Are you an architect or design professional that's
Jon Clayton:struggling to attract enough of the right clients and projects?
Jon Clayton:Then stick around.
Jon Clayton:Because I'm joined by leading architects marketing coach Richard Petri, to explain
Jon Clayton:how you can build a marketing system that consistently attracts more of the right
Jon Clayton:clients to your practice in this episode.
Jon Clayton:Of Architecture Business Club, the weekly podcast for small firm
Jon Clayton:founders who want to build their dream business in architecture and
Jon Clayton:enjoy more freedom, flexibility, and fulfillment in what they do.
Jon Clayton:I'm John Clayton, your host.
Jon Clayton:Having spent over 20 years working in architecture, I know how hard it can
Jon Clayton:be to explain your services so people truly understand and value what you do.
Jon Clayton:Many firms struggle with this, but by sharing your stories on podcasts,
Jon Clayton:you can become the trusted voice in your market, grow your brand,
Jon Clayton:and attract much better clients.
Jon Clayton:We can help you with everything from podcast strategy and launch.
Jon Clayton:Production and management podcast hosting and guesting through to
Jon Clayton:promoting and growing your show.
Jon Clayton:If you'd like to discover how podcasting could benefit your business, click the
Jon Clayton:link in the show notes to book a no obligation chat about working with me.
Jon Clayton:Or if you're interested in being a guest on this show, email, John.
Jon Clayton:That's JO n@architecturebusinessclub.com.
Jon Clayton:Now let's learn how to build your marketing system.
Jon Clayton:Richard Petri is the world's foremost architect marketing coach
Jon Clayton:and the co-founder of the Architect Marketing Institute, a leading
Jon Clayton:provider of marketing, training and resources for small firm
Jon Clayton:architects and building designers.
Jon Clayton:Their mission is to enable motivated architects to find freedom and
Jon Clayton:fulfillment through exceptional projects and exceptional income.
Jon Clayton:Richard brings a high performance mindset to marketing for his architect clients
Jon Clayton:all around the world, and is joining us on this episode to share his expertise.
Jon Clayton:To find out more about the system that Richard uses, head
Jon Clayton:over to arch marketing.org.
Jon Clayton:Richard, welcome to Architecture Business
Richard Petrie:Oh, nice to be in the club.
Richard Petrie:Thank you for having me.
Jon Clayton:Oh, you're very welcome.
Jon Clayton:Yeah, it's, it's a pleasure to, to have you here from the
Jon Clayton:other side of the world as well.
Jon Clayton:I'm in the UK and you're over in New Zealand, and, uh, with the,
Jon Clayton:the wonders of modern technology, it's not a problem for us to meet
Richard Petrie:Not a problem.
Richard Petrie:The world is becoming a, a global marketplace.
Richard Petrie:We can do whatever we want whenever we want, can't we?
Richard Petrie:So it's about, I think it's about 8, 8 30 at night here, and it's
Richard Petrie:morning for you, so you know.
Richard Petrie:10 years ago, I remember I started doing this.
Richard Petrie:We were doing, um, webinars and things like that about fif 15 years ago I
Richard Petrie:started doing this type of thing.
Richard Petrie:And, uh, back then we had to explain what a webinar was.
Richard Petrie:We said, well, it's on the web and it's like a seminar, but just
Richard Petrie:click on the buttons and turn up and, and you know, you'll, you'll
Richard Petrie:see what it is when you get here.
Richard Petrie:And it was literally that when we started and now it's like.
Richard Petrie:Uh, it's commonplace, but 15 years ago we, we were doing it way back then
Richard Petrie:and uh, it was a little bit weird for most architects, that is some time.
Jon Clayton:Uh, absolutely.
Jon Clayton:Yeah.
Jon Clayton:I mean, uh, you were early adopters, I guess with a lot
Jon Clayton:of this stuff, so, um, yeah.
Jon Clayton:But now we're, we're using it all the time.
Jon Clayton:Richard, we, we've got some great stuff that we're gonna talk about today.
Jon Clayton:Before we dig into all that, I, something I do know about you, you, you were a
Jon Clayton:top level international cricket player.
Jon Clayton:Can you tell me a little bit about that?
Jon Clayton:I'd like to hear a little bit about that
Richard Petrie:Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Richard Petrie:Well, I played, I played professional cricket in New Zealand for 12
Richard Petrie:years and I played 12 one day internationals for New Zealand.
Richard Petrie:So it's a 50 over game.
Richard Petrie:Played against England.
Richard Petrie:Uh, a few times got out Gooch and Goer, so some of your, some of your members
Jon Clayton:I won't hold that against you.
Richard Petrie:but, uh, they were, they were pretty good bats.
Richard Petrie:Gooch and Go.
Richard Petrie:And we played, uh, Australia, played Sri Lanka, played South
Richard Petrie:Africa, and that was pretty much it.
Richard Petrie:And then, uh, then I had stress fractures in my back and a torn
Richard Petrie:partial rupture of Achilles's tendon.
Richard Petrie:And that was kind of the end of my international career.
Richard Petrie:But it was fun while I lasted.
Jon Clayton:Oh, absolutely.
Jon Clayton:And it, and it brought you to the, the beautiful county of Lancashire,
Jon Clayton:my, uh, my home county in the UK at some point during that career,
Richard Petrie:right.
Richard Petrie:Yeah.
Richard Petrie:No IED for one of the clubs in Lancashire and, um, loved it up there actually.
Richard Petrie:A lot more.
Richard Petrie:The Northern, the Northern Clubs are more community based and, and, and,
Richard Petrie:you know, everyone comes and watches and drinks at the bar afterwards.
Richard Petrie:And so I loved it up in Lanre.
Richard Petrie:Really, really loved it.
Richard Petrie:It was probably my favorite cricket season.
Richard Petrie:I probably had about six or seven seasons overseas, but Lanker was
Richard Petrie:probably the most enjoyable one.
Jon Clayton:Oh, and I'm sure you're not just saying that just
Jon Clayton:because I'm from Lancaster, are you?
Richard Petrie:no, no.
Richard Petrie:We had a great team and, and the people were great, you know, a lot
Richard Petrie:of characters there, but, um, and we won the league, which helps too.
Richard Petrie:So that probably helped the whole vibe of the,
Richard Petrie:of the summer.
Jon Clayton:absolutely.
Jon Clayton:Ah, sounds fantastic.
Jon Clayton:We are gonna talk about how to build a marketing system so that.
Jon Clayton:Architects and other building designers, they can consistently
Jon Clayton:attract more of the right clients.
Jon Clayton:So I'm really excited to talk about this today.
Jon Clayton:It's gonna be great topic.
Jon Clayton:So let's begin with looking at some of the challenges.
Jon Clayton:So what would you say that the challenges that architects generally face in
Jon Clayton:winning the right types of projects?
Richard Petrie:Yeah.
Richard Petrie:Well, the most common sort of complaints I hear on a, on a daily basis would
Richard Petrie:be not enough leads, not enough.
Richard Petrie:You know, the phone's not ringing enough.
Richard Petrie:That would be one I. Um, another one would be we are getting, we're
Richard Petrie:getting inquiries coming in, but they're the wrong type of inquiries.
Richard Petrie:They're not the type of projects we want.
