Examples of bad advertising
are all around you. Pay attention to ads from other companies and notice the ones
you like and the ones you don’t like. Most savvy marketers have a “swipe
file” where they keep ads, newsletters, and marketing ideas from others to
use as models for their own business.
The following list of
10 Marketing Mistakes is subjective and the order is not significant. Other authors
will have their own list, so take the time to peruse our resources below and take
advantage of the wealth of marketing information on the Internet.
MISTAKE
#1: Forgetting to present a professional image
“You only
have one chance to make a good first impression.” This may be a cliché,
but it’s the truth. Potential customers will make a decision whether to call
you or buy from you based on the most trivial details. If your written materials
(business cards, flyers, brochures, printed ads) are sloppy and homespun, readers
may assume that your services or products are equally substandard. If your personal
appearance is not clean and neat when you go out of your house, some will jump
to negative conclusions about the quality of your business. If your young children
answer your business telephone or if callers are distracted by “family noises”
in the background when they call, your image may be tarnished.
At
the risk of getting too basic, please don’t forget to provide complete contact
information on every promotional item that you produce. An ad, pencil, mug or
T-shirt imprinted with your business name without a phone number is not maximizing
the money you spent. If you have a Website, its URL should always be used. If
you have a slogan, use it consistently so that prospects will begin to associate
it with your business. Create a consistent and professional image, and it will
become a foundation for business growth.
MISTAKE #2:
Focusing on yourself or your company instead of on your prospect or customer
This
is probably the most common—and most preventable—marketing mistake that
businesses make. In their ads, they talk about themselves, their product, their
service, their length of time in business, yet they fail to address what their
product or service can do for their customers. Can you save your prospect money?
Can you solve a problem they have? Can you make their life easier or their own
business more profitable? That’s what a potential customer really wants to
know: “What can you do for me?” Never forget this.
MISTAKE
#3: Emphasizing the wrong elements in your ads or promotional literature
What
stands out in your ad when a reader is perusing the newspaper or scanning a Website?
Far too often, it’s your company name or your fancy logo. The rule of thumb
for a written ad is to grab the reader’s attention first—with a compelling
headline and a supporting sub-headline—then provide details elsewhere in
the ad or provide an easy way for them to get more free information.
Example:
ARE YOU PAYING HIGH ENERGY BILLS AND STILL FEELING COLD IN YOUR HOME?
Our Acme woodstove will keep you comfortable for pennies a day!
Writing good ad copy is a complex topic
about which entire books have been written. If you feel this is an area of your
business that needs improving, make it a point to learn more about it from Internet
experts or your local business library.
MISTAKE #4:
Cutting your marketing budget during slow times
It’s such
a temptation--when your sales are down and so many of your expenses are beyond
your control, you think the only place to cut corners is in your marketing budget.
Yet this would be cutting off the very best means for bringing new customers into
your business, and without a continuous flow of new customers, your business will
eventually shrivel up and blow away.
Keep your marketing campaign
steady and consistent. When cash flow is tight, consider moving to less expensive—and
perhaps less traditional—marketing venues, but never cut off your marketing
all together. If a dairy farmer started reducing the amount of feed he gave his
cows, he would soon start seeing a reduction in milk production and a deterioration
of his business. Don’t let temporary cash flow shortages put you into a downward
business spiral.
MISTAKE #5: Not giving prospects
a compelling reason to take action
Even if you have gotten
your prospects’ attention and convinced them that your product or service
can provide a solution for them, you must motivate them to take action immediately—before
their attention is diverted to something else.
This can be
done by offering such incentives as discounts, rewards/bonuses, or “limited
time” offers. You’ve probably seen television shopping ads that do this
beautifully: “Order today and we’ll also send you an additional…or
two for the price of one...or free shipping, etc.” Give your prospects a
compelling reason to act now, and you’ll greatly increase the chance that
they will do so.
