Up A Facebook Page

Or, just start going through the Create A Page process on Facebook.

https://www.facebook.com/pages/creation/

Once your Page is created, or if you already have a Facebook Page, next you’ll need to set up Business Manager.

Facebook also has easy to follow instructions to do that:

How Do I Sign Up For Business Manager?

Business Manager is just the back-end tool that you use to manage your Facebook Business Page, any ads you have going, and what you need to create an audience to target when you’re boosting posts.

If you’re planning on doing any kind of Facebook advertising or boosting of posts on your Page at all, it’s a good idea to get Business Manager set up for your Page.

To access your Business Manager account later, go to https://business.facebook.com.

If you happen to have multiple Facebook Pages (for multiple businesses, etc.), you can access each of them through Business Manager.

Once you log in to Business Manager, you’ll see each of your Pages that you have access to listed, and you can just choose the one that you want to go to.

Step 3: Create A Saved Audience

Now that you have your Business Manager account set up, it’s time to dig in and create that audience!

Go to https://business.facebook.com, and log in to your Business Manager account.

In the top left corner of the screen, click the menu bar that says “Business Manager.”

Then, under the “Assets” column, click “Audiences.”

In the Business Manager Menu, select “Audiences.”

Once you’re in the Audiences screen, click the blue Create Audience button and then Saved Audience.

Then, you’ll get to the screen where you can actually create your Saved Audience, which looks like this:

Let’s go through each section…

Audience Name

You can name your audience whatever you would like, but you may want to create a couple different audiences to test out, using different qualifiers and targeting.

So, you may actually want to save the audience naming until after you’ve done the rest of the targeting, so you know how to name the audience (based on who you’re actually targeting).

Custom Audiences

For now, don’t worry about this section.

Custom Audiences are a different kind of audience, and not something you need to deal with right away.

They’re based on things like the people who have visited your website or a particular blog post on your website, or people who have engaged with you on your Facebook Page. You can even create an audience on Facebook from your existing email list too.

One side note about Custom Audiences …

If you’d ever like to retarget people that have been to your website before (aka, show an ad or boosted post to someone who’s shown an interest in you before), then you’ll need to make sure you set up a Facebook Pixel on your website.

Here’s a quick tutorial on how to set up your Facebook Pixel.

But, for now, don’t worry about it.

Put that on your to do list for later, if it’s something you’re interested in (or, if you’d like some help getting all of this set up, let me know — I can help!).

Locations

If your business is local, like you’re a yoga studio or teacher that only teaches in a particular area, or your a chiropractor’s office, etc., then you’ll want to make sure you set your location to your local area.

If you are an online business or can reach a larger audience, you still may want to set at least countries that you’d like to serve (or that at least speak the same language as you!).

When I’m doing my Facebook ads and boosts, I often set my location to United States, Canada, and United Kingdom.

But, if you’re more local, you can also include your business address (or just the city you’re in), and then you can change the radius from that point (10 miles, 25 miles, etc.).

One other note about locations.

There’s a drop down menu at the top of the section that defaults to “People who live in this location.”

Most likely, that’s the option you want, especially if you have a local business.

The other options are:

  • Everyone in this location
  • People recently in this location
  • People traveling in this location

If you want to include people who are traveling in your location, you may want to select one of those options.

Age, Gender, Languages

Usually, I leave all of these options just as they are in the defaults (18-65+, all genders, and leave languages empty).

If you are targeting a specific age group or gender, you may want to change those.

Detailed Targeting

This is the part where it starts to get interesting.

This is how you narrow your audience down by their interests, their employer, their job title, behaviors, school they went to, and SO many other things!

Go back to your Dream Customer worksheet that you completed in Step 1.

What are they interested in?

What do they do?

Where do they work?

What’s there job title?

What books (or authors) do they read? (Yes, you can even type authors in here!)

What tools or resources do they use?

Start typing things in to that Detailed Targeting box and see what comes up.

Not everything you type in there will be an option in Facebook, but many things will, so start trying things out and see what you come up with.

You may want to create a few different audiences that just include some of the features of your dream customer (rather than throw every single descriptor you could ever think of to describe your audience in here).

For example, I have a few different audiences that I’ve been trying out to reach my own dream customers.

I’m trying to reach yoga studio/business owners with my content, so I created an audience that includes all of the different types of yoga, as interests, that I could find in the detailed targeting listing (i.e. Yin Yoga, Bikram Yoga, Hatha Yoga, etc.) in the main Detailed Targeting section.

