Friday 29 August 2014

Labor Day Weekend in the Triangle Area - WRAL.com

Happy Labor Day weekend! Here’s your weekend family fun. As always, check WRAL.com’s Out & About section for more ideas. Keep reading for holiday weekend hours for popular family destinations.
There’s about a day left to register for the Big Muddy Challenge, a parent-child adventure race series that begins at 9 a.m., Saturday, at Hill Ridge Farm in Youngsville. The two-mile course features physicaland other obstacles. It’s designed for kids ages 6 to 13 and their adults. Fees are $40 for adults and $37 for kids.

The African American Cultural Festival in downtown Raleigh runs 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., Saturday, and 1 p.m. to 9 p.m., Sunday. The free festival features music, performances, dance, arts, crafts, vendors and more. A Family Village includes educational, hands-on activities for families such as storytelling, dance troupes, drum circles, crafts and more. The Family Village area is open 11:30 a.m. to 6 p.m., Saturday, and 1:30 p.m. to 6 p.m., Sunday.
Take a road trip to the Blue Ridge Mountains for the 12th annual Mile High Kite Festival on Sunday in Beech Mountain’s meadow. Located at more than 5,000 feet in elevation, the meadow makes it easy to sail kites more than a mile above sea level. Other activities include races with kids pulling parachute kites, face painting, and a variety of craft and food vendors. The first 300 kids age 12 and under get a free kite. Beech Mountain is just under 4 hours from Raleigh.
Durham Central Park will host one of its popular food truck rodeos from noon to 4 p.m., Sunday. The afternoon also includes lots of live music.
Noah’s Landing in Coats, less than an hour from Raleigh, will host its annual Blue ‘n ‘Cue at the Zoo. It’s 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., Saturday and Sunday. The event features a chance to see the zoo’s many exotic animals, along with bluegrass and BBQ. The zoo also will set up an ice cold dunking booth. For a $5 donation to the ALS Association, visitors can take turns helping volunteers take the plunge. Tickets to the event are $8 per person.
The Paperhand Puppet Intervention continues the run of its 15th summer puppet show at the Forest Theater at UNC-Chapel Hill. The show, a tradition for many around here, will be performed on select days through Sept. 7 in Chapel Hill. It then moves over to the N.C. Museum of Art Sept. 12 to Sept. 14. These are great shows, fantastic spectacles.
Hairspray is on stage at the Raleigh Little Theater on select dates through Sept. 7. Tickets are $22 to $24.
The Durham Bulls has home games Sunday and Monday. The Carolina Mudcats have games Thursday through Monday.
This is the final weekend for the N.C. Museum of Natural Sciences' Rainforest Adventure exhibit. The exhibit, best for preschoolers to tweens, takes visitors on a “maze” through the rainforest. It closes next week.
The N.C. Museum of Natural Sciences is open all weekend. Hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., weekdays and Saturdays, and noon to 5 p.m., Sunday.
Marbles Kids Museum in Raleigh is open all weekend, including 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday, Labor Day.
The Museum of Life and Science is open all weekend and Monday - 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., weekdays and Saturdays, and noon to 5 p.m., Sundays.
Morehead Planetarium and Science Center in Chapel Hill has shows both Saturday and Sunday.
The N.C. Museum of History and N.C. Museum of Art are open Saturday and Sunday, but closed Monday.

http://www.wral.com/weekend-plans-labor-day-edition-what-s-open-closed-happening/13930773/#UwmAjs9pIZjovoKp.99


www.telepathicgraphics.com

Thursday 28 August 2014

B2B Sales Strategies That Work.. Really Well - FORBES


Top leaders reveal how they accelerate B2B sales.

My biggest successes in selling to other businesses have come from focusing on the goal of helping them sell more of their products/services to their customers. In fact, I have often said that the main reason any for-profit company purchases anything from any other company is so that they can better


sell their own stuff. Case in point: My consulting firm recently created a cloud app that enables organizations to engage employees to creatively innovate solutions for a multitude of business problems. And what is the first challenge at which my clients are aiming this new tool? The ever-present need to increase sales.

If your sales strategy does not emphasize how your products and services help your B2B customers sell more, you should consider repositioning your offerings. This should be at the top of the list of your sales success factors, but the list also includes other important strategies. To help flesh them out, I talked to other CEOs who have a lot to share on this topic.

It’s Complicated. Reid Tatoris, is co-founder of Are You A Human, a company that ensures advertising gets in front of actual human beings. “One of our biggest B2B challenges is the number of decision makers who need to weigh in on the purchase decision,” observes Tatoris. “You really need to be able to tell your story several different ways to several different buyers in the prospect company. Everybody has the ability to veto the deal, and they all have their own purchase factors to consider.” One obvious complication that stems from the multiple-buyer syndrome is the fact that we rarely get a chance to present to all buyers in a given organization. This argues for a well-thought-out strategy for arming your initial contact with enough information to “sell” the deal to other internal decision makers, such as the economic buyer, technical buyer, etc.

It’s All About Trust.
“When you work with a B2B customer, you will almost always be privy to sensitive information,” warns Rick Spurr, CEO ZixCorp, an email data protection company. “This applies not only to a direct customer’s information, but also to their customers’ and suppliers’ data as well.” We have all seen what happens when businesses take this concept lightly: Reputations irreparably damaged, business value diminished, and fortunes lost. “We call it the chain of trust,” continues Spurr, “and see it as a corporate obligation that we all must participate in together.” Obviously, trust is a key to building a lasting relationship. What can your company do to increase trust with prospects, customers and partners?


