How You Can Make Advertising Pay Big Dividends
(source: www.chetholmes.com)
McGraw Hill once commissioned an extensive study
to determine what marketing weapons make a company famous in it’s
market or community.
The study went on to show that advertising created
more product, service, or brand awareness than all other marketing
weapons combined.
The fact is, we know that Coke is “The Real Thing”
because Coke advertises, not because it has good salespeople or does
great direct mail.
Advertising stays in front of your prospects when
you can’t be there. While a handful of salespeople can only be in front
of perhaps a hundred or so prospects per month, 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. 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.
If you do advertise, do not 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 as a direct
mail piece, promo piece, or even a hand out at a trade show.
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 important point along the lines of
advertising smart is that cable TV today can virtually change your life
in a week. I know a fellow who has an electronic repair business.
He would fix VCR’s, TV’s, Toasters, etc… and he
also would come to your home to hook up your entire entertainment
system if you needed him to do that. The name of the business was Mr.
Tim’s Home Electronic Repair and Installation Service.
First, on my advice, he took an insert in the
newspaper. (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 B2B
in a trade journal or B2C 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.
When I ran magazines and newspapers, we
discouraged them because we NEEDED ads in the magazine/newspaper, but
when we had a client we were going to lose over lack of response, we
ALWAYS recommended the insert because they almost always worked.
So Mr. Tim’s Home Electronic Repair and
Installation Service took the newspaper insert in the local newspaper
and bought, specifically, the major neighborhoods where he felt they
have more time than money.
That’s the other beauty of newspaper inserts is
that you can generally buy a small piece of the circulation to test the
idea or to concentrate geographically. This worked for months for Mr.
Tim, as people kept the insert around until they needed him.
But one of the people that spotted that insert was
the local cable salesperson who told him he could make him famous. Mr.
Tim thought TV would be WAY too expensive, but, as it turns out, in
some markets, you can buy just a neighborhood. You can buy by zip code.
So for $200 per week, Mr. Tim was on TV like 60
times per week, spread all over 50 different cable channels.
It was amazing. You’d be watching re-runs of
Seinfeld and there would come this Mr. Tim’s Home Electronic Repair and
Installation Service ad and his phone would ring. It worked great.
Then one day he walks into a bike shop and someone
recognized him from his TV ad. He was becoming famous from this mere
$200 per week.
Not for everyone, but if you sell B2C, look into
local cable and concentrate with a lot of spots.
Every business action requires some kind of cost
justification. Does the effort justify the cost? Company X advertised
its professional educational materials.
When it seemed as though the advertising was not
working, the company was going to cancel its ad campaign.
Then it discovered a startling correlation between
its advertising and its direct-mail efforts: Its direct-mail response
went up by 30% in the months it advertised to the same audience.
This is typical. The more penetration you can get
to the same audience, the better the possibility that you will get
noticed.
In the ’90s, getting noticed is everything. In
today’s commercial clutter, you get noticed only by continually
reaching the same potential customer with a consistent theme, message,
look, and feel.
If you advertise in a print medium (magazine,
newspaper, etc.), you will find that most publications will rent you
their mailing lists.
This means you can direct mail to the same
audience to which you are advertising! This is a very smart usage of
marketing dollars.
Look at the lifetime value. If you have an
inexpensive product, your advertising has to deliver a high number of
leads, or every lead has to turn into a repeat customer.
For example, say your average customer spends $25
with you. If you are spending $1,000 per month on advertising, you will
need to attract 40 new customers per month to break even on the ad, not
counting any of your other costs, such as product costs and overhead.
If those customers are one-time buyers, then you
have to find a way to make your advertising more effective or less
expensive. If they become regular buyers, then you can accept lower
response rates.
The key here is to look at the “lifetime value” of
a customer. A customer who spends $25 a month and comes to your store
only once is only worth $25 to you.
But if you can get that customer to be a repeat
customer, then that customer is worth $300 a year, or $1,500 over five
years!
Most business people do not understand the power
of advertising; they do not realize that each new $25 customer is
potentially a $1,500 customer!
Advertising brings in the customers, but it is
your job to keep them buying from you.
Advertising promotes word-of-mouth
Often, a loyal customer will see your ad while
with a friend or business associate. Your customer will show your ad to
the friend and say, “Hey Joe, now this is a really great
company/product/service.”
