More Low-Cost Marketing Ideas for Your Business in 2009

As I discussed the other day, your marketing efforts in this down-turn economy must be supported by a simple but vital three-legged stool:

  1. Excellent customer service
  2. A customer-appreciation and retention program
  3. A customer referral program

Once these three vital elements are in place, any other marketing ideas you put in play will have a far greater chance of success.  Now, based on your particular business, your past marketing successes, and your personality, take a look at the brainstorming list below to consider what other free or low-cost marketing ideas may get the word out about your products or services.  Feel free to mix and match, using as many of these concepts as you can (in a synchronized, non-competing way) to build your brand, bring in customers and explode your profit!

Note: The $ indicates this method will require some cost to implement.  A method is noted as free if you can implement it for no more cost than the time and supplies you use to create it (i.e. a flyer is called free because it costs you nothing to hang it up on a bulletin board, but you will need to pay for the paper and ink to print it up.)

  • Flyers/coupons hung on local free announcement bulletin boards
  • Eye-catching signs outside your shop
  • Local Pennysaver ads ($)
  • Local classified ads ($)
  • Cold-calling to former customers you haven’t seen in a while
  • An e-mail newsletter
  • A print newsletter to hand out…
  • …or mail ($)
  • Ultra-targeted direct mail (i.e. mailing a circular to everyone within a mile of your retail location) ($)
  • You do have a website, don’t you? ($)
  • Blog posting
  • e-newsletter
  • Forum conversations
  • Twitter, Facebook, MySpace, etc., etc. etc. ad nauseum.
  • Print circular
  • Free consultations
  • Public Access infomercial ($)
  • Press releases to local newspapers
  • Web press releases
  • Search engine optimization
  • Search engine submission
  • Online classifieds
  • www.Craigslist.org
  • all the Craigslist wannabes
  • Write articles on your specialty for online and offline submission
  • Business cards to hand out everywhere ($)
  • really, anything at all that you can think of that keeps your name and product or service in people’s minds constantly.

If you have any questions at all about how these suggestions can be molded to fit your business, contact me at copyghost@copyghost.com and I’d love to discuss it with you.

Published in: on February 8, 2009 at 11:45 am Leave a Comment

New Special Report Available!!! – INSTANT EXPERT!!!

I’m taking this opportunity to announce the completion of a brand new Special Report entitled “Instant Expert: How to “Write the Book” On the Topic of Your Choice and Make a Killing At It”, and to make it available FREE OF CHARGE to all my valued blog readers. 

I think you’ll get some valuable information from this report, which helps break down the sometimes-complex world of self-promotion into some manageable chunks, and also helps explain how a hard-working, high-quality ghostwriter can help you get to where you want to be professionally.

If you’d like to get your FREE copy, please click here: http://www.copyghost.com/Expert.html

Published in: on October 25, 2008 at 10:24 pm Leave a Comment

Some More Gems from “Scientific Advertising” by Claude Hopkins

I hate to bore anyone with this book, but I am on my fifth or sixth re-reading of “Scientific Advertising” by Claude Hopkins, and I still enjoy it every time.  Of course, it was written ages ago and his application is dated, but the principles he discusses are timeless, and still as valid in today’s net-friendly, media-saturated world as they were then, in the hey-day of mail order catalogs and newspaper display ads. 

See what you can glean out of this lengthy excerpt from Chapter 22, The Conclusion:

A rapid stream ran by the writers boyhood home. The stream turned a wooden wheel and

the wheel ran a mill. Under that primitive method, all but a fraction of the streams

potentiality went to waste.

Then someone applied scientific methods to that stream – put in a turbine and dynamos.

Now, with no more water, no more power, it runs a large manufacturing plant.

We think of that steam when we see wasted advertising power. And we see it everywhere -

hundreds of examples. Enormous potentialities – millions of circulation – used to turn a mill

wheel. While others use that same power with manifold effect.

We see countless ads running year after year which we know to be unprofitable. Men

spending five dollars to do what one dollar might do. Men getting back 30 percent of their

cost when they might get 150 percent. And the facts could be easily proved.