Richard Petrie:And I, I read a stat the other day, not long ago actually, and it said
Richard Petrie:that, um, only 5% of the buildings built have a, have an architect
Richard Petrie:sort of fully involved in it.
Richard Petrie:So, you know, most projects don't, which is probably why a
Richard Petrie:lot of the people ringing up.
Richard Petrie:They're not really, you know, either, they either don't have the budget or they.
Richard Petrie:You know, they'll, they'll talk, they'll pick your brains and they'll chew up
Richard Petrie:some time, but they end up doing it with a drafts person or a do it themselves.
Richard Petrie:Or a builder will say they'll do it for free.
Richard Petrie:So there's a lot of frustration around the quality of leads.
Richard Petrie:Marketing doesn't generally work for architects or, or designers, not
Richard Petrie:the traditional type of marketing.
Richard Petrie:So you follow stuff that you see online and you can be very frustrated
Richard Petrie:and you can lose a lot of money by doing stuff that doesn't work.
Richard Petrie:The final one I would say would be you, you, you've done design fee resistance.
Richard Petrie:How, how do you feel about, you know, people questioning your fees?
Richard Petrie:Someone said there's no other profession in the world that
Richard Petrie:has their fees questioned more than architecture and design.
Richard Petrie:I. Right.
Richard Petrie:And it's, it's probably true.
Richard Petrie:You don't go to a lawyer, an accountant or a, or a doctor and go to the doctor,
Richard Petrie:you know, no, you're gonna have to sharpen your pencil on that doctor before you
Richard Petrie:do my, you know, my heart operation.
Richard Petrie:And he goes, I don't think I do actually.
Richard Petrie:Uh, I think you need to hurry up.
Richard Petrie:Sign the, sign, the check.
Richard Petrie:You need to get into the, uh, into the operating theater.
Richard Petrie:So pro architects, Fees being challenged, not enough good quality work.
Richard Petrie:And, and, and how do you differentiate yourself?
Richard Petrie:When there's a lot of other people who are highly trained, you know, you
Richard Petrie:guys, you know, a lot of them, a lot of the architects who, who get qualified.
Richard Petrie:You, you've been working for five or seven years getting your
Richard Petrie:qualifications or studying or you know, or at least three or four.
Richard Petrie:And, um, there's a lot of those people around.
Richard Petrie:So how do you differentiate yourself?
Richard Petrie:So there was lots of challenges for the industry, shall we say.
Jon Clayton:Oh yeah.
Jon Clayton:Yeah.
Jon Clayton:So you mentioned there, there was not having enough leads coming
Jon Clayton:in, not having enough of the right type of leads coming in.
Jon Clayton:You also mentioned there about this.
Jon Clayton:That's that statistic that was actually really surprising.
Jon Clayton:That statistic you just mentioned, only 5% of buildings that that get,
Jon Clayton:that get built, uh, have had an architect involved right through that.
Jon Clayton:And I mean, that's, that's quite shocking in itself.
Jon Clayton:Uh, quite a shocking statistic.
Jon Clayton:But again,
Richard Petrie:you drive around, you can, you look at the buildings,
Richard Petrie:you can tell, you know, it looks about right, doesn't it?
Jon Clayton:Yeah.
Jon Clayton:I think though that it's it makes sense though that with a lot
Jon Clayton:of those inquiries that that.
Jon Clayton:Potentially have been coming in that the, there's may be a misalignment
Jon Clayton:in with some of the the architects and, and the practitioners, their
Jon Clayton:expectations of what level of service that these potential leads are looking
Jon Clayton:for versus actually how many of them are gonna be those high quality projects
Jon Clayton:where they do want somebody right.
Jon Clayton:The way throughout the whole thing.
Jon Clayton:And obviously more of the right type of leads is what we want, isn't it?
Jon Clayton:Ideally,
Richard Petrie:about 5%.
Richard Petrie:So that's what you want calling you, but you're gonna get, you're gonna
Richard Petrie:get probably the top 50% calling you.
Richard Petrie:So there certainly needs to be a bit of filtering and qualifying going on because
Richard Petrie:it is very frustrating if you can't either attract enough of the right ones.
Richard Petrie:Well, you can't, you know, the other danger is that you, you think
Richard Petrie:everybody that calls you up is a, is a proper prospect and is worthy
Richard Petrie:of investing five to 10 hours in.
Richard Petrie:To see if there's a project there.
Richard Petrie:And, and in most of the cases, or many of the cases, there either isn't
Richard Petrie:a project that really requires a top quality designer or the budget's
Richard Petrie:completely inadequate, or the expectations from the client are not
Richard Petrie:really what you want to be doing.
Richard Petrie:So.
Richard Petrie:I would, I, I kind of think that you, you, you need to be very clear about what, what
Richard Petrie:a yes client or what a yes project is.
Richard Petrie:You need to get quite specific about that for you.
Richard Petrie:You also need to be really clear on what a no project is for you.
Richard Petrie:And you need to have the questions that tell you whether they fit here or here.
Richard Petrie:'cause you need to be able to sort that out quite quickly.
Richard Petrie:And if you can do that that's, I guess, that's part of the problem.
Richard Petrie:But you also need enough of the yeses coming through.
Richard Petrie:Right.
Richard Petrie:Yeah.
Jon Clayton:Yeah, it's easier to, it is easier to, to say no if you've got enough
Jon Clayton:of those leads coming in in the first place, because then like you can, you
Jon Clayton:know, if you're going to stick your flag in the ground and say, you know, we want
Jon Clayton:to become known for this type of work.
Jon Clayton:This is what we're gonna do.
Jon Clayton:You like you say, you've gotta have enough leads coming in the first
Jon Clayton:place to be able to use that filter.
Jon Clayton:To filter out those, um, leads that aren't so great a fit for you.
Jon Clayton:Interesting.
Jon Clayton:That is really interesting.
Jon Clayton:And um, the last thing he mentioned was about, um, the fees as well.
Jon Clayton:That is so true.
Jon Clayton:I can't remember the last time I went to the dentist or, or I went to
Jon Clayton:get my car fixed or whatever that.
Jon Clayton:And I challenge that, but it is something that we often get challenged on.
Jon Clayton:And I think something as well, Richard, I dunno if you feel this, but there's
Jon Clayton:a lot of architects out there that are sole practitioners that actually kind
Jon Clayton:of makes up a, a biggest proportion of.
Jon Clayton:Practices out there is single person micros size practices, and often
Jon Clayton:as creatives we get so emotionally attached to the work that we do.
Jon Clayton:And we can take it really personally if, um, somebody's like pushing back
Jon Clayton:and it might just be that they're just the lead that's falling into that
Jon Clayton:bigger percentage that are just actually not a great fit for what you offer.
Jon Clayton:But that is something that is definitely another one of those huge challenges.
Jon Clayton:So, um,
Richard Petrie:and if you don't have enough leads coming through, then
Richard Petrie:you end up feeling you have to, you have to try and win all of those Noli
Richard Petrie:you, you know, you feel you have to win the no clients as well, and it's
Richard Petrie:just a, it is just a death spiral, you know, then if you feel overwhelmed
Richard Petrie:and you're doing too many projects, you're doing too many no projects.
Richard Petrie:And, and I don't think most architects don't really have
Richard Petrie:a problem winning projects.
