TZL 1370 (web)

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BUSINESS NEWS KILL DEVIL HILLS UNVEILS NEW ELEVATED WATER STORAGE TANK Dewberry , a privately held professional services firm, has announced that a new elevated water storage tank and water booster station expansion in Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina, has been constructed. Dewberry prepared a preliminary engineering report and provided design and construction services for the tank and 4.5-million-gallons- per-day water booster station. The tank was designed by Dewberry in partnership with American Engineering Associates and was constructed by Landmark Structures. Located at the Kill Devil Hills Fire Station, the new 400,000-gallon elevated tank became operational on June 25, 2020 and the old tank was demolished in October 2020. Dewberry’s services included hydraulic modeling to

evaluate the location, size, configuration, and operation of the new elevated tank and to evaluate the existing water distribution system for water quality, pressure, and fire flow availability. As part of the project, Dewberry developed a calibrated water model of the Kill Devil Hills water system, including the Dare County Water transmission main to allow for accurate modeling of the water quality from the supply connection points to the individual customers in the Kill Devil Hills water system. “Kill Devil Hills is a beautiful community that attracts visitors from all over each year,” says Dewberry Associate Vice President Dan Villhauer, PE, LEED AP. “This $2.9-million project helps the town reliably supply its

visitors and community members with high- quality drinking water while also increasing fire flow availability.” Dewberry is a leading, market-facing firm with a proven history of providing professional services to a wide variety of public- and private-sector clients. Recognized for combining unsurpassed commitment to client service with deep subject matter expertise, Dewberry is dedicated to solving clients’ most complex challenges and transforming their communities. Established in 1956, Dewberry is headquartered in Fairfax, Virginia, with more than 50 locations and more than 2,000 professionals nationwide.

MARK ZWEIG, from page 9

frequency. I can imagine in some cases potential clients may be contacted as frequently as daily or even more than once a day – especially if the information you are providing them with is valuable or useful to them and not just an attempt to sell them something. You have to abandon your old ways of thinking and your personal prejudices and kick up the activity dramatically. Here is why: If your response rate is 0.1 percent (one tenth of one percent), that means that you need to reach out to 1,000 people to get a single response. If you have 2,000 people on your list, that means you may get two responses. If you have 50,000 people on your list, that means you could get 50 responses. Not all responses will be leads, either, but each represents a potential lead. 9) Just because a potential client does not respond to any specific marketing effort does not mean that your effort was wasted. Your company name may now be familiar to them when it wasn’t before, and that alone could result in you making it on a shortlist or getting an approval to be hired by someone in that target client organization that you didn’t even know had anything to do with the decision-making process. Remember this. 10) If you want this list to remain viable, you have to use it. The best way to keep it current is to make it available to every single employee. Restricting access to the list and sending all changes to one person is not the way to see any but a really small list maintained. The decentralization is a critical element. And yes, there are ways to keep people from stealing the list while still providing access and the individual ability to change it when it needs changing. One last thought. Stop worrying so much about duplicate entries to your list and keeping people off the list and instead focus on getting more people on the list. Track the numbers of organizations and people on the list, and the number of changes to the list, and share this with all of your employees. Keep this list front and center. Make it important. That is the best way to build it and maintain it. MARK ZWEIG is Zweig Group’s chairman and founder. Contact him at mzweig@zweiggroup.com.

with knowing who has money. Get off that track! It is not relevant. Instead focus on finding ALL organizations that make up each sector within the geographic range you identified in step No. 2 above. Why do I say this? The reason is simple. You don’t know and won’t know what any individual organization’s plans really are, and whether or not they will have needs soon. You also don’t know if the people you are marketing to will move to another potential client organization at any time, and you want to be sure they know who you are and are top of mind the next time they need services from a firm like yours. 5) After you define your sectors, define the geographic reach you can serve, and find all organizations in that sector, regardless of whether or not they have money or you have had prior interactions with them, find all of the people in those organizations who could potentially influence the decision to hire your firm. The group of people in any organization is probably much larger than you realize. You need every one of them in your list. 6) There are many ways to find these people. Besides web searches, organization websites, trade or professional association lists, and more, we now have vehicles such as LinkedIn that allow one go to any specific organization and find many, if not most, of the people there. Get them all on your list. 7) These lists have to be much larger than most A/E firms realize. It’s not uncommon to see firms that have only a couple thousand people in their target lists. That is not enough to feed anything but a very small firm. I have more than 4,500 people in my phone alone. You need to change the way you think about your target clients and the list. A 50-person A/E firm, depending on the market sectors served, could easily have 20,000 or 50,000 people in its target client list. Instead of two or three people in a large client’s list, there could be 20 or 30, or even more per organization. Cast a much wider net. 8) These target client lists won’t do you any good unless you USE them. The idea that you will send out a Christmas card and then a couple boring project descriptions to your list over the course of the year and this is going to create new leads is naive. You need better content and much higher

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THE ZWEIG LETTER DECEMBER 7, 2020, ISSUE 1370

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