Posts Tagged Advertising

5 Cheap Ways to Market Your Business

Written by Susan LaPlante-DubePrecision Marketing Group
Posted By Natan Lustgarten - Asylum Design Group

Think you can’t afford to implement any effective marketing tactics? Think again. Here are five ways to make a splash on a shoestring budget.

Eager to expand your client base and spread the word about your products and services? Wondering if you should even bother with marketing programs if you don’t have thousands of dollars to spend?

The answer, of course, is yes. It’s financially riskier for a business not to market. And there are literally hundreds of cost-effective ideas you can use to increase your revenue. Here are five high-impact marketing approaches that don’t cost a bundle and that can work for virtually every business.

1. Talk to your clients. It’s amazing how much money businesses spend to gather market information and attract new clients when they have a wealth of opportunity and information in their existing client base. One of the best ways to increase revenue is to talk to existing customers. Ideally, this should be done by someone outside your company so clients are willing to be honest and open.

When you assess perceptions, you don’t need to talk to hundreds of individuals; simply choose 5 to ten clients and contact them to ask if they’d participate in a phone interview. Here’s how it works:

1. Send a letter asking permission to have someone contact them about your company.

2. Have the interviewer call and ask value-based questions such as:

  • What problems were you trying to solve or what challenges were you facing when you considered the services of Company ABC?
  • How important were Company ABC’s services in solving your problems or addressing your challenges?
  • What did you value most about this company’s work?
  • What other products or services do you wish they offered that could help you with other business challenges?

3. After all the interviews have been conducted, compile the information to discover trends and themes.

4. Send a thank-you letter to every client who participated. Include key lessons from the interviews and explain the specific changes you plan to make to your business based on this information.

The important part here is to use what you learn. If you don’t make changes to your business, then you’ve wasted everyone’s time. One company that recently did this tripled its business in one year-the owners learned what people wanted, how their solution made a difference, how to present it, and how to price it, and then proceeded to make changes that improved those areas.

Keys to success: The conversation with your customers is just that, a conversation. Don’t fire questions at them; instead, have the interviewer engage in a conversation and gather as much valuable data as you can. Remember, it’s not about how satisfied they are-it’s about how much they valued your product or service.

2. Creatively package your marketing campaigns. A postcard is one way to market your business. But how about putting a small box together with a fork, knife, spoon and a custom printed napkin that invites your prospect to “have lunch on us?” Think outside the box, and your marketing campaigns will have more impact.

And don’t be afraid to see what other people in other industries are doing and adapt that to your business. Think about the little details that will get attention. I once did a marketing program to the food industry that had a brochure vacuum-sealed in the same plastic used to wrap bacon. The same piece sent to technology companies used static shield envelopes. This campaign earned 96% recognition when follow-up calls were placed.

Keys to success: Set a clear objective for your marketing campaign, and identify how you’ll measure its success. Then follow up to measure the results and adjust the program if necessary.

3. Get the word out with publicity. Think you can’t do PR or publicity without employing the services of a high-priced firm? You can! Although a good firm brings tremendous contacts and experience, most small companies can do enough PR on their own to spark the public’s interest. One great resource for the media unsavvy comes from Shock PR, a Holliston, Massachusetts-based public relations firm. Their product, PR in a Box, delivers templates, tips and step-by-step instructions on how to prepare releases and pitch stories that will intrigue the media.

Keys to success: In one word, leverage. Though it does happen, don’t expect one story placement to generate thousands in revenue. Your success depends on leveraging each press release, each article and each published mention. Put it all on your Web site: Create a news page and add a What’s New area on your home page. Add it to your marketing kit and send the piece to clients, colleagues and professional organizations. Include a note in your newsletter that says ‘Recently Seen In…’ And remember: PR is more cost-effective and more credible than advertising.

4. Leverage existing relationships. Most people know at least 200 people. Do the math: If you know 200 people and they each know 200 people, that’s 40,000 potential contacts! Spend time developing relationships with the people you already know-clients, colleagues, people you meet through professional networking organizations, friends and even family.

Start by making a list of all the people you know. Next, prioritize your list into As, Bs and Cs. As are your advocates. These are the people who feel strongly about you. They’re the “cheerleaders” who would refer business to you right now. Bs could become advocates if they knew more about you, so you need to spend time with these people to educate them. Cs are those people you don’t communicate with often enough. You may keep them in the loop, but they need more time and nurturing before they’d refer any business your way. If there are any names that remain, delete them.