Richard Petrie:They have a problem winning enough of the right projects, and that's the problem.
Richard Petrie:You know, if you imagine a, you know, you've got a bag of different
Richard Petrie:colored lollies and really the green lollies are the good ones, but most,
Richard Petrie:most architects and designers have all, you know, mixed a mixed bag.
Richard Petrie:And what all you all, you really, you know, the big picture is, this
Richard Petrie:is easy to say, but what we need is, you know, half the bag needs to
Richard Petrie:be green lollies and we'll be fine.
Richard Petrie:So then it comes down to, okay, well, well how do I get enough of the green,
Richard Petrie:let's say green ones are the really good ones to make it really simplified.
Richard Petrie:You are gonna have to find a system or a method or a way, this is the answer, you
Richard Petrie:know, that you're looking for to attract enough of the green ones where you can,
Richard Petrie:where you're comfortable, you go, yeah.
Richard Petrie:Okay.
Richard Petrie:Well I'll, I've got enough of the green ones coming through.
Richard Petrie:You need to have an over it's supply and demand.
Richard Petrie:You need more greens coming through than you can handle so
Richard Petrie:that you can start saying No.
Richard Petrie:'cause I don't think any firm is gonna be a successful firm UN, until you get
Richard Petrie:to the stage of being able to say no and.
Jon Clayton:Yeah, so having more, more, um, demands than
Richard Petrie:Yes, and I know what you're gonna ask next.
Richard Petrie:How do we do that?
Richard Petrie:And we'll, we'll, we'll get into that.
Richard Petrie:But, but that's, that is the secret is, is, you know, we need more, we
Richard Petrie:need to know what the right ones are.
Richard Petrie:We need to know how to attract them to us in such quantity that we can be a little
Richard Petrie:bit more fearless about our pricing.
Richard Petrie:We can be a little more fearless about saying no to people.
Richard Petrie:If people have inadequate budgets or question our fees, we don't care.
Jon Clayton:Yeah.
Richard Petrie:got time to take all of you on anyway, and you are not really,
Richard Petrie:I don't really want you, so if you think I'm too expensive, I think you are right.
Richard Petrie:You know, there are plenty of other architects or designers out there who
Richard Petrie:are a lot cheaper than me and, and I think they would be a better fit for you.
Jon Clayton:Yeah, that, that, that totally makes sense.
Jon Clayton:And it does, it nicely segues onto what I was gonna ask next.
Jon Clayton:'cause we, we've really laid out all of those challenges there.
Jon Clayton:I'm sure that if you're listening to this, like you, you, you're gonna relate
Jon Clayton:to a lot of this stuff if you're an architect or you're in practice for sure.
Jon Clayton:The good news is that there are is a lot we can do.
Jon Clayton:To solve and, and address these challenges, which is
Jon Clayton:what we're gonna cover now.
Jon Clayton:So Richard, let's look at things from a high level point of view.
Jon Clayton:What, what high level strategies do you recommend that we, we should be thinking
Jon Clayton:about when setting up a marketing system that's gonna address and solve some of
Jon Clayton:these challenges that architects are often
Richard Petrie:Right.
Richard Petrie:Well, that's the first thing you, you said the word system.
Richard Petrie:So we need something which is systematic.
Richard Petrie:We need something which is reliable.
Richard Petrie:And predictable and brings us more of the type of projects coming
Richard Petrie:towards us than, than we can handle.
Richard Petrie:So a system or a method or a way.
Richard Petrie:So one key thing when you're thinking about a system, one
Richard Petrie:is a system is systematic.
Richard Petrie:That's step one, step two, step three.
Richard Petrie:And it's, you run a set routine, let's say every month.
Richard Petrie:So get the idea of you need a system in there.
Richard Petrie:The second thing is if you're gonna do marketing, the only real
Richard Petrie:type of marketing that works.
Richard Petrie:Generally there's a generalization is when you target one type of project at a time.
Richard Petrie:So you know, it's good.
Richard Petrie:Most people have heard of niche marketing, and the analogy would be
Richard Petrie:if I'm a fisherman, I. And I went out and I live down here in New
Richard Petrie:Zealand, so I'm on the Pacific Ocean.
Richard Petrie:And if I went out on a boat and I had a fishing rod and some bait and
Richard Petrie:a hook, and I just went out into the Pacific Ocean somewhere, dropped my
Richard Petrie:line, chances are I'll catch nothing.
Richard Petrie:And if I do catch something, oh, I've got, I've got a bite.
Richard Petrie:It's probably something I don't wanna eat.
Richard Petrie:So think of it, think of marketing like fishing I need to say, right?
Richard Petrie:What are the type of fish I want to catch?
Richard Petrie:And we talked about the green projects, but let, let's say in this case, there's
Richard Petrie:a type of fish in New Zealand called Blue Cod I dunno if you get it up
Richard Petrie:there, but uh, blue Cod is great fish.
Richard Petrie:So if I go right, blue Cod is the type of fish I want.
Richard Petrie:Now, now everything reverse the engineers back from Blue Cod Right?
Richard Petrie:Where do I find Blue Cot?
Richard Petrie:Uh, I could go to North Canterbury and I could go off the coast there.
Richard Petrie:'cause there's Blue Cod in North Canterbury, there's,
Richard Petrie:there's Blue Cod in the.
Richard Petrie:In the, um, in the sounds at the top of the north island, it's not everywhere.
Richard Petrie:So I have to go certain places.
Richard Petrie:I have to, I have to have the right type of bait, which is suitable for
Richard Petrie:Blue Cod I have to have the right hook.
Richard Petrie:I have to be in the right location.
Richard Petrie:Yeah, I, I, I, everything is geared up for, I've got a fishing rod and a
Richard Petrie:location that's geared up for Blue Co and Blue Cod Only if I go anywhere, I'm
Richard Petrie:not gonna catch Blue Cod So I would, you know, that's the same analogy for trying
Richard Petrie:to catch a specific type of project.
Richard Petrie:You need to work out what are the projects that are my green projects.
Richard Petrie:My blue cod projects right now, we go to town.
Richard Petrie:Where are they?
Richard Petrie:What sort of bait do I need?
Richard Petrie:What sort of hook do I need?
Richard Petrie:How do I, how do I reel them in?
Richard Petrie:We can go into detail on there and there.
Richard Petrie:You want to go into specifics on this as well, but, but
Richard Petrie:that's the metaphor to think of.
Richard Petrie:It's fishing and if you go, if you go to this ocean to try and catch anything,
Richard Petrie:you'll probably catch nothing or you'll catch the wrong thing, and that's what
Richard Petrie:you guys are doing with your marketing.
Richard Petrie:As you're doing very broad marketing, you're effectively going out into the
Richard Petrie:middle of the Atlantic Ocean, probably the the North Sea or something, and
Richard Petrie:you are wondering why no one's biting or the wrong type of fish are biting.
Richard Petrie:That's why you've gotta think of fishing.
Richard Petrie:I.
Jon Clayton:I love that analogy that just, I can visualize that and that, that
Jon Clayton:just makes it really easy to understand and when you, you put it in those
Jon Clayton:words I. It just totally makes sense.
Richard Petrie:Yeah.
