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November 23, 2009

Are You Telling Your Targets What They Need to Know?

Category: Marketing, Promotional Items — Tags: , , — Sarah @ 9:00 am

Well, are ya?

Yeah, yeah.  You tell them your phone number.  You tell them your e-mail address.  You tell them how much it costs to buy the wares you’re peddling.  But what do you tell them about you?

When you first set up your business, it’s possible that you focused on the basics.  In other words, you might have asked yourself, What goodies am I going to sell? Where am I going to sell them?  What bank is going to be delightful enough to lend me the money for this?

Then things got rolling, your customers started buying, and you were probably like, Whoa.  I have a real business! So then you may have gotten yourself some business cards, some letterhead, and maybe even a few T-shirts to pass out to your family and friends.  And that was pretty awesome.

Once all those fun milestones are under your belt, though, it’s time to look at the BIG picture.  Your business is your baby.  Except babies basically develop their own personalities, but you get to play a more direct role in the development of your business’ personality.  You can have a classy business.  A fun business.  A hippie tree hugger business.  And it’s all up to you to decide.

Maybe you’ve decided already, and you are comfortable in your company’s identity.  Maybe you’re not quite sure yet.  If it’s the latter, take a little time to think about what your business is and what you want it to be, and when you’ve thought enough to develop a sore puzzler, you’ll know.

And once you know, then you can let your clients know.

So let’s talk about a few ways to do that.  First off, a few suggestions of what not to do:

  • Call each customer at 3 AM and, in a creepy, whispery voice, tell the story of your business.
  • Write a folk song about your company’s personality and hire singing telegram people to dress as the Von Trapp children and sing it for each of your customers.
  • Spray paint key adjectives that describe your business on the exterior of your clients’ homes and/or cars.

Okay, so now that we’ve cleared that up, here are a couple of ideas that we actually do recommend:

  • Write about your company’s vibe.  And print it up in a nice, professional brochure or newsletter.  Send it out to your clients with some coupons or an ad about an upcoming sale.
  • Choose high quality promotional items that tell a little bit about your business.  Rather than occasionally giving potential customers random promotional items, come up with a welcome package of well-chosen giveaways that you give out consistently.  Make sure that the items you select really give people a feel for what your company is all about.

If you want to develop lifelong customers, you need to let your regulars know who you are, what you’re all about, and what you stand for.  Come on, don’t be shy.  Get your company’s sparkling personality out there for the world to see.

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November 9, 2009

Are You Losing Customers With Inconsistent Messages?

Category: Marketing, Promotional Items — Tags: , — Sarah @ 9:00 am

Okay, so not to get all middle school guidance counselor-y on you, but…

Who are you, really?  Deep down inside?  What makes you special?

Yeah, we know.  Eeek.  You came here hoping we might digress into some kind of strangely entertaining anecdote involving chubby penguins playing roller hockey with angry hedgehogs, but instead, here you are smack in the middle of an intervention with Dr. Phil.

Relax.  We’re not here to make you cry or to get you involved in a five-step plan for a new life.  But just for a few seconds, think about the answers to those questions – in terms of your business.  What kind of a business does your business really want to be?  And what makes your business unique?

The answers to questions like those are actually really important to what we’re going to talk about in this post – promotional items and branding.  (And no, not with a hot iron poker thing.)   Branding is all about defining your company by its unique characteristics.  Whether you are a general contractor or a plumber or a jewelry designer, you are part of a sea of thousands of people who have similar businesses.  So you have to determine what separates your business from all the rest.

Sometimes marketing geeks like us call this idea your onlyness.  In other words, what kind of statement can be made about only your business?

Are you the only roofing company in the Albany area that promises to return a customer’s call within an hour?  The only Mexican restaurant in town with a full menu until midnight?  The only income tax preparation company in the area that is open year-round?

You are the only business exactly like yours, so there is some special characteristic about your company.  And once you’ve found that characteristic, you can really play it up with the promotional items you choose.  Instead of sporadically giving out keychains, Frisbees, stickers, T-shirts, coin purses, pens, and sticky note pads, you could pick a smaller assortment of high quality promotional items that truly represent your brand and consistently give those to potential clients.

It would make sense for a company that is uniquely tech savvy, for instance, to give out flash drives instead of pencils or notepads.  Or a company that prides itself in being particularly green could go with reusable shopping bags or water bottles.  Or that year-round tax prep company that we mentioned earlier could give out a magnet with a year calendar on it to remind clients that they’re always open for business.

And as for the Angry Hedgehog & Chubby Penguin Roller Hockey League?  A black and white hockey puck coaster with an angry hedgehog on it, of course.

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November 2, 2009

Your Promotional Items Make A Difference

Category: Creativity, Promotional Items — Tags: , , , — Sarah @ 8:32 am

Naomi and Tyger work for two paperback book distributors.  Heather from Crazy Seashell Bookshop purchases books from both of them.  Let’s look at Heather’s interactions with these two salespeople and see if we can guess which company she is more likely to call next time she needs a shipment of books.

Interaction #1:

Naomi: Okay, Heather, thanks for meeting with me today.  You’ll receive your shipment of books by the end of the week.  Oh, and did I give you a business card?  Well, here’s a business card.  Oh, and have a random pen.  Have a nice day!

Heather: Thanks!

Interaction #2

Tyger: Okay, Heather, thanks for meeting with me today.  You’ll receive your shipment of books by the end of the week.  And I brought a little gift for you today.  It’s one of those new magnetic bookmarks that you can use to mark your spot in a book, right down to the line.  They’re actually really cool.

