If you read my
blogs regularly, you’ll know that I bang on about ideal client profiles – and,
at the risk of boring the pants off you, knowing who you’re trying to reach is
essential to every marketing activity you do.
If you know your
audience, reaching them becomes so much easier.
You know where they are active, what they read, what they watch and what
their problems are. That allows you to
tick all their boxes and be the obvious choice when they know they need your
kind of help.
So let’s look at
your options.
Social media
It’s no coincidence
that people who are successful on social media are known as influencers. It’s a way to put you in front of people and
impress them with your knowledge and shared expertise, your authority in your
industry and your willingness to help others.
A carefully crafted campaign on the platform where your target audience
hang out can be powerful.
It’s probably not a
resource to be your only marketing, but it should not be ignored.
Broadcast and print media
Getting your name
and your business into the media is a great way to become visible and to get
known as an expert. However, you need to
be sure that you’re choosing the right media – the ones that your ideal clients
are following.
If your audience
are reading their industry journals, appearing in a national daily may not be
very effective. If you’re on local radio
in the daytime when they’re not listening, it won’t help your marketing.
Advertising
Ads are a whole
article of their own! They can be cheap
and cheerful or quite expensive, so working your budget out first is
essential. There are plenty of
publications who will offer you a deal to get you to place an ad, but is your
audience reading these ads.
A £50 ad in a local
magazine delivered door-to-door can work brilliantly for an electrician or a
company that cleans gutters, but won’t work for a company that makes parts for
car manufacturers. So pick your
publication carefully – and then invest in getting a professional to design
your ad, so it’s attractive and clear.
Don’t fall into the
trap of trying to stuff as much information as possible into a relatively small
space. The headline is the key to
success – get that right and it will engage with your audience. Make it easy for them to contact you.
Advertising can
include TV, billboards, banners, sports sponsorship and more. Think carefully about how advertising fits
into your marketing campaign.
Direct marketing
This includes
leaflets of all kinds whether they’re delivered by post or by hand. Effectively they’re an ad that you can
deliver directly to your target audience.
The same applies to
leaflets as to ads – don’t stuff them with too much information. Paper leaflets are better printed on
one-side, or with the minimum of information on the reverse (maybe just your
contact info).
Cards are better,
these can be postcard size or bigger, and are harder for people to screw up and
throw away, so are often kept around for longer. You can put information onto both sides and
the formats can be double sides or a folded document that has more substance.
Direct marketing
also includes what is often known as ‘lumpy mail’. Sending something in an envelope that creates
a lump, is more likely to get opened – curiosity is a powerful thing!
People include
branded items, like pans and coasters, but I’ve seen successful lumpy mail
campaigns with teabags, biscuits, etc. and a clever message.
Email marketing
This can be very
effective if you’re good at writing good subject lines to get the recipient to
open the email and creating content that grabs their attention quickly.
Don’t try and send
lots of email like this from your own email account, that’s the quickest way to
get your email provider to shut your account down. Instead use an online emarketing platform
like Mailchimp, Aweber, Mailerlite or Constant Contact (there are dozens, do a
bit of research).
An integrated campaign
You don’t have to
choose one or another. You can use more
than one method to reach your target market, but you do need a strategy and a
plan of action to ensure your chosen methods are congruent and successful.
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