Richard Petrie:If you want trout, you're gonna have to go to a certain rivers and
Richard Petrie:you've got a different fishing rod.
Richard Petrie:You know, you've got a fly fishing rod, you've got fly, you haven't got a hook.
Richard Petrie:You're not gonna catch trout with your, with your other, you know.
Richard Petrie:So everything has to be geared up.
Richard Petrie:It's a custom fishing rod to catch a specific type of fish.
Jon Clayton:So if we can get really clear on the types of clients and
Jon Clayton:projects, really specific about the types of projects we want to be working
Jon Clayton:on, and then we could reverse engineer everything else from that to make sure.
Jon Clayton:That we're using the right gear, the right, the right setup, if you will.
Jon Clayton:The right systems.
Richard Petrie:Correct.
Jon Clayton:Cool.
Jon Clayton:Okay.
Jon Clayton:Okay.
Jon Clayton:could we talk a bit about offers?
Jon Clayton:we, could we lead onto, onto that because, I know that there's a few
Jon Clayton:different types of offers that you've, you talk about Richard, that fit into
Jon Clayton:this marketing system that we build out.
Jon Clayton:So once we're clear on who it is that we're looking to work with, the type
Jon Clayton:of projects we, we gotta have the right offer for them, haven't we?
Jon Clayton:How can we create offers that people really want to talk to us about?
Richard Petrie:Good question.
Richard Petrie:Well, that's kind of like our bait, right?
Jon Clayton:Yeah.
Richard Petrie:It's, it's our bait.
Richard Petrie:So, but before we get to the bait, there's something else I want to, I
Richard Petrie:wanna bring up, and that is that you think about clients or, or phish let's
Richard Petrie:say clients as they're moving through their journey of wanting to do a
Richard Petrie:project ultimately with an architect.
Richard Petrie:They go through a number of different stages to start with.
Richard Petrie:They, they're a little bit uncomfortable with their space and it doesn't really
Richard Petrie:work for us anymore, or we don't have a space and we need a space.
Richard Petrie:Okay, so those people are kind of in the early stages.
Richard Petrie:They're in information gathering mode.
Richard Petrie:They're not ready to hire an architect.
Richard Petrie:They're not really spend a million pounds on building something.
Richard Petrie:But they are interested in it and they're in information gathering mode, right?
Richard Petrie:So, so, okay, that's cool.
Richard Petrie:If that's one stage, we'll need an offer for them, right?
Richard Petrie:Then once they've gathered some information, they go, okay, we've got
Richard Petrie:a few ideas and we, we've got a rough idea of what we can and can't do.
Richard Petrie:Then they start saying, well, okay, now we've got this piece of
Richard Petrie:land, or we've got this building.
Richard Petrie:What are some general things that we can do with this space?
Richard Petrie:You know, I've got some broad in, you know, I've got information
Richard Petrie:gathering, but I need to sort it out to narrow it down a bit.
Richard Petrie:So I need some general information and, and they might go to a builder or
Richard Petrie:they might go to an architect and go, you know, look, look what we got here.
Richard Petrie:What can we do?
Richard Petrie:Or here's, we've got some ideas.
Richard Petrie:Are these feasible?
Richard Petrie:And, and so that's the, that's another stage they get into, right?
Richard Petrie:Where they're, they're asking for sort of general advice and then now
Richard Petrie:they need really specific advice.
Richard Petrie:'cause now they've, they've got a few ideas and they're going,
Richard Petrie:right, we've got some ideas here.
Richard Petrie:It is this feasible?
Richard Petrie:How much will it cost?
Richard Petrie:How long will it take?
Richard Petrie:Who's the best person to hire to do it?
Richard Petrie:So now they're moving into.
Richard Petrie:I need specific advice.
Richard Petrie:I've gone from, I need general advice, now I need specific advice.
Richard Petrie:And then they go into, all right, now I need to hire an architect.
Richard Petrie:Now I need to hire a builder.
Richard Petrie:Now I need to hire, right?
Richard Petrie:So there's, there's the information gathering sort of mode.
Richard Petrie:There's, I need general advice to, to sort my ideas out.
Richard Petrie:Now I need specific advice.
Richard Petrie:Now I need to hire people.
Richard Petrie:Right now I need to design.
Richard Petrie:And, and so, okay, so there there's several different phases.
Richard Petrie:So what I reckon and what, what, here's the problem with, I think what most
Richard Petrie:architects marketing is when they go and make an offer, it's pretty
Richard Petrie:much, Hey, I'm a, I'm a designer.
Richard Petrie:I'm really good.
Richard Petrie:Look at my portfolio, hire me.
Richard Petrie:Go, go to my website, look at my portfolio.
Richard Petrie:It's, it's, it's, you know, it's like a flasher.
Richard Petrie:Which is really only appealing to the, a very small number of people
Richard Petrie:at the very end of the process who are ready to go right now.
Richard Petrie:And they may be speaking by this point, they may be getting three or four
Richard Petrie:proposals from different architects.
Richard Petrie:So what I'm saying, nothing wrong with that, but it's a bit late sometimes.
Richard Petrie:I wanna be coming into the process earlier.
Richard Petrie:So the, the four offers that I like.
Richard Petrie:Putting in place, and this is your sales process.
Richard Petrie:We have an educational offer or, or a range of them so that these might
Richard Petrie:be tools and resources, we'll just call it a green project, right?
Richard Petrie:Um, tools and resources.
Richard Petrie:For anyone considering doing a green project, you might be
Richard Petrie:asking, you know, how much does it cost to do a green project?
Richard Petrie:How long does it take?
Richard Petrie:What are the steps we have to go through?
Richard Petrie:You know, what, what do you have to do to get a permit for a green project?
Richard Petrie:Those type of questions, we can create tools and resources for that.
Richard Petrie:Great.
Richard Petrie:Okay, so we can get leads by offering up problem solving information for
Richard Petrie:people who are doing a green project.
Richard Petrie:Next step.
Richard Petrie:Alright.
Richard Petrie:Let's say someone downloads my green report.
Richard Petrie:They have to gimme their name and email address and phone number and,
Richard Petrie:and, and I'll send that to them.
Richard Petrie:Okay.
Richard Petrie:They've downloaded a green report on what, what will it, what does it cost, and how
Richard Petrie:long does it take, and what's the process?
Richard Petrie:Then I go, okay, well if this is something you're interested in and
Richard Petrie:you want some general guide, general guidance, you can book a 45 free,
Richard Petrie:you know, session with me and I'll, I'll, I'll take you through a bit.
Richard Petrie:I'll give you a sort of a, an action plan on where you should go.
Richard Petrie:Right.
Richard Petrie:I'm not gonna give you specific advice, and I'm not gonna tell you how much it'll
Richard Petrie:cost, but I'll have a meeting with you.
Richard Petrie:I'll listen to where you're at and I'll go Right.
Richard Petrie:Your next step is 1, 2, 3.
Richard Petrie:Oh, thanks very much.
Richard Petrie:But I want a meeting 'cause you need a meeting, right?
Richard Petrie:I need to get them into a meeting.
Richard Petrie:So I'll give 'em some advice, but then I wanna step them up to my next step, which
Richard Petrie:is okay if you want me to help you, you know, I've given you three things to do.
Richard Petrie:You can do number one, you can do number two, but you
Richard Petrie:probably can't do number three.