But, then, in order to try to reach business owners, and not just everyone in the world who is interested in some type of yoga, I click the link at the bottom that says, “Narrow Audience”.

Once you click that button, then you have another box where you can type in more interests.

This is narrowing your audience — the people in your audience must match at least one of the interests from the first box AND they must also match at least one of the interests from the second box.

So, you want these things to be different — for example, I broadly targeted everyone interested in yoga, but then narrowed down to business owners, yoga teachers, yoga teacher training, etc.

This helps you focus your audience down to people who may actually fit your particular criteria for your dream customer.

Use your Dream Customer worksheet.

Who are you trying to reach?

How could your narrow your audience down further to really reach the people you want to talk to?

Once you have a couple interests typed in, you can also use the “Suggestions” button to help you find interests similar to what you have typed in already, which may give you some good ideas that you hadn’t thought of before.

As you’re creating your audience, Facebook will estimate the size of your reach in the top right of the Create Audience screen.

If you have a local business, your audience size will be largely dependent on the location you are targeting, and you may only want to include a few interests in your detailed targeting, because mostly you are just targeting the people in your local area.

But, if your business is online, and the location doesn’t matter, ideally your audience size should be between 500,000 to 3 million people.

That size will give you the best results and reach for your ads.

So, if you’re creating an audience and it starts to get too large, break up the interests into a couple different categories and create a couple different audiences from them.

You can always run ads or boost posts to several different audiences to test them out and then see which one performs the best.

Connections

I don’t usually use this section at all, but it could be something to look into, especially if you already have a large following on your Facebook Page.

You can tell Facebook to either include (or exclude) people who like your Page, or friends of people who like your page, responded to your event on your Page, etc.

Depending on who you are trying to reach with your boosted posts or ads, you may test out this feature as well.

Remember, you can create and test out as many different audiences as you’d like.

There’s no limitation on the number of audiences you can create.

Just make sure to name them with a good description, so you can keep track of them, and then test them out and see what happens!

If you need help setting up these audiences, or creating the strategy behind creating them, let me know — I’d love to talk!

Step 4: Boost A Post To Your New Saved Audience

Once you have your audience created and saved, it will always be there when you go to boost a post from your Page!

When you have a post that you’d like to boost, go to your Page and click the blue “Boost Post” button under that particular post.

It will bring up this screen:

Let’s go through each section.

Objective/Post Button

The first thing you have to think about is what your Objective is for this boost.

Depending on the kind of post, you may have different options for your Objective in a boost.

The default for this one is “Engagement,” which means I want people to like, comment, and share my post.

If you have a link to your website or a blog in your post, then you may have an option to get clicks to your link.

Or, one other option is to get Messages, which means having people send you a message (through Facebook Messenger) who see the post.

So, choose your objective.

Then, you can include a button on your post, like “Send Message” or “Learn More,” if you would like.

Audience

Then, you get to the Audience section.

As you can see, the default for my post is to just boost to everyone in the United States, California, that’s 18-65+.

But, that is not my target audience.

So, I’m going to want to scroll down and choose which audience I want to boost this post to.

There are some standard audiences that Facebook includes for you, like People who like your Page, People who like your Page and their friends (this is a good one if you have a lot of people who like your Page already), and People in your local area.

But, if you keep scrolling (or you may need to click “See All”), you’ll be able to see your Saved Audience(s) that you created in your Business Manager in Step 3.

Select the audience that you want to boost your post to.

One other thing you can change is the Placements.

By default, Facebook selects “Automatic Placements” (which they recommend leaving on).

If you turn it off, you can choose where you want your post to show up — Facebook, Messenger, or Instagram.

If you don’t want it shown on Instagram or Messenger, you can unselect those options.

Budget and Duration

To start out, I would suggest boosting your post to your selected audience for $7 for 7 days ($1 per day).

This gives you a chance to test out your new audience for a pretty low investment and see how it performs.

If you’ve created a couple different audiences, you could boost the same post to both audiences (each for $7 for 7 days) and that would test out the audiences and you could see which one performs better.

Tracking Conversions

If you have your Facebook Pixel set up for your website (you should!), then make sure this is turned on and the correct Pixel is selected to use for tracking.

Payment

Make sure you have the correct Ad Account/payment method selected.

If you happen to have multiple Ad Accounts for different businesses (or, like me, you are included on Ad Accounts for your clients), just make sure you have the correct one selected before you boost your post.

After that, just hit that big blue Boost button, and you’re off!

Step 5: Test It Out & Adjust As Necessary

You can see some basic information about your posts and boosted posts right from your Facebook Page.