Magnetic Bookmark

Heather:  Ooh, I’ve never seen one of those before.  That’s handy!

Tyger: Yeah, I thought that might be something you’d find useful.  And if you ever need to get in touch with me, my contact info is right on the other side of the bookmark.  Well, you take it easy, and have a nice day!

Heather: Thanks!

Okay, how many people think Crazy Seashell Bookshop will be doing most of their future business with Naomi?  We didn’t think so.  Now, Heather’s interaction with Naomi was fine and all, but it really didn’t compare to her chat with Tyger.  And really, the difference came down to the promotional item that each of them chose to bring to Heather.

Since we know that Heather works at a bookstore, we can safely assume that she likes to read.  And since Heather is a human residing on Planet Earth, we can also assume that she has received a free pen at some point prior to her interactions with Naomi.  When Naomi haphazardly handed her the pen, she was neither remotely interested in it nor impressed by it.  But when Tyger smoothly slipped her the fancy bookmark, she was intrigued because it was a gift that was tailored to her interests and it was an item she had never seen before.  It opened up more dialogue between them, and later it will be something she’ll use often.

Business owners have a tendency to gravitate toward pens as a promotional item because everybody uses them.  But that’s just the problem with them.  Since they are used universally, the Heathers of the world know that they aren’t a personalized gift.  If you pick something out that targets a client’s interests or is something new and different, you are going to look like you care more about your client, and that will make your company stand out.

Tyger knows that every interaction he has makes an impression, and he wants that impression to be a good one.

Even if that interaction is with an individual who opted to name her store “Crazy Seashell Bookshop.”

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September 8, 2009

A Promotional Item We Were Actually Excited About

Category: Marketing, Promotional Items — Tags: , , , , — Sarah @ 8:30 am

We wish we could say that we’ve been the recipients of some totally off-the-wall awesome promotional items during our lives as consumers.  It would be really, really cool to tell you the story of that time we were given a box of fireworks that exploded in the shape of a company’s logo.  Or the time we received a Chrysler Sebring convertible with a company’s name painted on the door and pictures of Steve Carell embroidered into the upholstery.

But, alas, the businesses that are courting us haven’t pulled out all the stops just yet.  So while we wait patiently for the first company to give us something truly amazing, let us tell you the story of a conventional promotional item that we have received and appreciated greatly.

It’s…a beach bag!

We know, we know, that’s kind of a letdown compared to, say, explosives.  But let’s be honest.  Bags do have a few things going for them that fireworks just…don’t.

  1. It’s practical. Okay, so not everyone goes to the beach everyday.  But pretty much everyone goes somewhere everyday, and beach bags can double as lunch bags, diaper bags, grocery bags, gym bags…you name it.  Humans seem to compulsively carry around so much junk with us wherever we go, and a nice, spacious beach bag can help us lug it.
  2. It gets around town. Since we’re going to be using the bag to haul our stuff when we’re out and about, the company name on the bag is going to be seen wherever we go.  Now it’s not only a fun freebie for the recipient, but it’s providing free advertising for your company.
  3. It’s green. Reusable bags are particularly important these days now that everyone’s making a conscious effort to cut down on using those crinkly plastic ones.  So you are helping someone to help the environment, which is, straight up, a good thing to do; not to mention that image-wise, it’s never a bad thing for your company to seem like its looking out for the earth.

So, the bag idea can be pretty golden.  Especially if it’s a nice, sturdy, roomy, high-quality one.  We actually might like it more than a box of fireworks!

Truth be told, we’d still prefer the Sebring, but we’ll forgive you for not getting us that one.

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August 17, 2009

Some People Like Boomerangs

Category: Marketing, Promotional Items — Tags: , , — admin @ 8:37 am

Everyone loves free stuff.  Whether it’s a free sample of quiche you get walking through your local wholesale club or that miniature bottle of bodywash stuck with a glue blob to the regular-sized bottle, it’s fun to get something for free.  Businesses worldwide have picked up on this and tried to win or keep customers with freebies.

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Admit it: you’re probably not going to turn down a free sticky note pad or pen.  But is a company-branded pen going to translate into future business with the company?

Not necessarily.  After all, if you look in your junk drawer, you probably have a minimum of nine pens from companies that you have never done business with and do not intend to patronize in the near future.  But what if they had given you something original?  Something that made them stand out from the rest?

At minimum, it would have brought about a little convo between you and a coworker:

Armando: “Hey, Jack, how’d your business meeting go?”

Jack: “Holy dooley!  It was excellent, mate!  The bloke at the meeting gave us great prices on everything we needed, and he gave me a boomerang with the company’s logo on it!  He must have remembered that I keep a collection of boomerangs in my office!  Brilliant!”

Boomerang1

Okay, so the conversation probably wouldn’t go exactly like that.  But you do want people to be talking about your company, and if you give clients something fun and original, you’ll spark some discussion.

And going back to Jack’s affinity for boomerangs.  If, in fact, you know what your client likes, a specialized gift for a special client can go a long way.  You can also tie your promotional items into your particular product line or use them to communicate something about your company’s unique services.  (Are you a fruit vendor who specializes in exotic bananas?  You could give out stuffed monkeys!)

The truth is, there are a ton of promotional products out there, and we would love to help you pick out the right ones for your business.  It’s possible that pens and sticky pads would actually be the best choice for you.  Or maybe you should go with a well-chosen kaleidoscope, a wicked cool rhinestone tiara, or a sweet bottle of hair and body glitter.  We’re here to help when you’re trying to find the best freebie to market your business.

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