Richard Petrie:If you'd like me to do number three, it'll cost you a couple of.
Richard Petrie:Costs you 1500 pounds.
Richard Petrie:And I'll go and do the research.
Richard Petrie:I'll do the analysis and I'll come back to you and I'll do some diagnosis.
Richard Petrie:Like a doctor would do.
Richard Petrie:A surgeon would do diagnosis before they do an operation, right?
Richard Petrie:Any professional has to do a diagnosis.
Richard Petrie:A, a lawyer would do, uh, you know, pre-deposition,
Richard Petrie:they call 'em, doesn't they?
Richard Petrie:And an accountant would do an audit and a doctor would do a diagnosis like
Richard Petrie:all professionals do, paid diagnosis.
Richard Petrie:Then I'll do my prescription, which will be, here's what
Richard Petrie:I think your next steps are.
Richard Petrie:Here's your options.
Richard Petrie:Not, not design yet.
Richard Petrie:Not design.
Richard Petrie:I'll just prescribe.
Richard Petrie:It's like a, A surgeon wouldn't, you know, they'd do a diagnosis, then they'd come
Richard Petrie:back and go, right, here's what I found.
Richard Petrie:You've got three options.
Richard Petrie:Here's the pros and cons of each option.
Richard Petrie:I recommend option.
Richard Petrie:Number three, but it's up to you.
Richard Petrie:What do you think?
Richard Petrie:And they go, yeah, I think number three as well.
Richard Petrie:Okay.
Richard Petrie:If you would like, you know, we can move down the option three path and,
Richard Petrie:and I'll, you know, we move into design, but they're paying for me to work out
Richard Petrie:what the best option is, not the design.
Richard Petrie:So this is more of a, this sales process is more of a consultative sales process.
Richard Petrie:You're more like a consultant or a. And, and what I've discovered
Richard Petrie:is the way most architects will do it is they get a phone call.
Richard Petrie:Hello?
Richard Petrie:I'll come around to your site for free and give you lots of information.
Richard Petrie:Sure.
Richard Petrie:Yes.
Richard Petrie:Yes, sir. No, sir. Three bags full.
Richard Petrie:I'll be there in five minutes.
Richard Petrie:Turn up at the site.
Richard Petrie:Get your brains picked, give away great ideas.
Richard Petrie:Maybe, here's a sketch, you know.
Richard Petrie:Oh, can I have a copy?
Richard Petrie:Yes.
Richard Petrie:Oh, there's the, there's the sketch.
Richard Petrie:Can you do a proposal for me?
Richard Petrie:Oh, oh yeah.
Richard Petrie:Okay.
Richard Petrie:Um, I was, it was my daughter's birthday this weekend, but I'd much rather spend
Richard Petrie:10 hours doing a proposal for you.
Richard Petrie:Then going to my daughter's birthday, um, give you the proposal and then, and
Richard Petrie:then I'm just waiting for you to, and to me that's more of a sales process,
Richard Petrie:whereas the one I outlined is more of a consulting doctor, surgeon type process.
Richard Petrie:It's more, I think it's more professional.
Richard Petrie:Um, I know it works better.
Richard Petrie:Um, I know you get paid for doing your diagnosis and prescription
Richard Petrie:instead of doing it for free.
Richard Petrie:It ends up what you're asking for.
Richard Petrie:The first sale you're asking them for is a small, you know, 1500 pound
Richard Petrie:diagnosis, research, analysis exercise that you're gonna do for them.
Richard Petrie:Clients, you know, some people be sitting there and go, oh,
Richard Petrie:my clients wouldn't pay that.
Richard Petrie:They would, the, the genuine clients who, who, who are architect,
Jon Clayton:The right clients.
Richard Petrie:the top 5%.
Richard Petrie:much rather pay $1,500 for you to go and do some diagnosis than commit
Richard Petrie:to your proposal where you're asking them for half a million pounds.
Richard Petrie:I'd much rather pay $1,500 for you to go and work out what is
Richard Petrie:the best option for me than pay.
Richard Petrie:You pay half a million pounds, which includes your fee.
Richard Petrie:Maybe it's, you know, maybe you've got a 50,000 pound fee
Richard Petrie:in there, like that's high risk.
Richard Petrie:I don't, I don't really want to do that.
Richard Petrie:I'm happy to do the 1500 and what we found is, is that once someone commits
Richard Petrie:to the 1500 pound job, which is much easier to get a yes for because it's
Richard Petrie:more common sense and it's more in line with, with what every other professional
Richard Petrie:does, let's do some diagnosis first.
Richard Petrie:They're five times more likely to say yes to you for, for design than
Richard Petrie:if you are throwing them a proposal.
Richard Petrie:And yeah, maybe you one a three or something like that.
Richard Petrie:And then you just, you, you often go into a holding pattern where
Richard Petrie:you're waiting for them to give you an answer and they're not answering.
Richard Petrie:It's not just a case of having your marketing right, you've gotta
Richard Petrie:have your process right as well.
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Jon Clayton:Now, back to the show.
Jon Clayton:These four offers we're talking about.
Jon Clayton:So what we're not talking about is four different things that are for people
Jon Clayton:that are all, all ready, ready to buy.
Jon Clayton:The four offers that you've described, they are hitting, each
Jon Clayton:one of them is for a different stage in that client's journey.
Jon Clayton:And they're aligned with how ready they are to buy.
Jon Clayton:You mentioned that.
Jon Clayton:You might have somebody at the very beginning that is not
Jon Clayton:ready to hire an architect.
Jon Clayton:They are information gathering.
Jon Clayton:So there is that first offer, which could be, you mentioned like an
Jon Clayton:informational type product, so that, I guess it could be like A-A-P-D-F guide.
Jon Clayton:It could be a, a video masterclass, it could be some kind of resource
Jon Clayton:that you create that you could reuse.
Jon Clayton:Time and time again you can share with people.
Jon Clayton:And then you mentioned then that the next offer is something that's
Jon Clayton:more more general advice, wasn't it?
Jon Clayton:The second offer.
Jon Clayton:So they're, they're kind of like, okay, we, we we're se we're getting more serious
Jon Clayton:about doing this project, this idea.
Jon Clayton:Like we wanna know a little bit more about what this is gonna look like.
Jon Clayton:You know, what it's like working with an architect, that sort of thing.
Jon Clayton:And then you said the next stage was that you get into the point where you're giving
Jon Clayton:them some more specific advice then.
Jon Clayton:So as we get into that, those third and fourth points, like
Jon Clayton:we're getting to the point where.
Jon Clayton:You mentioned about like the id the analogy of like, um, a doctor, like a
Jon Clayton:doctor's appointment where there's like an audit or assessment that happens
Jon Clayton:and diagnosis, doctor's diagnosis.
Jon Clayton:That's the word I was looking for.
Jon Clayton:And you, you're absolutely right.
Jon Clayton:The conventional way that things happen in most instances is that we have,
Jon Clayton:we have one main offer, which is only really appealing to, I mean, I think
Jon Clayton:statistically they say in, in any.
Jon Clayton:Audience.
Jon Clayton:I think it's around about 3% of that audience are typically at the
Jon Clayton:point where they're ready to buy.