Unlock Your Customers’ Potential. “Every B2B customer is sitting on a gold mine of data,” advises Aaron Bell, CEO AdRoll, a retargeting company. “All we have to do is help our customers find, organize, and use it.” AdRoll purchases over one trillion online ads each month. They then sell those ads to their B2B customers, to be retargeted to their prospects in a purely data-driven system AdRoll calls programmatic advertising. “Few B2B customers track data and communicate it in the right way, so the better we are at transforming their data from potential to actual benefit, the more they need us,” notes Bell. So far, so good. AdRoll boasts a customer list that includes 16,000 businesses. What is the potential that only you know how to access and monetize within your client companies?

Keep Things Moving Forward, Not Backward. According to Lewis Miller, CEOQvidian, “In the B2B environment, buyers get through about 50-60% of the sales process on their own—before ever  ngaging a potential provider.” Of course, the Internet has made researching future purchase options rather perfunctory, but what does this mean for the B2B salesperson? “The sales cycle is in mid-stream by the time salespeople are involved. If they don’t understand this, and try to start at the beginning, the prospect will disengage,” explains Miller. “Knowing where a prospect’s head already is—and falling into stride—can differentiate one provider from all the others.” Qvidian has mastered this and other B2B practices to garner 1,150 business clients worldwide that use their sales process automation tools.

Create a Sense of Urgency.
We have all been put off by gimmicky phrases like, ‘sale ends soon,’ or ‘only while supplies last.’ One company has found a unique way to create real online urgency. OpiaTalk helps its customers dramatically increase their online sales conversion rates by giving cyber buyers a fifteen-minute window during which to take advantage of special offers. “We not only limit the time, but also the number of potential buyers,” says OpiaTalk’s CEO and Founder, Tom Popomaronis. “We make prospects a part of an exclusive club that they can invite a few others into—but they have to be quick about it.” This urgency/exclusivity creation system yields conversion rates as high as 19.5%, with an average of 12%. What can you do to legitimately make your offer a pressing matter in the eyes of your customers?

Reduce Expenses. Ah, yes. Cost reduction continues to build a clear and quick path to many a B2B purchase contract. We have just entered the world of ROI calculators and break-even timelines. There are many interesting, effective, and creative ways of using cost reduction as a part of one’s sales pitch—too many for this particular article. This topic deserves its own spotlight. I invite all who have something noteworthy to say about how cost reduction is used to close deals to contact me directly.

This list is by no means exhaustive. Truthfully, we have only skimmed the surface of a very deep pool of B2B sales accelerators. But you can boost your sales to B2B customers by adding the C-Suite tips from this article to your list of strategies. Let me know how it goes.


Wednesday 27 August 2014

Printing and Different Types of Binding

To help you make an informed decision among the numerous bindery options, here are descriptions of several ways you can attach loose sheets of paper or complete signatures (printed press sheets folded multiple times to yield complete 4-, 8-, 16-, or 32-page portions of a book). Bindery methods vary according to cost, durability, and appearance.
Case Binding
Also called edition binding, this method results in what is commonly called a hardcover book. It is the most expensive option yet also the most durable. Stacked signatures are gathered and sewn together for strength. This book block is trimmed on three sides and then glued into a spine, front cover, and back cover (a single unit) made of binders board covered with paper or cloth. The first and last sheets (end-sheets) are then pasted to the board. To reduce the cost of thisbinding method, you can set perfect-bound book blocks into cases rather than first sewing the signatures together and then gluing them into the covers.
Perfect Binding
Like case-bound books, perfect-bound books are also made up of stacked signatures. These are gathered into a book and the edges of the spine are ground off (or notched). When this book block is glued into a paper cover, the glue that attaches the signatures to the spine can flow into the notches or ground-off areas. The increased surface area for the glue allows for more permanent adhesion. The covers and book blocks are then trimmed flush. Unlike case binding, perfect binding involves only gluing the spine to the cover. Without reinforced endsheets or a binders board cover material, perfect-bound books are less durable than case bound books but are significantly cheaper. Sewing the signatures and/or notching the spine rather than grinding it improves durability.
Lay-Flat Binding
Perfect-bound books do not lie flat when opened because the spines are fully glued to the cover. By using a flexible glue on only the edges of the spine, perfect-bound technical manuals or cookbooks, and the like, can be made to lie flat on a table. This method is more expensive than perfect binding and requires more time for the glue to cure.
Saddle-Stitching
Signatures are nested (set one into the other rather than stacked as in the previous methods) and then stitched through the fold with staples made of thin wire. These books can lie flat. However, saddle-stitching only works for shorter books of up to 80 pages or so. These books also have no spine on which to print a title.
Side-Stitching
Side stitched books are essentially loose sheets of paper stapled together. A paper cover can be wrapped around the entire stack and glued to form a printable spine. However, side-stitched books (National Geographic Magazine is an example) do not lie flat.
GBC Binding
Also called plastic comb binding, this method is good for technical manuals that have a lot of pages and must lie flat. The stack of pages comprising the book is punched with a series of holes along the binding edge through which a plastic comb is inserted. This comb, which curls into a cylinder along the length of the book can provide a screen-printable spine. It can also accommodate numerous pages, and pages can be added or removed as needed.
Wire-O and Spiral Binding
Both of these mechanical bindings hold far fewer pages than comb binding. Wire-O is a series of parallel wire loops attached along a wire, while spiral binding is a metal or plastic continuous loop passing through the punched holes in a spiral from the top to the bottom of the book. Neither binding method will accept as many pages as GBC. Also neither provides a printable spine or allows for pages to be added or removed. However, both binding methods allow the product to lie flat.
Plastic Coil Binding
This is just like spiral binding. However, since wire can be crushed, plastic is a resilient alternative. Also, plastic coil bindings come in multiple colors.
Tape Binding, Post Binding, and Velo Binding
These are often used for presentations. In the first case, the covers and book pages are taped together over the binding edge. In post binding, screws are used in much the same way as side stitching (but the books can be disassembled and pages can be added or removed). In velo binding, a thin, flat piece of plastic runs the length of the bind edge on the front and back of the book, and thin plastic pegs attach the two through the pages of the book.
Ring-Binders
This is exactly what the name implies: the binders we used in school. The vinyl covers can be silk screened or paper inserts can be printed and then inserted behind the clear covering of some ring-binders.
Mechanical bindings (GBC, Wire-O, spiral, plastic coil, tape, velo, post, and ring) are more expensive per unit than perfect binding or saddle-stitching, and unlike most offset printing operations, their unit cost does not decrease with increased volume. They also require ample margins since they take up a lot of room at the bind edge. On the positive side, they can allow for the inclusion of many inserts of various types and sizes within the text. Because of their cost, mechanical bindings are usually best suited to short runs.


