While a handful of salespeople can only be in front of perhaps a hundred or so prospects per month, advertising stays in front of your prospects when you can’t be there. Advertising can reach thousands of potential buyers each and every month, week, or day. Studies also show that advertising inspires confidence from your current clients. When current clients see your ad, it reinforces their belief in you. It makes them feel like they made the right decision to be your client. But advertising can also waste money if you don’t use it properly. To avoid wasting money, keep these three tips in mind. Who You Advertise To Don’t spend money on an advertising vehicle if the majority of its listeners/viewer/readers will never buy your type of product or services. For example, let’s say that you own a commercial real estate company or a business bank. In both cases, you are only interested in business people. Broad-reaching television or radio stations or general-interest daily newspapers base their rates on how many consumers they reach. An examination of their audiences may easily show you that a high percentage of their listeners or readers are not business people, yet you will have to pay to reach all of them. Conversely, there are more specialized advertising vehicles that target a far greater percentage of your potential buyers. A business radio program or a business publication will offer you an audience comprised mostly of your potential buyers. How Often You Advertise Don’t expect that a single ad, or even a few ads, constitute effective advertising. Effective advertising needs to be consistent and steady. However, if you don’t have the budget to take a full advertising schedule, I often recommend that my clients buy one well placed ad in the ideal magazine and then use that piece for years sometimes with a banner that says, “As Seen In Industry Today.” This ad then works very hard for you and you can reuse it as a direct mail piece, promo piece, or even a hand out at a trade show. Where You Advertise Don’t spread your advertising too thin. Some years ago, a corporate training company launched its services by buying a few spots per week on seven different radio stations. Since it was not on any one station long enough to give its message a chance to take root, the advertising was a total failure. The company should have taken its entire budget and sunk it into one (or at the most two) primary vehicles. Each advertising vehicle has a loyal audience. You are far better off having a heavy schedule in one vehicle, where you have a chance to break through the clutter and get noticed, than to take a few spots in a half-dozen vehicles in which you get lost in the commercial clutter. Today, repetition and concentration are the keys to successful advertising. Another quick idea for advertising smart is, instead of taking up an advertisement IN the newspaper, do it as an insert. (An “insert” is a flyer that is printed separately and “inserted” into the newspaper as a loose piece of paper). This is generally a very good way to go with business to business in a trade journal or business to customer in a newspaper. These are good because they fall out of the magazine or newspaper onto your desk or kitchen table and they are less expensive to buy than printing your ad right in the vehicle of choice. Success Resources: http://www.srpl.net/
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