Jon Clayton:So we, we have an offer that's only appealing to 3%, whereas actually, if
Jon Clayton:we've got these four different things in place, we've got offers that are gonna
Jon Clayton:appeal to a hundred percent depending on what stage they're at, that they
Jon Clayton:can tap in and get the right offer.
Jon Clayton:We have the right offer for.
Jon Clayton:The right stage that that client is at.
Jon Clayton:And during that process, those offers are also gonna act as a filter, aren't they?
Jon Clayton:They're gonna filter it down so that by the time we get to that third and
Jon Clayton:fourth touch point there, that actually a lot of the clients that were a bad
Jon Clayton:fit, they've already gone elsewhere.
Jon Clayton:'cause we've filtered them out through this process.
Richard Petrie:Or the other thing that happens.
Richard Petrie:Because some of these people who get on think of it as getting,
Richard Petrie:you know, you've got a bus going along and they, we don't care.
Richard Petrie:There's bus stop, 1, 2, 3, 4.
Richard Petrie:Depending on where where they are, we don't care.
Richard Petrie:We'll pick them up on bus stop one, take 'em to two, take
Richard Petrie:to three, take 'em to four.
Richard Petrie:It may take a year or two for some of the people who get on a bus stop,
Richard Petrie:number one before they do a project.
Richard Petrie:That's fine.
Richard Petrie:If I've got a hundred.
Richard Petrie:People who have, expressed interest in getting on a bus stop, number
Richard Petrie:one for, for, you know, some problem solving information.
Richard Petrie:That's all right.
Richard Petrie:I mean, I had a hundred of them, let's say 50 of them never do a project, but
Richard Petrie:over the next two years, 50 of them do.
Richard Petrie:Well, it's, that's two a month are becoming, are coming ready.
Richard Petrie:They'll, they'll, they'll come ready when they're ready.
Richard Petrie:So if I've got a nurturing system, I'm picking people up there.
Richard Petrie:Yes, I'm picking them up for meetings, free meetings.
Richard Petrie:I'm then moving them into a paid meeting, which is the discovery or the diagnosis.
Richard Petrie:Then I'm moving in them into design.
Richard Petrie:I don't really care where I pick them up.
Richard Petrie:So what I am doing is I'm helping my marketplace out.
Richard Petrie:I'm giving them four different ways that they can be helped, and
Richard Petrie:if they're not ready for two years because they kept getting on a
Richard Petrie:bus stop, number one, that's fine.
Richard Petrie:I, I'll continue to educate them.
Richard Petrie:I'll give them tools, resources, I'll stay in touch with 'em.
Richard Petrie:When they're ready, they can book that meeting with me.
Richard Petrie:The first one, when they're ready, they'll book the second one.
Richard Petrie:And if I've got enough of these green type of clients in there, it's a numbers game.
Richard Petrie:It's a numbers game, but everything, every one of those offers is
Richard Petrie:custom made to be really, really useful and relevant and valuable.
Richard Petrie:For someone looking to do a green project.
Jon Clayton:It's very specific, isn't it?
Jon Clayton:And that's, that can only until you're clear on exactly.
Jon Clayton:What type of projects you wanna be working on.
Jon Clayton:You've gotta do that first, haven't you?
Jon Clayton:In order to then be able to kind of design these other offers and make sure you're
Jon Clayton:providing the right type of information, particularly with that the first point
Jon Clayton:where we're looking at something that's like an informational type product.
Jon Clayton:Product, uh, we've gotta know exactly.
Jon Clayton:What type of thoughts they're having, what type of considerations they're
Jon Clayton:having for that specific type of project to make those make those digital
Jon Clayton:products or whatever they're gonna be.
Richard Petrie:we, we, we do generalize to some degree because we do know
Richard Petrie:there are some questions that it doesn't matter what market you are
Richard Petrie:in, how much will it cost, how long will it take what's the process?
Richard Petrie:Who are the experts I should be connecting with, with a green project?
Richard Petrie:They're all asking, yeah, they might say, for my green project, okay, how much the
Richard Petrie:green project costs, what's the process?
Richard Petrie:How long does it take?
Richard Petrie:Who are the, so we can customize some of it, but for example, you know, I've got
Richard Petrie:a guy in Phoenix, uh, Arizona, Phoenix.
Richard Petrie:Yeah.
Richard Petrie:Phoenix.
Richard Petrie:And, and you know, he targeted Hillside properties, right?
Richard Petrie:And I said, well, what, you know, other than the general things that we've always
Richard Petrie:got, you know, is there anything else?
Richard Petrie:And he goes, yeah, well it's Hillside.
Richard Petrie:So.
Richard Petrie:Most of the people have to do a retaining wall.
Richard Petrie:Oh, right.
Richard Petrie:Okay.
Richard Petrie:That's a good one.
Richard Petrie:So, alright, well, can we can, okay.
Richard Petrie:Yeah.
Richard Petrie:Well, let's do a report on retaining walls.
Richard Petrie:What do they cost?
Richard Petrie:How long do they take?
Richard Petrie:Who?
Richard Petrie:Who should who can you recommend?
Richard Petrie:We can do a whole, we know that if someone's downloading something
Richard Petrie:on retaining walls for hillside properties in Phoenix, they're thinking
Richard Petrie:of building brand new Excellent.
Richard Petrie:Good bait, good quality bait.
Richard Petrie:No one's building a retaining wall.
Richard Petrie:Who's not thinking of building a, a fancy property on and hillside, you know, so
Jon Clayton:yeah, I I wouldn't be downloading that, that, um, PDF
Jon Clayton:unless I was that, that person.
Jon Clayton:Absolutely.
Jon Clayton:This, Richard, this leads us nicely on, actually, I was wondering if you
Jon Clayton:could share some more examples of, of architects or related professionals who've
Jon Clayton:had success with, with this approach.
Richard Petrie:Yeah.
Richard Petrie:Um, yeah, we've had about 1200 people go through the program.
Richard Petrie:So, well the first architect I ever had, uh, was a lady called Mona.
Richard Petrie:So she was in New Zealand and.
Richard Petrie:I said to her, I'd never worked with an architect before.
Richard Petrie:And when she rang up, she said, I don't, I don't, you know, I
Richard Petrie:don't think this will work for me.
Richard Petrie:She came to a workshop I was running in Wellington and she said, you know,
Richard Petrie:I don't have any money and I don't think your marketing or, I really
Richard Petrie:enjoyed it, but I'm an architect.
Richard Petrie:I don't think it worked for me.
Richard Petrie:And, and I didn't know any better.
Richard Petrie:And I said, oh, well, okay, maybe it won't.
Richard Petrie:And anyway, she hired me you know, for $10,000 and six.
Richard Petrie:You know, we worked together for six months, but I wasn't quite sure that.
Richard Petrie:She'd, she'd sowed the seed of doubt to me.
Richard Petrie:So anyway, I said, well, I think the first thing we've gotta do is we've gotta
Richard Petrie:pick a niche market that it doesn't mean, you know, and when I say pick a niche,
Richard Petrie:I'm not saying green projects are the only projects you have to be doing.
Richard Petrie:What I'm saying is you've got a green project winning machine that you've built.
Richard Petrie:And if you are a, a firm that has multiple markets, that's fine.