Tuesday 26 August 2014

Color Makes The Difference When It Comes to Printing

Using color effectively for your print advertising is very important. Readers are 9 times more likely to remember what they see in color, versus something printed in just a single color like black. They are also 70% more likely to remember the details of what they’ve read if printed in color. Most companies find that full color printing is more powerful in every way; it’s easier to retain words, images, text and graphics longer. Small wonder that 50% of company forms and documents are done in full color, from postcards to door hangers. Also, people are influenced by specific colors on packaging, advertisements and other materials.

Some of the world’s top brands stay that way in part because their trademark colors are so much a part of their image. Coca-Cola’s red is very powerful, UPS is reliably remembered for brown and the yellow, Best Buy logo is synonymous with bright ideas in electronics values. Certain colors express boldness (red), warmth (yellow), trust (blue) and peacefulness (green). This sets buyers’ moods and may even control their emotions. Combinations of these colors can be very effective in your marketing efforts. You may have to experiment to see which colors work best to establish brand recognition or convey such promotions as “sale” or “exclusive,” but full color lets you be more edgy than a monochrome or grayscale look. Determining your target audience will help you decide what kind of a color message to send.

Make sure your design makes the color work. Even if you splash certain colors over your advertising materials, they need to be designed well and be relevant. Your logos, layout and even company name must work together synergistically to convey the unique message and brand identity you want to convey. If not, your message may get lost or create a mood like “power” or “boldness” when you want to emphasize softness, wholesomeness or another personality.

Carry your color scheme and design across all of your advertising and marketing materials. This consistency will make your marketing more powerful since people can see one look across all your materials and remember your brand.

Let color help make a positive impact that will stand out from the crowd. Work with your printer to learn what color strategies work best for print ads, direct mail and other media.

Monday 25 August 2014

How to Keep Clients Happy

A great blog found on The Shoeboxed Blog that breaks down the clients general needs and expectations that can relate to all fields of business and customer service. 
Forget finding new clients or increasing conversions – if you want to grow your small business to astronomical heights, you have to learn how to keep clients, and how to keep them happy.
Here at Shoeboxed, we believe that instead of spending tons of money and resources attracting new client after new client, it’s much more efficient and beneficial to cultivate the relationships that you already have. Doing so will dramatically increase your passive income and the stability of your business.
You’ll also find that by taking excellent care of your current clients, the number of referrals you receive will increase exponentially. By taking great care with each customer interaction, you’ll be the first person each client thinks of when offering recommendations to friends and family.

Go the distance

With each interaction or transaction, you have the opportunity to merely meet your clients’ expectations or exceed their expectations. When you engage in the latter, it’s like offering an unexpected gift, and clients won’t soon forget the feeling of delight with which you provided them.
So how do you go the distance?
Let’s say you’re in the plumbing business, and you’ve given your customer a three-hour window for when your service team member will arrive at their home.
Unlike most other companies, who show up at the very tail end of that window, your service team member arrives five minutes early, finishes the job with expert speed and precision, and calls the next day to follow up with the customer and make sure everything is in working order.
None of those efforts cost your company a dime, but they are sure to secure a reputation for excellence. Because you went above and beyond what is considered the norm for your industry, your customer now associates your brand with surprise and delight. You can be sure that the next time one of her friends mentions a plumbing problem, she’ll eagerly share her story and her recommendation.
Remember that people want you to be outstanding, and not simply because they enjoy getting their money’s worth for goods and services. When you succeed at providing excellent service, your clients get to feel savvy and in-the-know. They feel like they’ve made a wise investment and feel smart every time they patronize your business. It is this feeling – even more than your product – that will keep clients coming back time and time again.