Joe will come into your business, and you will ask
him how he heard of you. He will say that his friend referred him and
never think to mention that it was your advertising that prompted the
friend to open his mouth in the first place.
I headed up a Neilson study that tracked hundreds
of ads and the response rate each ad generated. Each month, a computer
printout listed the ads and how much response each had generated. The
first printout came and it looked like this:
- X Company…………22 responses
- Y Company……...….20 responses
- Z Company………….23 responses
- K Company………..223 responses
- J Company……….….26 responses
In the midst of all the other ads generating
responses in the low 20’s, one ad was generated more than 200
responses!
Turning to the ad, we expected to find some
totally new or unique offer, product or service.
Instead, we found that the product advertised was
nearly identical in price and features to four or five other products
in the same publication.
Thus, it wasn’t the product that made the response
jump so significantly, it was the ad!
After a year of tracking the highest response generating ads, we
learned that, for the most part, the ads that pulled the greatest
response followed four primary rules:
Rule No 1: Is it distinctive? You must design
advertising that is so distinctive looking (or sounding, if you’re on
the radio) that it pops out of the clutter.
In print, the first goal of high-response-oriented
advertising is that it be visually distinctive. On radio, the audio
must be distinctive. Naturally, TV has both visual and audio
possibilities.
I ran a TV spot advertising a free seminar I’m
doing with Jay Abraham. Among other images we used in the spot, I put a
shot of me throwing a double side kick (I have 23 years of karate
training) to the head of a business owner (we’re both in suits).
What’s the point of that? One point. It makes you
want to find out “what the heck is going on there?” Today, 70% of TV
watchers are muting out the commercials.
But if you see something really intriguing, you
will UN-mute just to see what the heck is happening there.
There’s a spot running right now where this kid
sprays his mother with a squirt gun and she pulls the hose out of the
sink and nails the kid with it.
I saw that spot several times and it finally got
my goat. I wanted to see what they were advertising.
So make your ad distinctive. Something that makes
it STAND OUT.
Rule No. 2: Tell me what you want to tell me. If
you page through a magazine, you will quickly notice that you do not
read the ads that make it difficult for you to figure out what they are
selling.
“Clever” is only better if it is “super clever.”
Clever headlines that do not tell you what they are trying to sell are
simply not effective.
Most ads in most publications today don’t have
headlines that tell you what they are trying to sell. In the
information age, don’t hint around; say what you want to say, right in
the headline.
A good headline follows these four criteria:
- It tells you what the product or service is.
- It starts with the word you or your (not
always, but mostly).
- It contains a benefit to the reader. Most
companies brag about themselves, rather than talk about the benefit to
the reader (prospect).
High-response-oriented advertising focuses like a laser beam on the
benefit to the customer.
- It makes the consumer want to read on.
The headline is the ad for the ad. If the headline
isn’t good, no one will read the rest of the ad. Responses to ads have
jumped ten fold by simply changing the headlines.
Rule No. 3: The body copy should…
Be curiosity driven, unfolding the story you want
to tell.
By highly benefit oriented. So many ads talk about
features, when it is benefits that motivate buying.
Give you a reason to take action now! Can you
offer something for free that will help you engage the potential
customer?
Rule No. 4: Ask for the order. Too many ads do not
give explicit instructions as to what action you would like the
customer to take: “Order today and save,” or “Call us today and receive
this free….”. You must always ask for the order!
Summary
Advertising is a powerful tool for becoming a
well-known player in any market.
Even if you take a small schedule and a small ad,
by consistently letting it run in an appropriately targeted vehicle,
over time that ad will have an impact. People will see your logo and it
will register.
Advertising supports everything else you do in
your business. But it is only part of a total package.
You must have other marketing, and you must make
sure, ultimately, that you are treating the customer like gold. Happy
customers will spread the word faster, and advertising will help
facilitate that. Happy advertising!
Chet Holmes is President and CEO of Jordan
Productions, an international training firm that helps companies
accelerate growth using Chet’s proprietary techniques. See www.chetholmes.com
to attend a webinar about Chet’s concepts.
About The Author
Chet Holmes is author and creator of the popular
business series Guerrilla Marketing Meets Karate Master with Jay Conrad
Levinson, Business Growth Masters, and Zero to $100 Million.
Chet charges $5,000 an hour and has been paid fees
up to $1 million dollars from a single client. He's personally had 50
Fortune 500 clients and has 60 products selling in 19 countries.