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How to find customers in B2B?
Post 1 of 33
HelloKitty
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No Company Website yet
Overall Ranking MVP:674 Rank:302

[em14]Dear All,

Do you have some effcient ways to find potential customers in B2B websites? Tks.

05 May 2009 19:58
Post 2 of 33

you can write best related keywords in search box, it will give you best results.
15 Jun 2009 00:22
Post 3 of 33
I'm always a little passive in B2B business,I just wait for customers' response,I nearly break down.[em22]
16 Jun 2009 00:05
Post 4 of 33
ellen_liu1987
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No Company Website yet
Overall Ranking MVP:63 Rank:75,525
yes, come on, hello kitty, we can success as long as you can work harder and harder[em2]
30 Jun 2009 00:02
Post 5 of 33
Have faith and keep trying. [em20]
23 Jul 2009 03:25
Post 6 of 33
offering payment with paypal and dropshipping service...
28 Jul 2009 12:27
Post 7 of 33
I am almost tired of it!
Everyday do the same job. nothing interesting at all!
so do I .[em23]
04 Sep 2009 01:40
Post 8 of 33
try learning trading business from professionals,
Let say you want to trade cars, try this one:
http://06e78itlm8v9vgf06gqe64hkud.hop.clickbank.net/?tid=IMPEXP

it really helped me. Still using it to check stuff i forget.
04 Sep 2009 04:37
Post 9 of 33

Basic Methods to Get Feedback from Customers

Far too often, we think we know what our customers think and want because -- well, we just know, that's all. Wrong! Businesses can't be successful if they don't continue to meet the needs of their customers. Period. There should be few activities as important as finding out what your customers want for products and services and finding out what they think of yours. Fortunately, there are a variety of practical methods that businesses can use to feedback from customers. The methods you choose and how you use them depend on what the type of feedback that you want from customers, for example, to find out their needs in products and services, what they think about your products and services, etc. Employees Your employees of usually the people who interact the most with your customers. Ask them about products and services that customers are asking for. Ask employees about what the customers complain about. Comment Cards Provide brief, half-page comment cards on which they can answer basic questions such as: Were you satisfied with our services? How could we provide the perfect services? Are there any services you'd like to see that don't exist yet? Competition What is your competition selling? Ask people who shop there. Many people don't notice sales or major items in stores. Start coaching those around you to notice what's going on with your competition. (See Competitive Analysis.) Customers One of the best ways to find out what customers want is to ask them. Talk to them when they visit your facility or you visit theirs. (See Questioning and Listening.) Documentation and Records Notice what customers are buying and not buying from you. If you already know what customers are buying, etc., then is this written down somewhere? It should be so that you don't forget, particularly during times of stress or when trying to train personnel to help you out. Focus Groups Focus groups are usually 8-10 people that you gather to get their impressions of a product or service or an idea. (See Focus Groups.) Surveys by Mail You might hate answering these things, but plenty of people don't -- and will fill our surveys especially if they get something in return. Promise them a discount if they return the completed form to your facility. (See Survey Design.) Telephone Surveys Hire summer students or part-time people for a few days every six months to do telephone surveys. (See Survey Design.) www.sinyo-faucet.com E: jackfaucet@gmail.com[em18] [em18]

04 Sep 2009 17:31
Post 10 of 33
No enquiry, no customer
08 Sep 2009 02:52
Post 11 of 33
[em13]Maybe you can use the domain search to fine the potential customers...[em1]
08 Sep 2009 06:40
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