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Fri, 04 Nov 2005
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Posted 13:27
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Sun, 18 Sep 2005
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| Five Costly Marketing Errors ! |
Five Costly Errors That May Be Preventing Your
Marketing Messages From Getting The Results You
Want
by Shirley Hanson
What marketing
tools
don't work for you?
We ask this question when we welcome subscribers
to our zine. Their answers are consistent: "We
sent out a mailing and got no response," they may
say. Or they tell us, "Our letters, postcards, or
brochures failed."
What went wrong?
You may be surprised. The reasons you find here
may not be what you suspect. You may be
thinking, "Direct mail letters (or other marketing
communications such as a Yellow Pages ads,
brochures, newspaper ads, etc.) just don't work
for someone in my business."
Because you and your 3-fold brochure, sales
letter, or other marketing message are not in
front of us, we can't pinpoint exactly why it fell
short. We can, though, give you five of the most
common errors that may be shutting the door on the
results you want.
And just by reversing these mistakes your
marketing communications can become winners!
#1- Not Precisely Pinpointing
Your Target
Market:
One of our clients, a leading
networking company,
relied heavily on seminars for its sales. To boost
attendance at one seminar, it placed an ad in the
local newspaper inviting anyone and everyone to
attend. With its wide-open y'all come approach,
the ad attracted students looking for information
and a free lunch.
Instead of desperately trying to fill seminar
seats, the company would have done better to more
precisely identify its target -- the information
technology managers and executives who make
decisions about networks.
Even if your message is the greatest, it will fail
if it doesn't reach the right people.
#2-Spending Money On The Wrong
Marketing
Medium:
A new video producer we interviewed
for an article
told us this story. After creating a video about
dog training, he developed a marketing strategy --
to place a $600 ad in TV Guide. After all, he
reasoned, there has to be a pack of dog owners
among its 20 million readers. Perhaps. But only
one of them ordered the video.
He would have a greater chance of success by
trying out an ad in a publication geared to dog
lovers or, perhaps, purchasing a list from one of
these publications and testing a mailing.
The better you can describe and understand your
market, the more likely you are to find them. And
the more you zero in on exactly where they hang
out in groups (such as readers of specialized
publications or newsletters), the less you risk
choosing a time-and-money-swallowing marketing
medium.
#3-Putting a Fog Around Your
Message:
Sometimes business people write marketing
communications with the belief they should, above
all else, be clever. (Or, worse, they pay others
to concoct these witty or whimsical messages for
them.) As a result, their main message becomes
clouded. Another frequent fault is to obscure
their message with jargon.
Or they may bury their message beneath a display
of sensational verbal or graphic fireworks. Think
of the number of Web sites you've seen where the
message is submerged or nonexistent.
Be alert! Don't let anything come between you and
the message you want your prospects to remember
and respond to.
#4-Relying On Image And A
Brochure To Carry
The Day:
By image we mean marketing communications with the
sole purpose of creating an image and awareness of
your firm, product, or service. They attempt to be
a work of art. Watch out! Sometimes they take the
form of a glossy brochure with slick photographs
and attention-grabbing layout.
The problem is they do not produce measurable
results, nor do they provide feedback to guide you
in improving your marketing message.
If you have $10 million to spend on marketing,
your image brochure (or ad) may work for you . . .
some day. It's unlikely that it can prompt your
prospects to act now.
Read on to find out exactly what goes in your
brochure or ad to grab your best prospects and
urge them to respond at once.
#5-Not Acting On The Power Of
Marketing
Leverage:
What is marketing leverage?
Controlled studies by successful advertising
experts have measured the impact of headlines,
offers, copy, and graphics. By testing -- changing
these elements one at a time and comparing results
from direct response ads -- the experts discovered
the following differences between responses to the
best and worst versions of each element.
#6-The champions, please...
Headline: a response that was 21 times greater
Offer: a response that was 10 times greater
Copy: a response that was 5 times greater
Graphics: a response that was 5 times
greater
#7-How can you take advantage of
this
information?
If your marketing communication does not have
an
offer, develop one. If it has a lackluster offer,
make it irresistible. If your marketing document
does not have a headline, create one. If it has a
humdrum headline, generate one that grabs the
attention of your prospects.
How about you? Do you suspect that one or more of
these errors caused your marketing messages to
fall short?
By avoiding these expensive mistakes you will
improve your chances of success. Put these errors
behind you and produce marketing communications
that get attention and results.
Copyright 1998 by Shirley Hanson. She is a
writer
and direct marketer who helps consultants and high-
tech firms attract more clients and customers for
higher revenues. Also, she specializes in writing
Web content that makes a difference -- more
visitors who stay longer. You can subscribe to her
free zine The Marketing Energizer for
Consultants.
Brought to you by: World Wide Information
Outlet -
http://certificate.net/wwio/ ,
your source of
FREEWare Content online.
The Hanson Marketing Group Web site features
marketing tips, techniques, and A-to-Z steps at
http://www.hansonmarketing.com<
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Posted 11:46
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