Business and Marketing Authorities, Experts and Masters

BusinessTitleA recent article of mine asked the question “Would you hire yourself?” from the standpoint of, are you really qualified to do all the things your website (or promo emails) state you can.

And we received several comments in response and one in particular inspired today’s article around how we define “authorities”, “experts” and “masters”.  After all, I call myself a “Small Business Growth and Marketing Expert” and it got me to wondering if I’ve earned the title.

Out came the dictionary:

  • An “authority” is defined as “an accepted source of information, advice” while
  • An “expert” is defined as “a person who has special skill or knowledge in some particular field” and
  • A “master” is defined as “a person eminently skilled in something, as an occupation or science”

And I thought about all the entrepreneurs who avoid the question altogether by selecting titles such as “maven”, “goddess”, “coach”, “mentor”, etc.  Titles which either have no standard definition when it comes to business or which cover all ranges of a skill set.

We’d be remiss without mentioning those titles which indicate how much revenue someone’s made from their clients: “millionaire this” or “multimillionaire that”.

Nothing wrong with it. . .just food for thought.

Let’s look at it from the business owner’s standpoint…

And from a prospective client’s point of view…

  • Who to trust?  If titles mean nothing (and given that anyone can declare themselves anything, they really don’t mean much), whom do you trust?
  • Read testimonials, check out credentials, review experience, speak with prospective vendor to see if you click, etc.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

MY REQUEST TO YOU

Ask yourself the following:

  • Are you happy with your “title”?
  • Does it fairly represent who you are, what you focus on or what your level of expertise is?
  • Do/Will your clients “get it” or do you have to explain your business?
  • If you’re calling yourself an “expert” or a “master”, can you back it up?  For example, while I can easily back up calling myself a “small business and marketing expert”, I’m not comfortable calling myself a “master” (yet).

And if you’re not happy or comfortable with your title, now’s the time to change it and/or plan what you want to do in 2012 to upgrade your skill set (or choose another field).

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Related posts:

  1. Are You Building a Business or a Marketing Empire?
  2. Why You May Not Be Succeeding In Your Business — and it’s not what you think
  3. New Marketing for the New Economy, Part I
  4. New Marketing for the New Economy, Part 2
  5. Services vs Products: The Marketing Difference
You're welcome to use this article on your website, blog or in your ezine if you include this entire blurb, without modification: If you liked this article, you'll want to hop on over to www.SandraMartini.com for more comprehensive business building and marketing strategies, articles and resources. Sandra Martini, a Small Business Mentor, founder of Escalator Marketing™ and creator of the Escalator Profits Program™, teaches small business owners and entrepreneurs how to build sustainable businesses without losing their integrity or their minds.
  • Heidi McCarthy

    Hi Sandy,

    This is great! I do get tired of hearing about all the “experts” out there who took a class from someone who is (or isn’t) and expert / master in their field and the newbie declares themselves as one also.

    I call myself a trainer and consultant. I’m comfortable with these words as I know my capabilities in both those areas. Expert? Maybe. I do know more than my clients. Master??? There is always so much too learn :-)

    Heidi