Richard Petrie:You've got a green fishing rod, you've got a blue fishing rod, you've got
Richard Petrie:a red fishing rod, but they're all a bit different depending on who, you
Richard Petrie:know, the green, red and the blue fish.
Richard Petrie:So anyway, she picked, um, character homes, so these are villas in New
Richard Petrie:Zealand and they're all about 1900.
Richard Petrie:And so we positioned her as New Zealand lead.
Richard Petrie:New Zealand's lead.
Richard Petrie:I said, I said, does anyone else specialize in character homes?
Richard Petrie:She said, I don't know anyone.
Richard Petrie:I said, well, right.
Richard Petrie:Well then you are New Zealand's leading character home architect, aren't you?
Richard Petrie:She said, well, I couldn't say that.
Richard Petrie:And I said, well, why not?
Richard Petrie:No one else specializes in it.
Richard Petrie:You do.
Richard Petrie:You specialize in it.
Richard Petrie:She said, well, I am now.
Richard Petrie:I said, right, well let's call you that.
Richard Petrie:And she said, but what will I, and he, this is, this is a key point.
Richard Petrie:Listen to this, everybody, she said, but what will other architects say?
Richard Petrie:Right.
Richard Petrie:But, but isn't that how most of you guys think?
Richard Petrie:What will other, what will my peers think?
Richard Petrie:They that, and she said, you know, she said that, that they don't, they won't
Richard Petrie:think that I'm a, I'm a New Zealand's lead that, you know, I can't say that.
Richard Petrie:'cause my other architects will think, no, she's not.
Richard Petrie:New Zealand's leading.
Richard Petrie:I said, what do we care about?
Richard Petrie:What they've, are they gonna, they're not gonna hire you.
Richard Petrie:Why are we doing our marketing based on what we, what,
Richard Petrie:what other architects think?
Richard Petrie:That's crazy.
Richard Petrie:So anyway, we got over that mental hurdle and um, and I think she did
Richard Petrie:become, because she picked up a whole lot of projects in that area
Richard Petrie:because she became, not only became a specialist, but presented herself
Richard Petrie:as a specialist and as New Zealand's leading character home architect,
Richard Petrie:she did become probably New Zealand's leading character home architect.
Richard Petrie:And when you.
Richard Petrie:When you start getting a reputation as New Zealand's leading character
Richard Petrie:home architect, then when someone wants to do a really good job,
Richard Petrie:you are seen as the number one.
Richard Petrie:So you start being more attractive to the top end of those wanting.
Richard Petrie:They want the best.
Richard Petrie:So the people who are spending the most money want someone who
Richard Petrie:specializes in that type of project.
Richard Petrie:And for them, money's not an object.
Richard Petrie:I just want the best 'cause I can afford the best.
Richard Petrie:So there's not really any bad things.
Richard Petrie:That doesn't mean if a blue project can, you know, rings her
Richard Petrie:up and says, do you want to do it?
Richard Petrie:And she likes the look of it.
Richard Petrie:She can still do the blue project, but her marketing system, her,
Richard Petrie:her green fish catching system is designed for catching green fish
Richard Petrie:and green fish only, and it does.
Jon Clayton:I love that.
Jon Clayton:So, that, that, that story really illustrates the power of, of being
Jon Clayton:really clear on the niche and the type of projects that you're looking to work with.
Jon Clayton:And I, I like that you shared there that.
Jon Clayton:To give some reassurance that people are listening, you're listening to
Jon Clayton:this thinking, oh, but I, you know, I, I can't, I can't niche down.
Jon Clayton:I'm, I'm scared of nicheing down too far.
Jon Clayton:It doesn't mean you, you, you, you don't do any other stuff.
Jon Clayton:It just, you can still take on other projects if you wish.
Jon Clayton:It's just that, that marketing machine that you're building, that sort of
Jon Clayton:client attracting machine, the system is gonna be working to attract more
Jon Clayton:of those right clients, the ones you really, really want more of.
Jon Clayton:It's the green fishing rod for the, you
Jon Clayton:know, the green projects for the green fish or the, the blue cods.
Jon Clayton:Let's, yeah, we won't confus them with the blue cod.
Jon Clayton:Let's just keep it green.
Jon Clayton:Too many metaphors.
Jon Clayton:Yeah.
Jon Clayton:Oh, that's, that's really interesting, Richard.
Jon Clayton:Okay.
Jon Clayton:What would be the main thing you'd like everyone to take away from this?
Jon Clayton:Because we've we've covered quite a bit, but we've given them something that, I
Jon Clayton:think this is something that's actually.
Jon Clayton:You've laid it out in such a way that makes this quite simple for people really.
Jon Clayton:But what would be the main thing you want 'em to take away from what we've been
Richard Petrie:Well, I think, I think the main thing is a lot of people would
Richard Petrie:say marketing doesn't work for architects.
Richard Petrie:You know what a bit like the, a bit like the projects, they're right.
Richard Petrie:You're right.
Richard Petrie:99% of marketing doesn't work for architects.
Richard Petrie:You know, you're not selling ice creams or guitars or cars even.
Richard Petrie:You are selling a high priced professional service.
Richard Petrie:So most of the marketing that gets taught online or even, you know, even, even
Richard Petrie:anywhere, I mean, I went to university and did a marketing degree and.
Richard Petrie:It taught me nothing about selling anything.
Richard Petrie:It was, it's very theoretical, very, theoretical, and it would
Richard Petrie:be sort of corporate theory.
Richard Petrie:Like useless.
Richard Petrie:So don't think that if you didn't go to university and do a marketing
Richard Petrie:degree, you're at any disadvantage.
Richard Petrie:All the marketing I learned was sort of, um, after university.
Richard Petrie:But, but so on one hand, I wanna say yet, 99% of marketing doesn't work.
Richard Petrie:You are right.
Richard Petrie:You have wasted money, you've done too much social media, you've spent
Richard Petrie:too much money on your website.
Richard Petrie:You've probably done too much cold calling and networking, but
Richard Petrie:hopefully I've outlined the one per.
Richard Petrie:You know this makes sense when you, when you hear it, you go, oh my
Richard Petrie:goodness, this is common sense, right?
Richard Petrie:This is the 1% method that does work, and the only reason, it's not that I'm
Richard Petrie:a genius or anything like this, but this is what I've been doing for 15
Richard Petrie:years, is just working with architects, helping them win better projects.
Richard Petrie:So you see, and you test enough stuff.
Richard Petrie:That sooner or later you start to notice things that do work.
Richard Petrie:And so marketing does work for architects.
Richard Petrie:You've gotta get it just right though, so have confidence.
Richard Petrie:If you do the things that, that I discussed this today.
Richard Petrie:You can, you know, this is podcast and you can, uh, you can record it, you can
Richard Petrie:go back, you can listen to it again.
Richard Petrie:You can, you can go onto our website.
Richard Petrie:John gave us the URL earlier on.
Richard Petrie:You can go, there's a whole lot of free resources on our website.
Richard Petrie:You can go and have a look at or, or you can get coaching from us.
Richard Petrie:But, you know, I've mapped out everything you need to do.
Richard Petrie:Um, at a high level.
Richard Petrie:And if you've got that framework in mind, then you are stacking the odds in your
Richard Petrie:favor of actually being able to put in place something that does actually work.