MISTAKE #6: Neglecting current customers
Keeping
your current customers satisfied so they will give you repeat business is much
less expensive than getting new customers, yet so many business owners neglect
this powerful fact. These simple activities can help:
·
Stay in touch with your customers through mail, newsletters, or phone calls.
·
Follow up after you’ve made a sale to see if they are satisfied.
·
Return phone calls promptly.
· Correct problems immediately.
· Ask for testimonials and keep a file for future use
in your marketing literature (See Mistake #7 below). One testimonial from a popular
or influential member of your community can be more effective than many other
ads combined.
Negative comments from dissatisfied customers
can severely hurt you, so keep your customers happy!
MISTAKE
#7: Not using testimonials in your marketing literature
Building
credibility is one of your main tasks as a business owner, but this can be tough
when you’re new and have no positive track record. Using testimonials in
your marketing materials can be an extremely effective way of gaining a prospect’s
confidence.
Whenever you get positive feedback from a customer,
ask if you may quote them. As mentioned in #6 above, keep a file of these and
use them in your next ad, flyer, or brochure. Failure to do this is wasting a
free and powerful marketing tool
MISTAKE #8: Not offering
a guarantee
The fear of being dissatisfied or taken advantage
of is frequently the underlying reason why prospects do not buy, yet many small
business owners fear offering a guarantee because they believe it will encourage
more returns.
Marketing research has shown that the increased
sales from offering a guarantee will more than offset any increase in percentage
of returns. Anything that converts prospects to customers more easily is to your
advantage, and a customer who knows he can return something he doesn’t like
is much more likely to make a purchase in the first place.
MISTAKE
#9: Not testing your market and tracking your results
Far too
many business owners believe that their product or service will be snatched up
by thousands of customers without having done the market research to support this
belief. They spend thousands of dollars promoting something, only to find that
the market is not what they thought or that a modification would have greatly
improved the product’s marketability.
Use the Internet
to look for published information on products/services like yours. Get free feedback
from chat rooms. Take surveys (your local business school may have students who
will design and conduct a survey for you as a project for a very reasonable fee).
Put together a focus group composed of prospects from your target market.
Virtually
ALL effective marketers track their ads and marketing methods so they know which
ones pull and which ones don’t. You can easily spend thousands of dollars
on promotions that aren’t producing results, but if you don’t know which
ones they are, you’ve wasted money. Ad results can be measured by using a
code of some sort. Direct mail results can be measured by using response cards
or coupons. As in market testing, surveys and focus groups can also be used to
provide marketing feedback. Think about how you can track your results when you
plan a marketing strategy.
MISTAKE #10: Not diversifying
your marketing methods
Plan your marketing budget so that it
covers as broad a range of marketing methods as you can afford. When you use only
one or two methods, you could be severely limiting your exposure to the maximum
number of potential customers. Direct mail, print, radio, and Internet ads are
important, and sometimes TV and magazine ads can be effective if they are carefully
targeted and professionally done.
Don’t forget less obvious
ways of promoting your business:
· Get involved with
community organizations and charities.
· Network at
chamber of commerce gatherings or business associations.
·
Offer yourself as a speaker or presenter--find out if there is a speaker’s
bureau in your area.
· Offer low-cost or free seminars.
·
Throw a party to celebrate your opening, your business anniversary, or a national
holiday.
· Insert small flyers in every bill you pay.
·
Sponsor local teams.
· Participate in local discount
cards.
· Partner with other small businesses to put
on an event or sponsor an activity.
* * * * * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * *
You have undoubtedly noticed that many of
these marketing mistakes are related to one another. Almost all result from a
basic failure by the business owner to put herself in the place of the potential
customer. The Golden Rule applies in business as well as in personal life: treat
others the way you like to be treated. If you make a regular effort to think about
how you’d feel about your business or your marketing methods if you were
a prospect, you’ll often be able to correct your own marketing mistakes.
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