Getting the biggest bang for Your Buck as Discussed by Melvin Feller MA, MBA
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Melvin Feller MA,MBA and Marketing |
According
to Melvin Feller, MBA and business owner as well as an online educator,
marketing is an ever-changing, sometimes elusive activity. Even the
marketing experts are continually tweaking their strategies in order to
remain focused on attracting the customers they want. So, what should
typical small business owners do, whose expertise is in delivering the
product or service they started the business for?
First,
understand that marketing is simply the message you send out to connect
with people who want what you sell. Communicating this message is
actually easier than creating the message itself. And herein lies the
problem. Most business owners focus exclusively on the type of
transmission vehicle that carries the message instead of crafting a
compelling message that entices their customers to want to do business
with them. When this happens, most marketing programs are equally as
effective and tend to deliver the same poor results.
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Melvin Feller and Marketing Team |
Melvin
Feller teaches and analysis marketing messages and believes that the
fact is, that business have an identical marketing weakness as do most
industries where there are tons of competitors with virtually no obvious
differentiation.
Most competitors’ web sites or marketing messages make the same-sounding claims, describe the same-sounding services, and make same-sounding lead generation offers.
Some try to break from the pack by making either of the three big marketing mistakes:
Mistake 1:
Boasting about leadership. “We’re the leader in…” Even if it’s true,
unless you’re a household name it sounds fake, and no one cares except
your CEO. It’s not a key differentiation
point.
point.
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Melvin Feller and the Marketing Puzzle. |
Mistake 2:
Making up terminology to describe yourself. “We use the unique A.B.C.
process to…” If prospects never heard of it, they don’t care. They are
not here to learn about you — they just want to know if you can solve
their particular problem.
Mistake 3:
Broad customer description. “Everyone from the Fortune 500 to small
businesses use our services.” Prospects don’t think of themselves as
generic (even if they are), so they don’t want to buy generic services even if it would suit them.
Melvin Feller’s bottom line advice is to focus your positioning on the customer — not
yourself!
yourself!
Feller
recommends that you start by reviewing what you have received for the
money you have spent on marketing programs. While every business has
unique qualities that may favor particular approaches, here are some of
the more common forms of marketing and some tips on how to evaluate
their effectiveness.
Local phone books-
Most of these directories have been replaced by more robust on-line
services. Still, a tremendous number of businesses continue to advertise
in ‘yellow page’ style books. Look at the section of the book you
occupy. Based on competition, the size you select and cost you agree to
pay, the listing should be big enough to have one main message plus
contact information. Anything more and the cost associated with it can
be put to better use.
Newspaper ads-
Unless you do a substantial volume business or rely on holidays for the
majority of your business, forget them. The cost grossly outweighs the
benefit.
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Melvin Feller and Getting the Most out of Your Marketing. |
Coupon mailers-
These vehicles are acceptable for car washes, haircuts and pizza but
not much else. Most people don’t even open the envelops and if they do,
they usually don’t look through more than 4–5 on the top. In any case,
the coupon redemption is less than 1% so figure out how much you will
pay to get 2–3 people to call you.
Online local listings-
Several companies sell services to place you in all local listings for
an ongoing monthly fee of anywhere from $99 to $499. If you have the
know-how, you can do 90% of this yourself and save some money.
Door flyers-
Most of the cost of this promotional approach is in the cost of
delivering the flyers. They can be very effective if combined with
something free. Real estate agents do very well by advertising
themselves on pads of paper. This way, your name stays in front of your
prospect for some period of time.
Mobile Text Messaging-
A relatively new advertising medium, this service sends text promotions
and offers to people who sign up using a text message code. They can
work very well for low cost purchases or time specific offers like free
sodas with any sub during the lunch hour. Other than that, I predict
this program will fade as people will tire of getting ads sent to their
phones.
Radio-
Broad reaching but can be expensive. Depending on the time slots, you
may or may not even be talking to your potential customers. All times
are not equal so ask lots of questions about the schedule you buy into.
Billboards-
Predominantly dependent on your message and the location. Unless your
business has a visual component, I would pass on this sort of
advertising.
Networking events-
An excellent way to build visibility and referrals but it can be time
consuming. You may need to test a few different groups to see which ones
attract the types of referral partners and customers you are looking
for. For most quality networking groups, look at WWW.meetup.com
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Melvin Feller Loves Marketing. |
Websites-
One of the single biggest marketing expenses for a small business, your
content, appearance and functionality must all work together or your
designer and hosting costs are going down the drain every month.
Be
very critical of your returns with any of these marketing approaches.
If you are spending $500 to $2,500 per month on a variety of programs,
make sure you can message the business you get with the right message.
If the return is poor, cancel the agreement.
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