When you’re on your Page, click the Insights button on the top bar, then click Posts in the left sidebar.

You’ll be able to see a list of all of your posts, along with the Reach (how many people saw your post) and Engagement (how many people liked, commented, shared your post).

This may be enough information initially to test out different posts and audiences and just see how they do.

If you’d like to get more detailed about the performance of your boosts and your audiences you’ll need to log back into Business Manager and go to your Ads Manager.

Ads Manager has a lot of information and can be overwhelming, especially if you don’t know what you’re looking for.

But, a few things to take a look at include:

  • Cost Per Result: You want this number to be as low as possible, especially if the result you are going for is link clicks — under $0.50 per click is great!
  • CTR (Link Click-Through): This is your link click-through rate. You want this to be a high percentage, above 1% is good, but the higher the better.
  • Relevance Score: This is a number from 1 to 10, and you want it to be as close to 10 as possible, but 7 or higher is good. You won’t get a Relevance Score until you’ve had at least 500 impressions on your ad, so it may take a while to get a Relevance Score, depending on your audience size and your budget. But, this is a good number for testing the quality of your audience — it tells you how relevant the audience you’re advertising to thinks the content you’re sharing is to them. So, it can tell you if you’re advertising to the right audience or not.

Feel free to test out different audiences, different post boosting, and see how things go.

Check out this post with 33 examples of the different kinds of content you can share (and boost!) to your audience.

Recap

You CAN start reaching your dream customers, even with boosted posts on your Facebook Page!

You just need to make sure you set up your audiences in Facebook, and don’t just use the defaults when you boost your posts.

There are five steps to do this:

  1. Dream About Your Dream Customer: Who are you trying to reach? Write it down. Use my free Dream Customer worksheet to help you figure it out.
  2. Set Up Facebook Business Manager: Create your Facebook Page and get Business Manager set up (if you haven’t already).
  3. Create A Saved Audience: Go through the steps I listed above to create your Saved Audience (or more than one, if you want to test out different options). Use the details you included in your Dream Customer worksheet to help you with the detailed targeting.
  4. Boost A Post To Your New Saved Audience: Go back to your Facebook Page, share content, and choose a post to boost. Make sure you select that Saved Audience you created, rather than the defaults that Facebook chooses for you.
  5. Test It Out & Adjust As Necessary: Let your boosted post run for 7 days ($1/day) and see what happens. What kind of reach and engagement did you get? If you want to get more detailed, check out Ads Manager (within Business Manager) and look at your Cost Per Result, CTR, and Relevance Score.

Need Help?

If this all still seems like too much for you, or if you’d rather focus on the parts of your business that you love and let someone else handle Facebook for you, then I can help!

I love getting into all the nitty-gritty detail of Facebook audiences, posts, boosts, and ads, and I would love to help you bring in more of your dream customers through your Facebook content and boosts!

I help health and wellness businesses consistently bring in new clients every month using Omnipresence Content Marketing.

Let’s schedule a call to talk about your business and the challenges you’re facing right now.

If you would like your business to become Omnipresent to your dream customers, let’s schedule a call today.

Ask the Experts: How These 7 Wellness Business Owners Consistently Bring In New Clients

If you’re the owner of a yoga or fitness studio, a chiropractor’s office, holistic healing practice, or another wellness business, you’re probably well aware of the constant struggle to find and bring in new clients.

New clients are the life-force behind your business.

But, finding those new clients can be difficult.

I asked seven top yoga and wellness business owners what they do to consistently bring in new clients.

Here’s what they had to say.

Christine Burke, Liberation Yoga

Christine Burke (Source: www.liberationyoga.com)
(Source: www.liberationyoga.com)

Christine Burke is the co-owner/director of Liberation Yoga in Los Angeles, which was named one of the top 25 yoga studios in Travel + Leisure.

“Our greatest experiment in finding just the right students, who will really benefit from what we have to offer, has always been good old fashioned word of mouth,” Christine said.

She continued, “We have thrived for 14 years by offering an authentic and joyful yoga experience and encouraging our community to share the powerful healing benefits of yoga and the sacred oasis of Liberation, with those they care about.”

Finding your dream customers, providing amazing service to them, and then having those customers share your business with people they know — people who are probably very similar to them — is how many businesses in the yoga and wellness space get new clients.

Providing outstanding service to your existing clients is the first way to encourage that word-of-mouth marketing.

If your clients love you and the service you provide to them, they won’t be able to help but tell their friends about you, and word will spread.