We see wasted space, frivolity, clever conceits, entertainment. Costly pages filled with

palaver which, if employed by a salesman, would reflect on his sanity. But those ads are

always unkeyed. The money is spent blindly, merely to satisfy some advertising whim.

Not new advertisers only. Many an old advertiser has little or no idea of his advertising

results. The business is growing through many efforts combined, and advertising is given its

share of the credit.

An advertiser of many years standing, spending as high as $700,000 per year, told the writer

he did not know whether his advertising was worth anything or not. Sometimes he thought

that his business would be just as large without it.

The writer replied, “I do know. Your advertising is utterly unprofitable, and I could prove it

to you next week. End an ad with an offer to pay five dollars to anyone who writes you that

he read the ad through. The scarcity of replies will amaze you.”

Think what a confession – that millions of dollars being spent without knowledge of results.

Such a policy applied to all factors in a business would bring ruin in short order.

You see other ads which you may not like as well. They may seem crowded or verbose.

They are not attractive to you, for you are seeking something to admire, something to

entertain. But you will note that those ads are keyed. The probability is that out of scores of

traced ads the type which you see has paid the best.

Many other ads which are not keyed now were keyed at the beginning. They are based on

known statistics. They won on a small scale before they ever ran on large scale. Those

advertisers are utilizing their enormous powers in full.

Advertising is prima facie evidence that the man who pays believes that advertising is good.

It has brought great results to others, it must be good for him. So he takes it like some secret

tonic which others have endorsed. If the business thrives, the tonic gets credit. Otherwise,

the failure is due to fate.

That seems almost unbelievable. Even a storekeeper who inserts a twenty-dollar ad knows

whether it pays or not. Every line of a big stores ad is charged to the proper department. And

every inch used must the next day justify its cost.

Yet most national advertising is done without justification. It is merely presumed to pay. A

little test might show a way to multiply returns.

Such methods, still so prevalent, are not very far from their end. The advertising men who

practice them see the writing on the wall. The time is fast coming when men who spend

money are going to know what they get. Good business and efficiency will be applied to

advertising. Men and methods will be measured by the known returns, and only competent

men can survive.

Only one hour ago an old advertising man said to the writer, “The day for our type is done.

Bunk has lost its power. Sophistry is being displaced by actuality. And I tremble at the

trend.”

So do hundreds tremble. Enormous advertising is being done along scientific lines. Its

success is common knowledge. Advertisers along other lines will not much longer be

content.

We who can meet the test welcome these changed conditions. Advertisers will multiply

when they see that advertising can be safe and sure. Small expenditures made on a guess

will grow to big ones on a certainty. Our line of business will be finer, cleaner, when the

gamble is removed. And we shall be prouder of it when we are judged on merit.

 

Published in: on September 20, 2008 at 3:40 am Leave a Comment

Gotta Give a Plug to One of My Heros: Bob Bly

Just a quick shout out to one of my heros, a man who has shown us all what it takes to become an ultra-successful freelance copywriter, and what’s available out there for us if we put our minds and efforts into the job!

www.bly.com

I spent a long evening at my other job working on some mindless reports while listening to a few of Bob’s audio seminars, which I have purchased in the past.  Every time I listen to them, it helps remind me why I want to write for a living, and gives me the motivation I need to keep plugging away.

It’s not that Bob’s a motivational speaker, because he’s not.  And it’s not even that he has a ton of out-of-this-world ideas that I’ve never heard before or couldn’t come up with on my own, because he really doesn’t. 

He’s just a really down-to-earth guy who’s made a huge success of himself in a field that I would like to one day call my only career, and he’s had the good grace to spend a tremendous amount of time and effort offering his experience and know-how to others for a reasonable fee (i.e. a few bucks for a soft-cover masterpiece like The Copywriter’s Handbook or Secrets of a Freelance Writer.)

This guy is really living the life I want to live, and he’s been doing it for decades.  He’s earned my respect, but more importantly, he’s earned my gratitude.

Thanks, Bob!

Published in: on March 13, 2008 at 2:51 am Leave a Comment