Manage Expectations

Before you can exceed clients expectations, you have to know what those expectations are. Besides having a firm grasp on how things are normally done in your industry, you need to educate your clients as to how you do business.
At the beginning of the relationship, set clear boundaries and offer a firm set of policies and protocols. For example, if you run a service-based business like tutoring or coaching, make sure your policies on cancelled appointments are crystal clear. Help your target market learn what to expect from you, and why you’re different from the competition.
Once customers know what to expect from you under normal circumstances, they’ll be able to appreciate when you go above and beyond. By creating specific expectations, you’ll be able to easily surpass those expectations, improving customer loyalty and trust.
Remember that your goal is to create positive associations for your customer – when they think about you or your business, you want them to have a visceral reaction.
In the above example, you could create this feeling by making a one-time exception to your cancellation policy. Because the customer already knows the rules as they apply to everyone else, this exception will make them feel extra special and indebted to you. They will feel that they are getting service and treatment above and beyond the rest of your clients, which in turn will prevent them from missing future appointments and keep them coming back for more. (Use this tactic with care, however – there is a fine line between exceeding expectations and letting yourself be taken advantage of!)

Take advantage of mistakes

Speaking of taking advantage, be sure to make the most of your mistakes. You don’t keep clients happy by never messing up – you keep clients happy by solving problems in a way that exceeds their expectations.
Mistakes and problems are potential gold mines for your small business! They allow you to show what you’re made of, and give you an opportunity to truly wow your customer.
Think of a restaurant you always patronize. The service is great, the food is great, and you always have a good time when you go there. Now imagine that same restaurant making a rare mistake – not only did they get your order wrong, but the wine was bad, the soup was cold, and for some reason it took forever to get a table even though you had a reservation.
The owner of this restaurant has a few options. She can hope that because your previous experiences were positive, you’ll just let this one slide and keep coming back. She ignores the problem, hoping that will make you ignore the problem as well.
She could also buy you dessert or give you some sort of discount in typical restaurant-apology fashion. While this is certainly better than nothing, it’s also typical of her industry and may very well leave her customers feeling less than dazzled.
Or, she could go above and beyond.
She could begin by acknowledging the problem and directly apologizing for the fiasco. She could then go out of her way to make amends – not only is the customers’ entire meal paid for; they’re given a generous gift card for their next meal, which will also be on the house when they return.
This way, when the experience is related to friends and family, the focus is no longer on the cold soup and bad wine. Instead, the owner’s customers have a wonderful story to share about how the problem was handled.

Friday 22 August 2014

Branding, Identity & Logo Design Explained - What is the Difference?

A logo is not your brand, nor is it your identity. Logo design, identity design and branding all have different roles, that together, form a perceived image for a business or product.
There has been some recent discussion on the web about this topic, about your logo not being your brand. Although this may be true, I haven’t seen any clarification of the differences between ‘brand’, ‘identity’ and ‘logo’. 
What is brand? – The perceived emotional corporate image as a whole.
What is identity? – The visual aspects that form part of the overall brand.
What is a logo? – A logo identifies a business in its simplest form via the use of a mark or icon.
To explain this in more detail, let’s start at the top – the brand.

What is branding?

Apple - Photo by ronaldo f cabuhat
Branding is certainly not a light topic – whole publications & hundreds of books have been written on the topic, however to put it in a nutshell you could describe a ‘brand’ as an organisation, service or product with a ‘personality’ that is shaped by the perceptions of the audience. On that note, it should also be stated that a designer cannot “make” a brand – only the audience can do this. A designer forms the foundation of the brand.
Many people believe a brand only consists of a few elements – some colours, some fonts, a logo, a slogan and maybe  some music added in too. In reality, it is much more complicated than that. You might say that a brand is a ‘corporate image’.
The fundamental idea and core concept behind having a ‘corporate image’ is that everything a company does, everything it owns and everything it produces should reflect the values and aims of the business as a whole.
It is the consistency of this core idea that makes up the company, driving it, showing what it stands for, what it believes in and why they exist. It is not purely some colours, some typefaces, a logo and a slogan.
As an example, let’s look at the well known IT company, Apple. Apple as a company, projects a humanistic corporate culture and a strong corporate ethic, one which is characterised by volunteerism, support of good causes & involvement in the community. These values of the business are evident throughout everything they do, from their innovative products and advertising, right through to their customer service. Apple is an emotionally humanist brand that really connects with people – when people buy or use their products or services; they feel part of the brand, like a tribe even. It is this emotional connection that creates their brand – not purely their products and a bite sized logo.

What is identity design?

Coca Cola - Photo by taylorkoa22
One major role in the ‘brand’ or ‘corporate image’ of a company is its identity.
In most cases, identity design is based around the visual devices used within a company, usually assembled within a set of guidelines. These guidelines that make up an identity usually administer how the identity is applied throughout a variety of mediums, using approved colour palettes, fonts, layouts, measurements and so forth. These guidelines ensure that the identity of the company is kept coherent, which in turn, allows the brand as a whole, to be recognisable.
The identity or ‘image’ of a company is made up of many visual devices:
  • A Logo (The symbol of the entire identity & brand)
  • Stationery (Letterhead + business card + envelopes, etc.)
  • Marketing Collateral (Flyers, brochures, books, websites, etc.)
  • Products & Packaging (Products sold and the packaging in which they come in)
  • Apparel Design (Tangible clothing items that are worn by employees)
  • Signage (Interior & exterior design)
  • Messages & Actions (Messages conveyed via indirect or direct modes of communication)
  • Other Communication (Audio, smell, touch, etc.)
  • Anything visual that represents the business.
All of these things make up an identity and should support the brand as a whole. The logo however, is the corporate identity and brand all wrapped up into one identifiable mark. This mark is the avatar and symbol of the business as a whole.

What is a logo?

