Tuesday 31 July 2012

The Key to Successful Marketing - Free Bread, Mushrooms and Mini Bruschetta


The Key to Successful Marketing - Free Bread, Mushrooms and Mini Bruschetta
Turning cold marketing into relationship building strategies

In recent articles, ‘The Beating Heart of Local Marketing’ and ‘Top Tips for Creating an Engaging Website’, I have discussed that the key to effective local marketing is about offering something of value to the prospect or the visitor.

I met a business last week that shows the reality of what happens when you don’t address this very real and current marketing trend; this is probably the result for many businesses who after much time and effort spent on their marketing are left wondering…why am I not seeing the returns?

On the surface they looked to be doing everything within their power to market and promote their business.  They had eight different marketing activities in the mix; all of their communications were professional, were scattered with the benefits of doing business with them and all were followed up through a consistent and professional marketing process.

The trouble was they were not seeing the return from what was a significant amount of time, effort and co-ordination; the results were average at best.

It was their e-mail marketing strategy that really highlighted the problem; they were sending tens of thousands of e-mails each month to a cold, bought marketing database.  Each e-mail had a sales-led theme on one of their many products and each listed all of the benefits of doing business with them as a local business.

Because none of these people had agreed to receive their e-mail communications in the first place, the open and click-through rate was low and not surprisingly the list hadn’t grown in almost nine months.

The method of swamping a market with sales-led communications will never generate you a consistent return; many resort to this approach because it is traditional and what they are used to, the same reason people normally resort to advertising as their first choice for trying to drive interest.

Build a warm list of prospects and the results are very different; not only will you see a higher readership of your communications (what you send) but you will see a higher click-through rate to your website and better returns.

The only way to do this is to offer something of value in your communications, stop selling all of the time and give the reader something of use, for free.  Yes this approach takes time like everything else does if you aim to do it properly, but there are very few, if any, quick wins in marketing that will bring extra-ordinary results.

Given that you all operate in very different industries it is impossible for me to give you all an individual idea for your type of business; the best way to approach this is to think about what you or your clients like to receive.

For me personally, I like to receive things that educate me (briefly and in small doses), things that I find interesting or useful in relation to the job that I do or the clients that I work for and things that make me smile, the fun and quirky stuff.

Don’t get me wrong, in all of these communications there are subtle sales messages, but I don’t feel the driving force of them sending me something is to sell to me.  I am being given a chance to sample their experience and expertise, I feel as if they are educating me and I feel kept up to date with the things that effect what I do. 

More importantly, I don’t feel like they have intruded on my time; how often has an unsolicited e-mail popped up in your in-box just at the wrong time?  You feel annoyed as it has distracted you; if you are like me it goes straight into the trash and I avoid them in the future because they have become an annoyance.

This type of approach where you share useful or valuable information is called ‘Content Marketing’.  You may have heard this term being mentioned a lot more lately as it has been the buzzword in marketing for some time now.

The beauty of this type of marketing is that if you do have a number of different marketing channels in place, this one single weekly or monthly message can be replicated across all of your platforms.

For example, you may host these pieces of free information on your website on a dedicated page and all of your other marketing channels simply funnel the recipient through to this part of your website.

Your communications therefore become consistent and with one key theme they are easy to put out across a number of platforms.

Because your communications are not merely sales driven, and as long as what you are sharing is compelling, educating or informative, you will see more of the recipients clicking through to your website and you will see more organic growth in your mailing list.  People will share what you send out.

Once they are on your website you are entitled to be a little more direct in your selling, in fact they would expect you to try and sell to them a bit more.  Granted you can’t then plaster the page with big sales driven messages but you can certainly position some of your products and services around the information you are offering for free.

The simplest example I can think of to demonstrate this type of approach would be when I was on holiday a few years back; the promenade for this particular town was a row of about a dozen restaurants side by side, each offering something similar in terms of cuisine, cost and atmosphere.

All but one of these restaurants had two or three staff outside most of the day literally trying to drag you in; they would grab your arm, force a menu in your face and walk in front of you in a somewhat sheepherding motion trying to steer you towards the entrance, it was like running the gastronomy gauntlet.

The very last restaurant had only one member of staff outside and every evening, between 5:30pm and 6:30pm, they would stand behind a small, neatly laid table covered in a crisp, white tablecloth.  On the table were small samples of their food; it was adorned with freshly baked bread, garlic mushrooms and mini bruschetta and these were being freely offered, not forced, to anyone who approached the table to have a look.

Each time someone sampled some of the food the guy behind the table would mention where the ingredients had come from, in this instance it was from a local source and he took great pride in sharing this interesting information with people.

Guess which restaurant was full all night every night?

It was a pretty new development so I’m sure by now the others have cottoned on, but it’s a great and simple example of how you can re-think the way in which you present your business to prospects.

Sure, I get that this may not be as easy or as interesting for your type of industry or product and the appeal for what you offer may not be as far reaching as food is, but it is possible.

This is where the biggest challenge lies; irrespective of what tools you choose to get the message out there, if you can master the art of becoming a resource to prospects and clients, you will see steady and consistent growth in your marketing efforts.

In my own personal view this way of marketing is the way of the future, irrespective of how the marketing platforms may change, the premise of your marketing having to build relationships is here to stay and the sooner you can come to grips with it, the sooner you will reap the rewards.


Final Thoughts

Get to know your clients and you will get to know your prospects; understand what your clients want and respond to and you will understand what to start sharing in your marketing.

Your thoughts, comments and criticism are always welcome, after all this is a blog and everything is up for discussion and debate.

Next Article: Monday 13th August

To receive these articles directly into your in-box, sign up here.  I will not share you data with any 3rd party and I will not send anything other than my articles.