Keys to success: Educate, don’t sell. The key here is to build relationships. These develop over time as you create credibility and trust. To be truly effective, you must always be on the lookout for ways you can help your network. Start from the perspective of giving more than you ask, and your network will become your most valuable marketing tool.

5. Commit to e-mail marketing. Marketing through e-mail is flexible, cost-effective, easy to measure (assuming you put the right tracking in place), and high impact. It allows you to easily drive traffic to your Web site, reach a broad geographic audience and stay in frequent contact with your customers and prospects. E-mail marketing allows you to market your services and establish your expertise with your audience.

Use it for newsletters, new product announcements or to share your publicity success-the ideas are endless. But know that this flexibility and ease-of-use can cause problems. Remember, this is a marketing campaign. So be sure to think it through, develop an appropriate message, create a piece that reflects your brand, know your objectives, and make sure the information is valuable for your market, or people will quickly unsubscribe.

Keys to success: Don’t be seen as a “spammer”! Send e-mail only to those people who have given permission. When someone asks to be removed, respond immediately.


Susan LaPlante-Dube is president of Precision Marketing Group in Upton, Massachusetts, where she focuses on creating customized marketing solutions that deliver solid business results for organizations ranging from solo practitioners to Fortune 500 companies. To sign up for Susan’s “Matters of Marketing” newsletter, or to learn more, visit www.precisionmarketinggroup.com.

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How to Write a Killer and Magnetic Headlines and Titles

By Branko Rakic in Writing

How to create great headlines and titles to turn your prospects into buying customers using hypnotic words that will empower them to purchase your product or service, join your ezine.

First of all, you must learn how to get your prospects to trust you. This is true on every field. We trust those that are more like ourselves or one that we have been conditioned to believe.

“How many of you do not trust car salesman? This is because you have been repeatedly told over and over again, how they can not be trusted. Not every car salesman is going to give you a bad deal, just as every young man with long hair and holes in their jeans are not criminals.”

All of us resist people we do not trust, even though it starts in our subconscious mind. So, you must learn how to get your prospects to trust you with an unconscious connection.

This can be done by perceiving others behavior and mimicking or mirroring it so to speak. To rich this we must use “embedded commands”.

What are embedded commands? This is a term from NLP that stands for Neuro-Linguistic Programming. NLP is founded on then idea that the language and behavior of a person is extremely ordered. These behaviors and language can be either functional or dysfunctional. This order or structure can be organized into a mimicking form.

This means that others can copy the language or behavior of another to produce the same results in order to improve there late comings. This in essence means that the way in which we act or feel is based on how we perceive the world instead of the real world.

An embedded command is a technique used in NLP, which will plant a thought in the mind of another person just beneath that person’s conscious awareness. Embedded commands utilize the use of commanding tone to be effective. The command generally formulates words into a question, with the tone however being in the form of a command.

The reason people use embed commands is to get their listener to do you wish them to do in a non-intrusive or demanding manner.

Example

Look at this sentence:

“You should buy this software.”

Now look at the same sentence only written a little differently. “You know, that some people find they really want to purchase this software.”

What happened in the second sentence is that you let the person know that other people want to purchase this software and like most people they believe in their own minds they are better than most people or at least want to know as much as everyone else put there.

You can also use the same sentence and use other hypnotic phrases such as:

I don’t know if you knew it, but some people find they really want to purchase this software.

And I’d like to have you discover… that some people find they really want to purchase this software.

Headlines that Control the Mind

You will need to learn how to write headlines that will control the mind of your prospects. Yes, this is possible.

Three elements you must have in your headline to control the mind include:

Engagement: The easiest way to engage thought is by asking an open-ended question.

Curiosity: Mother nature has endowed each of us to be curious creatures, appeal to a person’s curiosity and you can hypnotize almost everyone.

Short and Sweet: In general, most people want to know at glance what the letter is all about. Use a headline that is short. You can always use a longer headline as a secondary headline or sub headline. The first short headline should lead into the longer headline, which can be more hypnotic than the first one. You need to create cravings if you want prospects.

In reality, people do not purchase products; they purchase altered states of emotion. You must convince your prospects that the products will give them something they desire or crave.

You must have a product that is in area of human desire. Remember everyone wants to look and feel younger, thinner, have more energy, and of course have more stamina.