You can also encourage customers to review your business on your website, Facebook, Google, Yelp, and other platforms.

Many people rely on reviews to choose the businesses that they frequent, and if someone sees that a friend of theirs likes your business Facebook page, or has left a positive review for you, that will encourage them to check out your business.

Another way to use the power of word-of-mouth marketing, without relying on your customers actually sharing your business with their friends is to use Facebook post boosting to the people who like your page, plus their friends.

Seema Sondhi, The Yoga Studio

Seema Sondhi (Source: www.theyogastudio.info)
(Source: www.theyogastudio.info)

Seema Sondhi’s The Yoga Studio in New Delhi, India, was also named one of the top 25 yoga studios around the world by Travel + Leisure — the only studio on the list from India, the birthplace of yoga.

“I have always let my students talk about my classes. The students that I get are usually by word of mouth. And also through my website,” said Seema.

A business’s website is an important piece of the puzzle. If your dream clients can’t find you online, they may not find you at all.

When is the last time your wellness business website has been updated?

Do you post new content there regularly to show your potential clients who you are and what you do?

One way to consistently provide new content to your audience is through a blog on your website.

Seema also said, “I have been teaching for almost 20 years and I can say that be true to the subject and knowledge of yoga [is what brings new clients in consistently].”

Being true to yoga.

Being true to the service you provide. Helping first. Provide value. Be service-oriented.

Having a passion for the service, the offering, that you are providing to your clients is an important piece of the puzzle.

It shows. People can tell if you love what you’re doing.

Seema continued, “I have always tried to make the classes interesting and challenging for the students, yet keeping the essence of yoga. I try and not make the practise monotonous, incorporating and always trying to build their interest in the practise to the point that I make them independent so that they can have their own self practise.”

Think about what your clients need, what they are looking for, and provide that to them.

Seema believes that when a student signs up for her classes, she has a few months to teach that student the basics of yoga so they can continue their own self-practice without her.

She’s trying to give her students the foundations they’ll need to continue on even without her.

She’s learned what her students are looking for, so that’s what she provides.

Tim Feldman, Miami Life Center

Tim Feldman (Source: miamilifecenter.com/)
(Source: miamilifecenter.com/)

Miami Life Center was another yoga studio listed on the Travel + Leisure top 25 in the world.

Tim Feldman and Kino MacGregor founded the center in 2006.

When asked what they do bring new clients in, Tim said, “[Provide] quality of service.”

He continued:

“In this case, having yoga knowledgeable and educated teachers who are thoroughly steeped in the tradition of both yoga asana and the underlying philosophy. Our teachers walk the walk. In this way any new student is met with kindness and taught with a solid understanding and wholesome approach to physical, mental and emotional well-being.”

Miami Life Center is committed to its practice, its philosophy, and tradition of yoga.

But, they also make sure that new students are met with kindness and knowledge from the very beginning, starting at the front desk.

“We see it as cardinal that the yoga journey starts at first contact when a new student walks in,” Tim said.

“That means that our front desk staff practice yoga daily too, that they themselves are students who have found benefit and trust in the yoga method and therefore are able to enthusiastically and accurately describe and guide any person into a class right for her/him, offer advice, and help with whatever questions might be present for the new practitioner.”

A wholehearted commitment to the experience that your students or your clients get from you from beginning to end is critical to bringing in, and keeping, customers.

Kia Miller, Radiant Body Yoga

Kia Miller (Source: www.kiamiller.com/)
(Source: www.kiamiller.com/)

Named one of the 10 inspiring yoga teachers you should know on DoYouYoga, Kia Miller, said:

“Everywhere I go I share my deep love of yoga.”

Kia taught yoga at a studio, Yogaworks in LA, for 15 years, but now offers immersive trainings and retreats through her business Radiant Body Yoga.

She said she continues to get clients for her business by:

“Being authentic in all my communications. Creating personal connections with people.”

These are both critical pieces to reaching new clients. Be authentic. Be real. Provide real value.

And create personal connections — both in person, but you can also do this online.

Kia added, “I enjoy creating promotional materials both visually and content wise that reflect what I teach. I love reaching out to inspire people on social media.

Create amazing content that helps people.

Continue your messages that you teach in class or use to help people with your business in your communications online — on your website and your social media sites.

Help people in an authentic and personal way, in whatever method you are using to communicate.

Melissa Kleehammer, Beyond Center for Yoga

Melissa Kleehammer (Source: www.beyond2yoga.com)
(Source: www.beyond2yoga.com)

“Word-of-mouth hands down,” said Melissa Kleehammer, studio owner and certified instructor at Beyond Center for Yoga in New York.