Jon Clayton:I love that.
Jon Clayton:Thanks, Richard.
Jon Clayton:Is there anything else that you wanted to, to say about the, the
Jon Clayton:topic that we haven't already covered?
Richard Petrie:I think architects, you know, or design business, you are only
Richard Petrie:as good as the projects that you can win.
Richard Petrie:So get very clear about what are the right projects and very clear
Richard Petrie:about what are the wrong projects.
Richard Petrie:And, and really your job is to, to, it's as simple as that.
Richard Petrie:Your job is to win more of the right projects so that you can say
Richard Petrie:no to more of the wrong projects.
Richard Petrie:And if you can do that, your income goes up.
Richard Petrie:I think you know your enjoyment.
Richard Petrie:There's certain projects which you probably love doing,
Richard Petrie:you know, those are the.
Richard Petrie:You wanna be winning the projects that you love doing and that where
Richard Petrie:you can earn a decent fee on, and, and that's your job is, is find a way
Richard Petrie:to win more of those ones because.
Richard Petrie:If you're just taking stuff that's coming in the door, it can be a pretty, so, you
Richard Petrie:know, difficult sort of a business to run.
Richard Petrie:So it, it does come down, actually, sorry, let me sum that up on one thing.
Richard Petrie:Your first job, and, and a lot of people might not like this, but your
Richard Petrie:number one job is you're a marketer of design services first, right?
Richard Petrie:That's your number one job.
Richard Petrie:If you're a business owner, you are a marketer of design services first.
Richard Petrie:Your second job is you are a designer.
Richard Petrie:Right.
Richard Petrie:If you just say, oh, but I don't wanna be a marketer of design services.
Richard Petrie:I just wanna be a designer.
Richard Petrie:Fine, go get a job, right?
Richard Petrie:Get a job.
Richard Petrie:Someone else will do the marketing and the sales for you.
Richard Petrie:But if you're gonna run a firm, you gotta, you gotta learn to win those projects
Richard Petrie:first, and then you get to do them.
Richard Petrie:But if you don't do job number one, which is win the right projects.
Richard Petrie:Then there is no there either.
Richard Petrie:Either there is no job number two of doing the design, or you're doing crummy design
Richard Petrie:for crummy clients with crummy budgets.
Richard Petrie:So your number one job you're a marketer of design services First.
Jon Clayton:Oh, that makes so much sense, Richard.
Jon Clayton:Uh, that's some tough love for everybody, but the, it's a message
Jon Clayton:that they need to hear because if we don't have enough of the right leads
Jon Clayton:coming in, then you can't get to do.
Jon Clayton:You can't get to do the work on the projects that you love to work on.
Jon Clayton:So, if you wanna be happier and more fulfilled in the work you do and get
Jon Clayton:paid the type of fees that you deserve, you really need to, you know, set some
Jon Clayton:time and resources aside for that number one job of doing the marketing and,
Jon Clayton:and winning those, uh, those leads.
Jon Clayton:I've got a question for you, Richard.
Jon Clayton:Just to wrap things up, it's not about the topic.
Jon Clayton:I just love to travel and to discover new places.
Jon Clayton:I was just wondering if you could tell me about, uh, one of your favorite
Jon Clayton:places and what you love about it.
Jon Clayton:And this could be near or far.
Richard Petrie:Sure.
Richard Petrie:A couple of years ago, me and my wife, um, 'cause I, I work online.
Richard Petrie:I'm a bit like you John, so I've got a laptop.
Richard Petrie:My business is on the laptop.
Richard Petrie:Um, pretty cool.
Richard Petrie:And so I can, I can be anywhere in the world and, and my wife likes to travel,
Richard Petrie:so I. We had, uh, we, we, we have a couple of rental properties and a French
Richard Petrie:couple rented one of our rental properties in Wellington, in New Zealand, and it
Richard Petrie:was on this sort of a home swap site.
Richard Petrie:So they, they, they came and lived in, in our house for three, well, one of
Richard Petrie:our rental properties for three months.
Richard Petrie:And they said, we've got a, we've got a sort of a holiday
Richard Petrie:house in the French Alps.
Richard Petrie:Would you like to swap?
Richard Petrie:Yeah.
Richard Petrie:You mean, you know, we don't pay anything.
Richard Petrie:Yeah.
Richard Petrie:You, you don't pay us.
Richard Petrie:And we, so anyway, we went to the French Alps.
Richard Petrie:It was a place near Shamini.
Richard Petrie:Um, it was called, Solange.
Richard Petrie:It was a little village, about 20 minutes from Shamini.
Richard Petrie:So we were in the middle of the French Alps, not far from Geneva,
Richard Petrie:not far from Shaman, not far, just through the tunnel to Italy.
Richard Petrie:Um, and we were there for, um, three or four months.
Richard Petrie:So that was just it.
Richard Petrie:It's a mountain village in the Swiss, in the French Alps.
Richard Petrie:And then because of that, 'cause we enjoyed it and the environment
Richard Petrie:and the, you know, it's right underneath Mont Blanc, right?
Richard Petrie:And you, you know, in the summer you can go swimming in the lake, but there's
Richard Petrie:the glacier and the Mont Blanc up there covered in snow and you are swimming in
Richard Petrie:the, so anyway, we, we love the mountain sort of thing and we, we moved to a place
Richard Petrie:in New Zealand, um, called aka, which is sort of the New Zealand version of that.
Richard Petrie:And, um, yeah, we, we loved our time in France.
Richard Petrie:We learned a little bit of French.
Richard Petrie:We ate some of the French food and got into the French lifestyle.
Richard Petrie:And, uh, just a great place to go to if you ever can.
Jon Clayton:Oh, that sounds amazing.
Jon Clayton:Yeah.
Jon Clayton:You know what I'd, I've yet to make it to the Alps, and I love the mountains just.
Jon Clayton:Crazy.
Jon Clayton:You know, I live in the uk.
Jon Clayton:It's actually not that far away.
Jon Clayton:So, um, definitely on my bucket list.
Jon Clayton:Um, for sure.
Jon Clayton:So Richard, thanks again for joining me today.
Jon Clayton:Really enjoyed the conversation and, um, I, I, I think this is just so
Jon Clayton:valuable what we've been talking about.
Jon Clayton:Could you just remind everyone where's the best place online to connect with you?
Richard Petrie:Uh, well, if you go to our, our website is Arch Marketing, A RCH.
Richard Petrie:marketing.org.
Richard Petrie:Just go there.
Richard Petrie:It's our website.
Richard Petrie:There's a whole, you know, there's a whole lot of offers there.
Richard Petrie:There's a whole lot of free, there's lots of blogs with that.
Richard Petrie:Explain a lot of the concepts that I've explained today.
Richard Petrie:They're, most of 'em are, well, they're all free.
Richard Petrie:Um, so go there and help yourself to all the free stuff.
Richard Petrie:And if you find yourself wanting to upgrade, then it'll be very easy
Richard Petrie:for you to do that on the website.
Jon Clayton:That's awesome.
Jon Clayton:Thanks again, Richard.
Richard Petrie:Thank you, John.
Jon Clayton:Next time I'm joined by Heidi Uri to talk about long-term
Jon Clayton:online strategies to build your visibility without burnout.
Jon Clayton:Thanks so
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