IBM - Photo by Boomberg News
To understand what a logo is, we must first understand what it is for.
A logo is for… identification.
A logo identifies a company or product via the use of a mark, flag, symbol or signature. A logo does not sell the company directly nor rarely does it describe a business. Logo’s derive their meaning from the quality of the thing it symbolises, not the other way around – logos are there to identity, not to explain. In a nutshell, what a logo means is more important than what it lookslike.
To illustrate this concept, think of logos like people. We prefer to be called by our names – James, Dorothy, John – rather than by the confusing and forgettable description of ourselves such as “the guy who always wears pink and has blonde hair”. In this same way, a logo should not literally describe what the business does but rather, identify the business in a way that is recognisable and memorable.
It is also important to note that only after a logo becomes familiar, does it function the way it is intended to do much alike how we much must learn people’s names to identify them.
The logo identifies a business or product in its simplest form.
http://justcreative.com/2010/04/06/branding-identity-logo-design-explained/


Thursday 21 August 2014

Branding 'Magic" - Creating Your Company Image

Today's customers think of branding as that creative thing companies do with the name of a product or service. It is the packaging of a product which includes the visual impression, logo, the jingle or tune that your customer's mind conjures up when they hear your product name, and the identifiable phrase that keeps your product's name in front of the buying public. Branding can be as simple as designing a new wrapper or it can be an exciting long-term media campaign for print and television that communicates the brand message.
Today's buyers use their instincts to determine the worth of a product or service, and it is based on visual impressions. Potential buyers make the subconscious decision of whether or not they want to do business within the first few seconds of exposure to your company or product. This visual impression comes from the packaging of your product, the impression they have of your web site, and presentation information, such as
brochures or business cards. A successful image is the foundation of every successful company. The image of your brand determines your credibility in the mind of new clients, and establishes the value of your products and services.
Your company has only one chance to make a great first impression. Here are some of the areas that companies use to make favorable first impressions.

Create the Right Impression

  • Logo Design to create the value of your product or service
  • Letterhead, Business Cards and Invoices
  • Web site and interactive design
  • Brochures and Handouts that explain the products and their value to the buyer
  • Business presentations, beginning with the telephone
  • Exhibits and Trade Show presentation
  • Product and packaging design
  • Professional Customer Service
Unlike graphic designers, media-driven ad agencies and bloated branding firms, Sales Creators build company brands from the outside in, rather than from the inside out. That is why our brands get remembered with the people who buy them and use them. Branding is more than making a new logo or company slogan. It is the silent message that the buying public receives and motivates them to tell others about their purchase. Real branding increases the profitability and lowers the cost of getting new customers.

Impact of the Internet on Branding

The Internet has caused problems for many brands because most companies think of the web or the Net as just another advertising medium, like radio, television, newspapers and magazines. While the WWW is a mass communication medium, the difference between the web and any other mass medium is that it is interactive. The user of the message is in charge, not the sender. What the Net marketers have discovered is that people do not want advertising. As a result, when you try to advertise on the Net, people turn it off. They do not pay attention. Assuming the Web will be the same kind of a medium as television causes the biggest mistake in branding – it is not the same process, and different strategies are required in order to build a brand on the Web. The Web is a great place to start in branding your products or services.
You build a powerful Web brand by making the brand itself interactive, allowing the customer access to further information. If you are an established company with a well-known brand, the first question you should ask yourself is, "Should we move our distribution of this brand to the Web?" Every brick-and-mortar company should have a web site, but it should be an information site, not necessarily a branding or business site. It should be a place where customers can go if they want more information about a company or product.

Advertising and Product Brochures Must be Positive

Branding must be consistent and positive with a single message that can be understood by all buyers. Your message must have powerful graphics that not only capture the buyer’s attention but also explain the message. A picture may be worth a thousand words, but make sure those thousand words are positive and memorable. Company and product brochures create a lasting impression that impact a customer in either a favorable way, or in a negative way that will cause them to shop elsewhere. If the company brochure explains the product and tells the reader how it will benefit them, the reader will want to read more. Most buyers today want to feel comfortable with their buying decisions and they are limited on time, so you must be concise and show them the value they will receive from their investment in your product or service.

Make the Company Name Count

It is better to have one quality advertisement that costs a little more than five inexpensive ads that do not have a positive image of your company. Before the final 'OK' is given, have a few of your trusted advisors or employees critique the advertisement and ask them for an honest evaluation. Rather than tell them about the purpose of the message, let them tell you if you have a quality ad or not. They should be able to express the purpose and the 'bottom line' of the message for the ad.

Press releases are a great way of getting your brand in front of the buyer and this message is free. Find something that is newsworthy: perhaps a sponsorship program, free training for the public, new hires or promotions all qualify. Send the information to your local paper and they will find a spot in an upcoming edition (they are always looking for good stories).


