Archive for good marketing

The Big “O”

At goodmedia we are all about organic — from what we wear, to what we eat, to how we grow our business. The most impactful way to grow your business is through organic growth. We hear that phrase all the time — organic growth. But really, what the heck does it mean? Well, it is really quite simple. There are four basic ways to grow your business organically.

1.    Acquire more customers
2.    Sale current customers more products/services
3.    Sale current customers more expensive products/services
4.    Sale current customers more profitable products/services

The most obvious choice of the four is to acquire more customers and in so doing create a larger base from which to draw revenue.

An, “If you build it, they will come” philosophy has been the ruin of many small businesses. There is a reason why the movie was called Field of Dreams. In the real world, building your business is the easy part, getting the customers to come to you is the hard part. So, how do you draw more customers? Marketing.

  • Research and create a strategic marketing plan. You may want to enlist the help of a professional.
  • Evaluate your current product/service offerings and make necessary adjustments to reach out to a client base you are not currently addressing.
  • Know what the competition charges and price your product/services accordingly.
  • Know your customers PROBLEM and be the SOLUTION.

Marketing Tips

  • Target Marketing. Get comfortable with the fact that not everyone is your client. Narrow in on who your target market is, and develop a pitch and sales collateral that is effective for that niche.
  • Maximize Your Budget. Don’t overlook the importance of sales. You will get more bang for your marketing dollar by focusing on the sales-marketing relationship. These two are co-dependents. There is no use in spending money on marketing if it is not followed up with aggressive sales efforts and vice versa. And, your sales efforts provide the client interfacing necessary to build effective marketing tools.
  • Make Personal Contact. Make a point to call at least ten potential clients everyday. Call — not email. There is great value in personal phone calls that is lost in email. Follow your call up with a handwritten note.

I also recommend Jeff Crilley’s book, FREE PUBLICITY. As an Emmy winning reporter, Jeff knows the insider tricks to getting media attention. Free publicity is always a good thing.

Marketing is not an event, but a process. It has a beginning, a middle, but never an end, for it is a process. You improve it, perfect it, change it, even pause it. But you never stop it completely. - Jay Conrad Levinson

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Discovering Your Golden Arches

What do Nike, McDonalds, Exxon and Google all have in common? A brand so strong we can all close our eyes and see it as though it were right in front of us. Now, close your eyes and think about your own business. What do you see? If the answer is a black void of nothingness, then you can be sure that is what your clients see as well.

We all have brands we know and love. We have brands that we are loyal to simply because of the emotional connection we have as consumers with the brand. Think about Apple. There is an entire cult-like following with the Apple brand. I know because I am one of them. Apple has done an extraordinary job at cultivating the market and making it cool to be a part of the Apple way of life. McDonald’s is another example. I am pretty sure we never ate at McDonald’s when I was a child. But I know for a fact, I begged my parents to stop and eat there just about every time I saw those glorious arches.

Developing a strong brand that your clients can connect with is the most important aspect of marketing and growing your business. Read on to learn more about how you create a strong brand for your business.

The American Marketing Association (AMA) defines a brand as a “name, term, sign, symbol or design, or a combination of them intended to identify the goods and services of one seller or group of sellers and to differentiate them from those sellers. Branding is about setting yourself apart from the competition and creating a connection with your target market so that they see you as the only solution to their problem. Starbucks is a great example. Starbucks has done such a tremendous job of branding their product that many people will only drink Starbucks coffee. As a matter of fact, you often hear people say, “Want to go get a Starbucks?” The Starbucks brand has almost become synonymous with the word coffee. To successfully brand yourself, your product or your service, you must understand the needs and wants of your client. Branding is about how your potential client perceives and connects with you, your services or your product.

Brand Objectives

1. Deliver a clear message.
2. Establish credibility.
3. Make an emotional connection.
4. Motivate the prospect to become a buyer.
5. Establish user loyalty.

So, you may be wondering … how do I accomplish these objectives? You first have to define your brand. Spend some time with the following questions. Be honest with yourself in the answers. You may want to brainstorm with your colleagues or partner.

