I got our first client through what today might be called fax spam. It started simply enough, during my last job, I had created a database of over 4,000 nonprofit organizations in the San Francisco Bay Area. We had a website up ad running, but it attracted mostly individuals and nonprofit technology consultants or other technology consultants, not nonprofits. So I made the decision. In the database we had created for a directory of nonprofits in the Bay Area, about 2/3rds had fax numbers. A one page newsletter, fairly well designed, and with easy opt-out instructions, a scanner to test what shades of greys vs blacks and whites transmitted best, a Mac, and a copy of FaxSTF; I started. Twice a month, a one-page nonprofit technology tip sheet with resources. Very little about our organization was on the fax, just our logo, our tagline, a brief note on how to remove or subscribe, and two lines stating that a wide variety of technology services including website design, database development, user support, system administration, and procurement assistance was available.
The first week, about 20 organizations called and asked to be removed from the fax. After the second delivery, 10 organizations had called and requested to be added. By the third, we had one emergency tech support client. Not much total bill was about $150, for a day spent rebuilding an entire network infected with some virus or another (small network). By week five, someone was impressed with our backend database and wanted us to design a new database for them. The database turned into two integrated databases, which lead to a database to web project with a different client who was introduced through the first. We kept up the fax Tip, Tricks, & Resources page for about two years, before we just didn’t have time for it.
Sometimes giving your knowledge away works well for persuading people to purchase your services.