Wednesday 20 August 2014

How To Create A Direct Marketing Campaign - Entrepreneur

Let's say you identify a new market, one that you think is going to be very receptive to your product. The cost of advertising to this market may be prohibitive: The best publications are frightfully expensive, and your ads couldn't appear for six months, anyway.
Direct marketing provides you with a way to conduct a test of this market relatively quickly, at a reasonable cost, and with convincing certitude. You'll know whether this is indeed the gold mine you hope it is.
Perhaps the most common use of a marketing database is to generate a target list for a direct-mail campaign. Of course, direct mail also works with purchased lists. Direct mail provides giant companies with the ability to target defined markets with specialized offers.
For smaller companies, using direct mail has a number of attractive advantages:
  • You can target recipients very precisely.
  • You can protect against overwhelming response. If you run an advertisement, you can't know whether you're going to get 10 responses or 10,000. For a small company, a powerful response to an ad can be even more disastrous than no response at all, since a poor reaction to a prospect's response will likely damage your relationship even before it's begun. With direct mail, you can start out with a modest-size mailing to study the response and make sure you can handle it expeditiously.
  • Costs can be modest. Or, more accurately, you can create a campaign to fit large or small budgets.
  • Direct mail can happen fast. With a modest campaign to a known target audience, you can acquire a mailing list, develop mailing materials (including direct-mail letter, flier, reply card), launch a mailing and start to receive results in just a few months. This is faster than the typical advertising campaign--and a lot faster than waiting for the phone to ring.
  • You can test different appeals, called "offers" in the trade, to reveal the most potent message. By making a different offer to randomly different portions of your mailing list, you can see which offer pulls best. Go with your best puller until you find a better draw. As you try different offers and different letters, you'll find one does better than another. Use the better one, and then try to beat that in your next mailing. Eventually, you should get better and better response rates.
  • You can mail to the same list again with a slightly different mailing and still garner worthwhile results. Most direct-mail experts say that companies don't get enough mileage out of their materials. Use them until they no longer pay their way.
  • You can never run out of prospects. Use your imagination to find new niche direct-mail markets for your products, whether retail or business-to-business. Your list broker or mailing consultant can suggest possible target markets worth trying.
With consumer products, you can often sell them right through the mail...or at least get customers to stop in. With business-to-business products, you usually face a two-step process. First, you get a response to your solicitation with an indication of interest (request for catalog, literature, report or sample). This is the lead-generation phase. Once you mail off the requested material, you then follow up with additional material or a phone call/fax/e-mail to use your skills at transforming the lead into a prospect.
Let's put you in charge of another business: a travel agency. It's been in business for nine years and has an established clientele of about 1,400 people. You've taken a close look at who books with you and why, and you've segmented several different submarkets that make up the bulk of your business: the elderly, school groups and vacation and cruise bookings. You don't handle business travelers (they're always wanting you to make last-minute changes and cut back on your discount).
The senior market is the one that interests you. You'll define that as 60 and over. You know the demographics are working in your favor here: More and more people will be entering this age group as the baby boomers get older. Your community has an ample supply of potential clients, and you're not up to your eyeballs in cut-price competitors.
You notice that senior travelers are taking more and more "adventurous" vacations--to China, Australia, the Middle East, India, South Africa--not just to the traditional destinations of 10 years ago. There are lots of eco-tourists, too, in this age group. They have money to spend, they're not overly cheap on accommodations, and they're a trustworthy lot. You want more of them. How do you get them?
You talk to your buddy Glenn, who (after a career in advertising) does some consulting "just to keep his pulse steady." Glenn makes some suggestions on making more of the senior market:
  • Create a modest one-page newsletter and mail it out six times a year to your current senior customers. Material should address their travel needs in particular, and it should include lots of "idea starters" to get them thinking about exciting new destinations.
  • Send your best senior customers a "Reward Offered" special mailing. If they send you the names of some of their senior friends, you'll contact those friends about becoming their travel agency. If they book a trip with you, you'll reward your original customer with 10 percent off his or her next airline ticket.
  • Look to develop new senior customers by some thoughtful mailing-list shopping:
  1. What magazines do the elderly read and can you get mailing labels for subscribers in your market area? A list broker can help you here, or you can contact the publication directly.
  2. What local resources are there for mailing lists? Many cities have sophisticated "letter shops" with remarkably adept mailing-list departments.
  • Set up focus groups of senior citizens and establish a protocol for finding out how to put together tour packages that will appeal to them. Depending on the importance of this senior citizen demographic, you might want to set up an advisory board of senior citizens to advise you on proposed marketing ventures to the market.

