Many people will agree that a decent letter could be the most effective
marketing tool. If used smartly, a bunch of folded sheets will be your
treasured winner for many years. It can also be very expensive.
Everyday is open season for the large companies who mail thousands or
millions of sales literature by bulk. They have perfected their
campaigns through the years. Furthermore, they may have even began with
a proven winning strategy. It surely works for clearing houses and
catalog marketers.
It is a different story, however, for the average home mailer. Not
having a permanent marketing department or high caliber consultants, you
have plunged into the business with sheer determination. You will not
feel the pain, initially, for that occasional 100 postcard mailing or
daily booklets of stamps. However, as months go by, the gloom
of achieving a 0.01% response rate and seeing your growing pile of
printing and postal receipts finally devours your clever plan of growing
a real business. After spending $500, you net two sales, several leads,
and a bruised ego. Glance into your garbage can and seeing those
reverse mailings from other wannabees makes you feel like someone is
pouring lemon juice into your entrepreneurial wound. Still, you wake up
stronger than ever.
Testing your materials makes sense, but sticking to a loser is
hopeless. Responses will not improve just by mailing out more. Don't
break the laws of statistics. Not just because so many others are still
doing it means that it works. Usually, they know nothing better.
Everyone is into the same fantasy. Until you find success, use the
other promotional media sparingly. And when one or two clicks, you
could always afford to diversify. Each has its own merits and costs.
- Classified ads -- The best way to sell low priced items and generate
leads are the classifieds. Studies also reveal that it offers faster
results. On per-inquiry advertising, Mail Order Success Secrets, by
Tyler Hicks states that "the media person can often estimate within a
few hundred how many inquiries you will get."
- Display ads -- Space advertising ranges from the tiny 1" to full and
double page spreads. Bordered ads out pull pure text, but with added
costs. Watch for discounts on additional ads and insertions, free
typesetting and checking copies.
- Card decks -- Ad copies are usually effective in card packs when they
are around 150 words. They work well for generating leads for high
priced products or opportunities and can sell moderately priced items.
If it produces direct order revenues 2 to 3 times the cost, your
campaign can be considered a success. Cost increases as the audience
becomes more targeted.
- E-mail -- Use this free medium for your existing customer base,
downline, or receptive prospects. Forget about spamming unless you want
deep trouble.
- Fax blasting -- Many years ago, this was the meaning of high-tech. It
was reported to work for sometime. Now, people receive offers just
because they have a fax machine or they once dialed up a fax-on-demand
number. They shell out ink and paper (it adds up) and carries the cost
of having their number unlisted. There are plenty of other things.
What do you think?
- The good old flyers on the wall -- If you have the time and enjoy it
like I still do sometimes, zap some crisp copies of your favorite ad and
announcements and head to the laundromats, supermarkets and any decent
place where they will allow you to do your thing. Make it easy for
passersby to get your info. Don't expect them all to carry pens and
paper to jot your info down. They are known to rip off the whole sheet
and it's all over. Cut pull tabs or insert your cards in a pocket.
Pretty neat plus you will get some local guys.
- F.O.D.'s and web sites -- Both require external promotions for
themselves. They are like your instant portfolios where prospects can
quench their desire for instant gratification. Remember, interests can
subside overnight. Even airmail can not compete with the speed of info
traveling through the wires.
- Internet advertising -- There is too much hype about this medium. The
smart spender should base his decisions on statistics, and sometimes gut
feelings. People will con you into losing $40 for a year of web
'presence'. But are you just buying a roundtrip ticket to nowhere?
Sites should promote traffic and get you business, not just type your
text on a virtual purgatory. The web is sticky enough, who would dare
venture into nothingness? Check out things like number of hits and
their marketing program.
A good way to go is to research all available avenues before you blow a
whole bundle. If you work with a company, you may not have to re-invent
the wheel. But don't do anything big and foolish just because your
sponsor said so. If he's, honest you would not be dragged into doing
the tightrope just to increase his chances. Certainly not just because
he said he earned $5000 last month doing the same.
At least co-op ads makes a leader put his money where his mouth is. Or
is it one way of getting a free ride. Well, assuming that organizing
takes a fair amount of effort and he trusts the medium, then he
probably deserves the freebie.
Free enterprise. It's your world. You can be in a business for
yourself. Now, you don't have to make it by yourself. Help is all
around you. Just make sure that providers are really helping you get
good exposure and not just helping you spend your money.