She continued:

“When I put effort into my training and bringing more into my classes, my students notice and tell their friends.”

When you provide a valuable service that helps people, your clients will notice.

When they see the amazing things you’re doing for them, they can’t help but share your service with others — they want other people to experience the same things that they are and to get the benefits.

Melissa also said, “My close second is sending personal newsletters with a nice message, instead of just promoting events and classes.”

This is a great point as well — Serve First, Sell Later.

Sending email newsletters is the same — make sure that they are not just selling, or promoting your services.

If you are using an email newsletter to communicate with your customers, it should include valuable information that they can learn from and get something out of, not just a promotion.

Meagan Mae, Wellness Entrepreneurs United

Meagan Mae (Source: Meagan Mae)
(Source: Meagan Mae)

“Build community,” is how Meagan Mae, founder of Wellness Entrepreneurs United responded to the question of how she gets new clients.

She said, “As a career and small business coach for inspiring leaders, I build digital communities to bring people together around common interests.”

To build community for her business, Meagan uses Facebook Groups.

“Facebook Groups are a powerful tool to manage a community approach,” she said.

Meagan’s group, the Wellness Entrepreneurs United Facebook Group, has more than 1,000 wellness professionals collaborating to share wellness with the world together.

She said:

“The idea is to connect professionals together to help one another and give them the tools and resources they need to succeed through quality content, connection, and collaboration.”

Depending on the type of business you are running, a Facebook group may also be a good way for you to create community with your audience.

Bre Nourse, Yoga Teacher, Writer, Photographer

Bre Nourse (Source: www.brenourse.com)
(Source: www.brenourse.com)

“I have found the best way to bring clients in to my business is through responsiveness,” said Bre Nourse, who is a yoga teacher, writer, and photographer.

She said:

“For every email, DM, comment, subscriber, etc., I reach out immediately to personally communicate my gratitude for their message/comment. This practice has led me to a major growth in not only clients but in authentic community engagement.”

This is an amazing practice to get into and continue, even when your wellness business might grow beyond just you.

You or a team member in your business needs to respond to every message you get from a customer or potential customer.

People buy from people.

Your customers or clients want to see that you are a person, someone who can help them, someone who cares about them.

So, respond to their messages, see how you can help them, thank them for joining your email list or Facebook page.

Authentic community engagement can go a long way to grow any business, but especially a business that is trying to help people be well.

Key Takeaways

Bringing new clients in to your wellness business does not need to be difficult or take a lot of extra effort, as these seven wellness business owners showed in their responses.

Here are the six client-getting recommendations these experts recommended:

  • Word of Mouth: Be good to your existing clients. Give them an amazing, valuable service, and they won’t be able to help but talk to people about you.

    Of course, you can always encourage your customers to share, or even use my Omnipresence Content Marketing technique to help spread the word to the friends of your audience without them having to actually tell their friends.
  • Be Authentic and True: Especially in the wellness business world. Be authentic with your customers. Provide a great service that you believe in and that will shine through everything that you do.
  • Quality Content: A website (even better with regular blog posts), a social media presence, an email newsletter. Several owners mentioned their content as a way to bring in new clients, but providing quality, helpful, valuable content on these platforms is important. Serve first, sell later.
  • Share Your Knowledge & Passion: These business owners know the value of the service they provide is in their knowledge and passion they have for the service they’re providing. They make sure that their staff — even front desk staff — are educated and knowledgeable, so they can give their clients the very best service.

They are also passionate about what they do, and they share that passion and love wherever they go. That shines through their businesses and attracts clients.

  • Create Personal Connections & Be Responsive: I loved Bre’s response about being responsive to the people that get in touch with her about her business. Respond to questions and comments promptly. Engage in conversations. Make personal connections with your customers. This is good customer service, but also shows people that you are interested in working with them and can help them.
  • Build Community: In the yoga and wellness world, community is important. Build community through your social media sites, maybe with a Facebook group, or just on your business page. You can also do this in person with trainings and workshops, and then continue the conversation online with your community after the events. When you have a community, they can help each other, but you also have a built-in audience for your services.

What strategies do you use to bring new clients consistently into your wellness business?

Do you need help finding and attracting more of your dream customers to your wellness business?

I help health and wellness businesses consistently bring in new clients every month using Omnipresence Content Marketing, and I’d love to talk to you about how I can help you reach those dream customers.

Let’s schedule a call to talk about your business.

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