Waging a Direct-Mail Campaign

Once you've outlined your target market, staging a direct-mail campaign has seven key steps:
1. Develop a mailing list. Put your description of the targets on this list in writing, so you know to whom you're mailing. If you're mailing to a larger-sized list (more than 20,000), you'll probably want to provide your letter shop with Cheshire labels: unglued labels that are affixed to your mailing piece with special glue. For smaller quantities, you might just provide pressure-sensitive (self-sticking) labels. When you have a small quantity of labels, you can put them on by hand with pressure-sensitive labels. Cheshire labels require machine application at the mailing house. Your list supplier will provide you the labels in whatever format you want.
2. Create a mailing piece. You don't just mail out a brochure to your list. That gets too expensive, and your brochures weren't designed for it. You need to create a direct-mail piece with a strong offer that will spur the recipient to action. All direct mail leads to the "call to action": What do you want the recipient to do next? Mail back the business reply card? Call the 800-number? Fill out the order form and fax it to your number?
You can never be too pushy in direct-mail materials. You can also be clever, cute, whimsical, even overpowering, but only in connection with being pushy. Your goal is to get action. You don't create a direct-mail piece to inform. That's what your brochures are for. You want action!
Designers of direct-mail pieces like to get creative with graphics. Your goal is to get the reader to respond to the offer. Any graphics that don't contribute to that are not worth the design and printing costs.
According to most direct-mail gurus:
  • 40 percent of a piece's impact comes from sending it to the right list in the first place.
  • 40 percent comes from the value of the offer.
  • 20 percent comes from the design or writing of the piece.
3. Code your response vehicle. Whatever way you ask recipients to respond, make sure you code your mailing. All you have to do is assign each mailing a batch number, such as 04052103: 0405 is the month/year of the mailing; 21 is the identifier for the particular list you mailed from; and 03 is the identifier for the particular offer. Coding provides a simple device for revealing just who has responded to which mailing and which offer. It makes individual responses much more valuable, since you can easily tabulate the different codes to see what's working the best for you.
4. Test the campaign. Even a modest campaign of a few thousand pieces can run up the budget with mailing and duplication costs. So you should always test mail a portion of your mailing list and check the results. No one can predict the response rate you'll get; there are just too many variables.
What percentage of your mailing makes for a reliable test? Again, it varies, but most authorities would tell you to test 10 percent of your list and no less than 250 pieces. This will give you enough of a spread across the variables to make the results worth something. Before you do your test, you should decide what response rate will support your going ahead with the planned major mailing. This will depend on your budget.
Writers on direct mail duck the issue of response rates because there are so many variables--and because no one really knows how to predict response. Experience suggests that if your rate is less than 2 percent, something is wrong. Either your list is wrong, or your offer is too weak. If you get a response rate above 7 percent for a mass mailing (without giving away the farm), you've done very, very well.
5. Run the campaign. Keep your mailing pace in line with your ability to handle the potential responses. Your test mailing will give you some sense of the rate of customer response. Use that as a gauge for how many pieces you should mail in a given week. Mail only those pieces you can support with your sales effort.
6. Handle customer responses. You can't handle the fulfillment end of a direct-mail campaign without considerable planning. If you're asking respondents to request additional information, what are you going to send them? How soon do you want to mail the information out? What else will you do with the responses? In other words, how will you make maximum use of the names you have spent so much money to acquire?
If you're a company with distributors or sales offices, it's common to pass along the names of prospects, so that follow-up can be handled on the local level. This can be handled with e-mail or faxes. The quicker the response the better, since your speed in dispatching information can quite justifiably be viewed as reflective of your commitment to customer service. Why should respondents have to wait for materials?
If you are mailing out product or samples, do you want that handled from your main offices? Many mail order campaigns depend on fulfillment houses, professional operations that handle the logistics of sending out materials to large quantities of customers. You provide the products and the prospects, they'll take care of the rest.
7. Analyze the results of the campaign. This is perhaps the most important, and underrated, aspect of the campaign. Did the final results match what you expected from the test? What parts of the demographic responded better than expected? Are there subsets of your target audience that you can focus on in future mailings? Every direct-mail campaign you run should contribute not just to your sales figures but to enhancing your customer database. In very real terms, it represents the future of your business.

