Ideas
to promote your business
- Design
an innovative logo that compliments your business and builds your brand.
- Design
branded letterheads, envelopes, business cards and office stationery.
- Design
an illustrated brochure or pamphlet that looks professional to explain
the benefits of your product or service.
Ensure that the print quality is superior.
- Register
a domain name and create a Web site that draws attention. If possible,
include e-commerce capability.
- Get
listed on all major search engines; include carefully selected words in
your meta tags that prospective customers might enter during a search
when looking for the type of goods or service you provide.
- Advertise
in the type of magazines or newspapers your target customers are likely
to read.
- Print
handbills (leaflets printed on size A6 sheets) and place on car windshields
and in mailboxes; or hand out at traffic lights.
- Customize
your marketing to niche customers. Talk to potential customers to find
out what their needs are, their likes and dislikes, and what they are
prepared to pay for a product or service like yours.
- Build
a client database to collect information about clients, such as their
comments about the product or service, regularity of orders, complaints,
etc.
Design branded promotional items such as t-shirts, mugs, pens, balloons,
calendars, fridge magnets, etc. that can be distributed to customers in
your area, at a trade show, erc.
- Run
a special offer on your Web site and mail a complimentary (branded of
course) promotional item with each order.
- Sponsor
a community event, which will give your business exposure in your immediate
community and is a great opportunity for word-of-mouth advertising. Consider
donating branded t-shirts and caps to an underprivileged sports team;
contact the editor of your local community newspaper to request media
coverage.
- Build
solid relationships with suppliers. Being on friendly terms with them
will encourage them to promote your business to other clients.
- Send
out a monthly newsletter to highlight new products and specials on offer.
You can also send out e-mail messages to locals to visit your store or
to pace an order online.
- Create
(or have a graphic artist do it for you) an attractive point-of-sale display
or an eye-catching poster. This will attract the attention of pavement
traffic and get them into your store.
- Initiate
a telemarketing campaign. Write a to-the-point opening and rehease it
well so that when you make a call the words are spoken from memory (and
come across as sincere) and not read like a robot. Even when making cold
calls, just be yourself; start with a friendly greeting and introduce
yourself and your company. Briefly describe your product or service and
relevant benefits, and where your store is located.
- Identify
cross-promotional opportunities by seeking other businesses that are not
direct competitors, but whose products or services compliments yours.
The idea is to combine products or services from various sources to make
up a comprehensive package that customers want and offers them convenience;
you can do a promotional deal that will benefit all participating businesses.
An example is a Pizza Take-Away next door to a Video Store; or a Coffee
Bar next door to a Book Store.
- Write
generic editorial about your industry for publication in a local or community
newspaper. The article should not be specifically about your business,
but about developments within your industry. Make sure the content is
interesting, with variable facts, and that you get accreditation as the
writer. This way readers will identify the information with you as an
expert on the subject. Include your contact details so that readers may
get in touch with you if they have questions.
- Running
a competition is a great way of attracting attention and getting feet
into your store. Include a feature of the competition that obliges participants
to come to your store.
- Include
promotional material and price lists with your customers' purchases, when
invoices are sent out, announcing a new product or service, competition,
etc.
- Take
part in relevant trade shows, seminars and exhibitions, which are all
great opportunities to network with suppliers and prospective customers.
- Signage
on company vehicles is mobile advertising that is seen by many prospective
customers wherever you travel or park. Don't clutter the design; keep
the information straightforward and easy to remember--basically your business
name, logo and contact phone number.
- Placing
a sidewalk sign on the pavement in front of your store will get you noticed.
The sign should bear your logo and perhaps a special offer that will intice
customers to visit the store.
- Get
signage in the vicinity of your business to alert customers about your
existence. A free-standing mini billboard or framed poster placed in prime
positions, with an arrow pointing in the general direction of your store,
will attract attention.
- Advertise
an organized lecture-demonstration about your product or service to be
held at a set time; make full use of this opportunity to impress prospective
customers by addressing their queries, identifying solutions to their
problems, and distributing product sheets and branded promotional give-aways.
- Request
that customers and prospects complete a short questionnaire so that you
may subscribe them to receive a free monthly newsletter telling them about
developments in the industry, new products and specials. Stress that they
are under no obligation to purchase.
- Have
an edition of branded wall or desk calendars printed to hand out as gifts
to customers, towards the end of the year.