Defining Your Brand
1. Define the qualities of the products and services that your company offers.
2. What solution does your product or service provide?
3. What are the core values of your products, services and company?
4. What is your company’s mission statement and is it in line with your core values?
5. What sets you apart from the competition? What do you offer that is different from the competition?
6. Who is your target market? Who do your products and services attract? Are the answers to these two questions congruent with one another?
7. Does your company have a tagline? How effective is it in communicating your company’s mission statement?
8. Create a personality, character or symbol for your company that represents your products or services. What is the character like? What qualities stand out? Is the personality of your company innovative, creative, energetic, or sophisticated? Is this personality something that will resonate with your clients?
9. Use the personality you created to build a relationship with your target market. How does that personality react to your target audience? Which characteristics and qualities get the attention of your prospects?
10.Using your answers to the above questions create a profile for your company. Describe the personality or character you created with words just as if you were writing a biography. Be creative and very descriptive.

Once you have a solid concept of your brand and feel certain it accomplishes your brand objectives, you must evaluate how effectively your current corporate identity is communicating your brand. Do your clients “get” what your company is all about? What is the emotion your clients experience when connecting with your company? Your company’s brand is the very foundation of your business. Your brand is the absolute center of all your marketing initiatives and is not an area that should be overlooked. Consistency in your marketing collateral and overall corporate culture is vital to the growth of your business.

Once you have discovered your Golden Arches you must implement your branding strategies at every single point of public contact. When you close your eyes and see your brand, you need to feel confident you see exactly what your clients see.

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The Power of Web Relationships

Clients frequntly ask me about ways to market their business on a shoestring budget. Blogging is the best way to accomplish just that. And, guess what? It is free. Remember the days of googling the name of the guy (or gal) who gave you his phone number at the bar and getting all the low-down scoop on him? Well, those days are almost gone. Unless, of course, he is doing some social networking. There is so much content available on the Internet, it is getting more and more difficult to get noticed than ever before.

Wikipedia defines Social Networking as a social structure made of nodes (which are generally individuals or organizations) that are tied by one or more specific types of interdependency, such as values, visions, idea, financial exchange, friends, kinship, dislike, conflict, trade, web links, etc. HUH? Simply put, social networking is setting up profiles on various sites such as Facebook, MySpace, Moli, LinkIn, Gaia Community; the list goes on and on.

Social networks are comprised of nodes and ties. Nodes are the individual actors (you) within the networks, and ties are the relationships between the actors (who you know and who knows you and who knows who you know).

Social networking gets really cool when you add in the component of blogging. Blogs are a collaborative space. A political soapbox. A breaking-news outlet. A collection of links. Your own private thoughts. Memos to the world. Your blog is whatever you want it to be. There are millions of them, in all shapes and sizes, and there are no real rules. In simple terms, a blog is a Web site where you write stuff on an on-going basis. New stuff shows up at the top, so your visitors can read what’s new. Then they comment on it or link to it or email you. Or not.
There are about as many blog programs as there are social networking sites. Take your pick … WordPress, Blogger, Moveable Type, Livejournal, Battle Blog, Blog.com, Blogabond, Blogging Systems, Blogonize, Blue Kaffee, DeadJournal, GreatestJournal, LiveJournal, MySpace, NooBlog, Open Diary, Square Space, TypePad. Typo, Windows Live Spaces, WordPress.com, Xanga, Vox.

If you are offically totally overwhelmed, no worries. goodmedia is happy to set your blog up for you. Heck, we will even write it for you if you want.

Once you get your blog up and running, start telling the world what you think. Toot your horn about your business, but most important teach the public something. Content is Queen. We all want to learn something. When people ask the google gods questions, they want answers. The more you blog, and the more places you post your blog, the more likely the google gods are to point the seeker in your direction.

You can access public blogs, as well as your own. What is your platform? Oprah.com, Ivillage.com, Thatsfit.com, GreenDaily.com, cnn.com. Again, there is no limit to the number of place you comment. I will admit that I have become quite the addict on CNN. I just can’t help myself!

Check out the Web sites to your favorite magazines, professional associations, local news, favorite products.

You have to provide the content, google will do the rest. Don’t believe me? Just google goodmedia communications. We are totally in with the google gods!

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