Creating Your Direct Mail Materials


Direct mail is the weapon of choice for many small businesses because of its targetability and reasonable cost. It's also very versatile since you can include whatever you want in a mailing package to convince your prospect of the desirability of your product or service. All your company literature can
become part of your direct-mail efforts, including company newsletters.
The standard direct-mail package consists of four elements: an envelope, a sales letter, a flier and a reply card.
Envelope
This carries your package to the recipient and bears the mailing label. There's no reason not to use the envelope to get the sales process started early. Use the outside of the envelope to carry an enticement to the prospect to open it:
1. "A new development in equipment rental reduces costs for your company."
2. "Important information for your financial future."
3. "Time-sensitive material enclosed."
4. "Spending too much on bank charges? Look inside."
Sales Letter
This is the workhorse of any direct-mail sales effort. It's been around for a hundred years, and the experts have been working at fine-tuning its appeal for 50 years. Many direct-mail campaigns consist of nothing more than a sales letter. It's inexpensive to duplicate, easily reproducible and simple to test. No matter what your product or service, a well-written sales letter gives you the opportunity to "make your case" to the prospect.
All the thinking that's been done about the basic sales letter can be boiled down to just a few key principles:
1. Write person-to-person. That means it's an "I" writing to a "you." A sales letter is a one-on-one selling opportunity. The prospect has opened your envelope, which has appeared in the mailbox. For a few moments (and not much longer), you have his or her attention. Write as if you were explaining the benefits of your product to a friend. Use short sentences. Avoid formal language. Don't be afraid of contractions like "don't," "isn't" and "it's": This is the way we talk, and this is the way your letter should sound. You're not writing as a company; you're writing as a person.
2. Make your first paragraph your best. People are busy, and no matter how wonderfully crafted your letter is, you can't count on your prospect finishing it. So put your killer benefits to that prospect right in the first paragraph or two. Many sales letter experts suggest you also convey the problem to which your product is the solution. This highlights the benefit and emphasizes the importance of your product or service.
3. Use boxes, subheads, bullets and bold type. Don't make your sales letter look like an encyclopedia article. Break up any large chunks of copy with headings and indents. Your reader will scan the letter quickly in the first few seconds to decide whether it's worth reading. You want the message to get across even with a cursory review.
4. Keep your letter short. One page is best if you're including other material. You should never go over two pages.
5. Make an offer. You're not providing information--you're actively selling. So you need to present the reason for sending your letter. There is something new about your product. You're writing to people who attended a particular show and are offering a discount. You're giving a second product free to people who order a first product. "Order five and get a sixth free." "Join for a year and get two months free." "For a limited time, respondents can take advantage of a one-time trial offer." "Book the service now and get a discount for summer delivery." These are all extra enticements designed to push the prospect over the edge and get him or her to respond.
6. Repeat the offer. State the offer at least twice in your letter, at the opening and at the close.
7. Add a sense of urgency. Give the prospect a reason to reply right away. If you can't persuade the person to act while he or she is holding your mailing package, chances are the person will never respond. So add a time deadline for a response. Or an offer on top of the offer for a quick response. Or maybe a limited amount of the offered product is available at this special price.
Flier
You frequently support your direct-mail letter with a flier, a small brochure that provides additional information on the product or service you're offering. While the letter has to condense the benefits of the product, the flier gives you the opportunity to expand on them a bit. Here is where you can use photography, charts and graphs to make your case. Testimonials always work well in fliers to help convince the prospect of the truth of your claims. Stay focused on benefits.
Don't make the flier depend on the direct-mail letter. It should be able to stand on its own in telling your complete product or service story. You'll undoubtedly have other uses for this flier than a particular direct-mail effort: as an invoice stuffer, as an item in a display rack and so on.
Reply Card
Reply cards can simply be inserted in the mailing package, or they can be attached to the brochure and torn off for return. You want the prospect to write his or her name, address and phone, and then generally to either place an order or ask for more information. Make sure your reply card has room and spaces for the respondent to include all the information you need. And have your business reply card checked by the post office so that it fits all their legal requirements for size, weight and color. You don't want the respondent to have to worry about postage, so your reply card has to carry your business reply permit information where the stamp normally appears (you can get such information from your post office).
The Self-Mailer
A scaled-down direct-mailing option is the self-mailer, which can incorporate virtually all the elements of a full direct-mail package on a single folded sheet of paper. And, of course, along with a decrease in elements is a reduction in cost.
With a self-mailer, you eliminate the costs of producing additional elements, inserting them into an envelope and paying greater postage. The simplicity of a self-mailer also makes it easy to produce quickly, enabling you to introduce a new product, announce a sale or make contact with customers in short order.
The only challenge of self-mailers is overcoming the image of a flimsy fold-over that epitomizes so-called "junk mail." However, what the self-mailer lacks in format appeal, it can make up for in copy clout and design.
The "guts" of the self-mailer can be set up any number of ways. In a three-panel piece, one panel can have bullet points, another a personal sales letter and another the response device or order form. You can even make your self-mailer a four-panel affair, with the final panel for testimonials.
The Postcard
The postcard is perhaps the most elementary of mailing formats, offering many of the advantages of a folded self-mailer, as well as some exclusive to itself.
Since a huge percentage of direct-mail packages never get opened, it pays to consider a format that never has to overcome that obstacle. With a postcard, all the recipient needs is a flip of the wrist to read everything you have to say. This can be a big advantage in attracting the typically impatient reader.
Inexpensive postcards give you the opportunity to consider a mailing "campaign," enabling you to send out a number of such cards at regular intervals to remind the recipient of your product or service.
You can also produce oversized postcards that give you more "canvas" on which to display your wares and make your sales argument. And while the larger size costs incrementally more in printing, paper and postage, its simplicity still makes it affordable.
Like the folded self-mailer, one possible downside of a postcard is that it won't get the respect of a sealed envelope. But if it's developed in a way that has originality and selling power, you could have yourself an inexpensive business builder.
Your Company Newsletter
One popular technique for staying in touch with customers and establishing yourself as a source of valuable information is a company newsletter. For small businesses, they offer a lot of advantages:
  • They're easy to produce in-house. While they're labor-intensive, they don't demand special skills. Any personal computer with a word processing program or page layout program can turn out an attractive newsletter. Many programs include newsletter templates to make your job even easier. Be sure to use a two- or three-column format for easy scanning. Employ photos or illustrations to clarify your articles. Keep your typeface large enough for all your customers to read the articles without straining.
  • They let you inform and sell. You can provide your customers and prospects news on your company, information on your products, case histories of how your products perform, background on key employees, market overviews and so on. You dictate the content. Your only requirement is to keep it interesting for the customer...and to keep the sales content from overwhelming the information content.
  • Their size can deliver more complex information. Ads and brochures always restrict what we can say. Newsletters provide you with an endless brochure. You can put together multipart articles, conduct lengthy interviews, show new ways to use your products--all within a comfortable space allotment.
  • They let you offer lots of different types of information. Don't be misled by the previous point. Although newsletters give you room for lengthier articles, keep the bulk of your newsletter as short pieces, so they are very scannable. You want lots of different items in the hope of providing something interesting to every reader.
  • You create credibility. Your newsletter lets you show off your knowledge and product savvy. Your customers get to see you, your products and your company directly, outside the typical selling framework.
  • You can think long-term. Good newsletters don't just happen. Editors have editorial calendars that link newsletter themes with conferences, new product introductions and other company events. You should plan your newsletter at least six months in advance.
  • You can get your customers involved. Establish a newsletter advisory board to give you ideas on content. Profile some of your largest customers in your newsletter to show other customers the quality of your product. Have customers write articles for your newsletter on industry trends, new applications, reports on trade shows and so on.
  • You can use your newsletter to prospect for new customers.Send out extra copies of your newsletter with a cover letter to prospects. It's a softer sales approach that can be very effective with some potential customers who may resist more direct sales efforts. You can win them over with your knowledge, not your sales persistence.
  • You control frequency. Newsletters can be a lot of work to maintain. Plan on four a year to start, and add more if you're getting interest and your company can handle the workload. You can always put out special issues for extraordinary reasons--new product introduction, large contract, special trade show exhibition, story in national press and so on.