Article

Will Seminars Get You Clients?

Topic: Small Business MarketingBy C.J. HaydenPublished Recently added

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 1,459 legacy views

Reader rating

Not enough ratings yet

Aggregate average appears after enough eligible reader ratings.

Rate this resource

Sign in to rate this resource.

Sign in to rate this resource

I often suggest public speaking as a powerful way to show prospective clients what you can do. Many professionals and consultants have built successful practices by giving free presentations to associations, businesses, and educational institutions. But what about producing your own seminar, where you arrange the logistics and invite the guests? Does this work as a strategy for landing clients?
Offering a seminar can be an effective means to become more visible to your target market. If you are a good (or even fair) presenter, and the right people come to your seminar, you will definitely get new customers. But to use seminar marketing successfully, you need to be very clear on your goals, and plan each seminar carefully.
If the purpose of your seminar is primarily to get clients, you shouldn't be expecting to make money on the seminar itself. You may wish merely to cover your expenses, or maybe even spend a little extra. For this type of seminar, the key to making it pay off is to attract people who are good prospects for your business in the first place, rather than just filling the room.
Instead of making your seminar free, it's a good idea to charge a small fee. That way, your prospective clients will perceive you as offering something of value. The fee will also discourage attendance by people who can't afford your product or service. It's the quality of the participants that matters, not the quantity.
If what you really want is for your seminar to turn a profit, you must recognize that by offering full-fee seminars, you are adding another line of business to your company. Operating as a seminar producer will require the same kind of planning and ongoing management as your existing business does.
It can be as difficult to make a profit on your first seminar as it was to originally launch your business. Many people won't sign up for a seminar the first time they see it; others would like to come but can't make the date. You'll have a better chance of making money if you plan at the outset to offer your seminar on a regular basis. You may find, though, that this takes away too much time from your core business.
Whether the seminar you are planning is promotional or for profit, estimate your projected income and expenses before making a commitment to proceed. Base the income you project solely on the fee you will charge per person multiplied by the number of attendees you expect. Don't include any projected spinoff business in your income estimate. If you land new business, you will still have to work additional hours to earn that compensation.
Typical expenses include design and printing of a flyer or brochure, postage, posting a notice on your website, purchase of mailing lists (if you don't have your own), print and Internet media ads (including calendar listings), facility rent, audiovisuals, handouts, and refreshments. You should also consider the cost of your own time to design promotional materials, compile lists, compose e-mails, and make phone calls, as noted below.
In designing a snail mail or e-mail campaign for your seminar, keep in mind that it is quite typical to get only one registration for every 100 pieces you mail, even with a pre-qualified list.
Subtract your projected expenses from your income, then make a rational decision on whether to proceed. If the purpose of your seminar is to get business, estimate how much spinoff business is likely. Before going ahead, ask yourself if there might be an easier or cheaper way to get that many new clients or contracts.
If your purpose is to make money, divide your expected profit by the number of hours it will take you to design, market, and deliver your seminar. Is that amount a reasonable level of compensation for you?
If your best guess at the numbers tells you that producing a seminar makes good business sense for you, go for it! Because people do business with those they know, like, and trust, seminars can help you build a solid client base. And because repeat contacts raise awareness, mailings and ads about your seminar will generate more visibility for your core business.

Article author

About the Author

C.J. Hayden is the author of Get Clients Now! Thousands of business owners and salespeople have used her simple sales and marketing system to double or triple their income. Get a free copy of "Five Secrets to Finding All the Clients You'll Ever Need" at http://www.getclientsnow.com

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

The Feedback Loop: How Sales Insights Sharpen the Edge of Appointment Setting In the fast-paced world of modern business, the bridge between a potential interest and a closed deal is often built by an appointment partner. These specialists act as the gatekeepers of a salesperson’s calendar, ensuring that every minute spent in a meeting is a minute spent with a high-potential prospect. However, this bridge is not a static structure. It is a living, breathing process that req

March 11, 2026

Article

The Quiet Revolution in Sunlight: How Automation and Outsourcing Are Redrawing the Solar Sales Map For years, the image of solar sales was a familiar one: a determined representative, clipboard in hand, going door-to-door under the sun they hoped to harness. It was a model built on human persistence and personal interaction. Today, that landscape is undergoing a profound and quiet transformation, not by replacing the human element, but by reimagining its focus. The future of

January 7, 2026

Article

Introduction In this digital era where everything is getting faster and smoother, the app is like a must-have tool in the corporate world to run the business in a very flexible, scalable, and future-ready manner. Among a lot of tech choices, Flutter garnered success because of its availability to write one code and use it on both Android and iOS and yet have an elegant, high-performance, and quick app. At first glance, combining Flutter with the microservices concept becomes

September 17, 2025

Article

Mobile applications act as a link between companies and their clients. Yet, creating apps for both iOS and Android can be costly. Many companies hesitate to move forward because of the high cost of native app development. This is where React Native changes the game. React Native allows businesses to build powerful and reliable apps without overspending. The Grey Space Computing team uses this framework to help the clients. We help in reducing costs and speeding up the app la

September 12, 2025