Let us see some examples of good headlines.

For Health fitness products:

Eat Right, Stay Fit, Feel Young, Gain Energy, Enjoy Less Pain

Headlines for relationships:

Attract the opposite sex, Find True Love, Improve Communication with your kids, Be noticed by your Boss, Be admired by coworkers

Headlines for finance and employment:
Be successful, Gain more knowledge, Scale the ladder of success, Get the promotion you deserve, Fire your boss

These examples are here to show you how to create your own effective headlines. Your headlines must convince your prospects that they really need you product or service. People usually buy what they want, not what they need.

About The Author:

Branko Rakic:
Millions Through Mind Control http://masscontrol.tosobiz.com/
Web Traffic Pro:
Free internet marketing videos and lessons.http://www.web-traffic-pro.com/

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New Green Marketing Guidelines

5-Mar-2009
Marketing Green

New guidelines on green marketing have been issued by the Commerce Commission. Sparked by the growing tide of “greenwash”, the guidelines are targeted at businesses using environmental claims in their advertising.

Among the practices the Commission cautions against are:

  • making claims that are vague (”green” or “environmentally friendly”)
  • overstating the environmental benefits of a product
  • using environmental images to imply environmental benefits that don’t exist
  • using business names (”The Absolutely Green V8 Car Company”) that imply green credentials that don’t exist.

Director of Fair Trading, Adrian Sparrow, says “green claims are a new area of focus for the Commerce Commission because we see it as an emerging area of concern. We already have active investigations in this area and businesses would be well advised to read the guidelines and seek legal advice about any green marketing claims they are making”.

Misleading claims breach the Fair Trading Act. Penalties can include fines of up to $60,000 for individuals and $200,000 for a company.

More information

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Interactive Media Advertising Growth on Major Upswing

Interactive media’s share of worldwide advertising expenditures is expected to hit 15% in 2009, almost double from four years ago, and will remain the main source of growth as ad spending in traditional media continues to decline, finds a study from WPP’s GroupM.

groupm-logo

Ad spending in interactive media – internet, mobile and gaming – reached 11% in 2007, sparked mostly by gains recorded in the US and Western Europe, as well as by the increased use and availability of improved handsets, inexpensive laptops, faster broadband, and extensive Wi-Fi connections.

The survey covers 35 countries and shows digital advertising’s share of total ad investment rising from 8% in 2005 to 15% in 2009:

The “Interaction: Addressable, Searchable, Social and Mobile” study finds that internet advertising has been the principal source of media investment growth in western nations since 2001 as spending in traditional media has leveled off.

Among other key findings of the report:

  • Almost 45% of 2007 interactive ad spending counted as display, a figure that is expected to fall slightly. Paid search advertising accounted for 38% and is expected to grow.
  • Google commanded a median 86% share of 2007 search inquiries in the survey’s sample of 35 countries, somewhat ahead of other industry samples.
  • The mean online shopping spend per user in 2007 was estimated at $471, and the only country to break the $1,000 mark was Denmark.
  • The survey also revealed a particularly strong positive correlation between broadband penetration and annual online spend per individual.
  • There is also strong positive correlation between the amount of broadband a country has and the internet’s share of advertising investment.
  • Demographics alone will sustain growth in internet use among consumers for at least another generation, and possibly two, as those under 25 years old carry their habits into middle age and beyond.

The study also found that the amount of time consumers spent online was increasing, from a mean of 27 minutes daily in 2005 to a projected 46 minutes next year.

The report concluded that the increased time was generally not a result of consumers’ spending less time with TV, radio and print but rather carving out more time to spend online each year, or possibly multitasking, which raises the bar for advertising creativity and engagement.

“This report aims to improve advertisers’ success rate in digital marketing,” said Rob Norman, global CEO of GroupM Interaction. “There’s little doubt that interactive channels are increasingly vital to delivering reach and engagement and will only become more so in the coming years. This report sheds considerable light on how best to use these platforms and how marketers can get the most out of their investment in them.”

About the study: In addition to spending forecasts, the survey also explores interactive media use in 35 countries, including a look at consumer time spent online compared with other media, e-commerce, top websites, and related interactive activities. It also quantifies ad investment in paid search, internet display, mobile, email, and gaming.

groupm-interactive-ad-spend-share-of-measured-media-by-region-2005-20091

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