Sunday 26 July 2009

10 small business marketing tips

Small business owners have to market their businesses smarter than before these days – With the recession looming with no visible end, every single penny counts. Many small business owners today are bootstrapping and going frugal.

If you are interested in low budget but effective marketing, here are some tips to share with you - Here are 10 marketing tips to help you find more customers and close more sales, quickly:

Don’t advertise like the big guys

Unlike us the smaller counterparts, big businesses advertise to build brand name and nurture future sales. We simply don’t have the budget to do so. Instead, DIY your advertising and/or outsource it to low-cost advertising companies, even freelancers. Make sure you always include an offer in your advertising that get prospects to be more inclined to respond.

Always offer lower cost alternatives

Prospects simply want to hang on their money as much as they can, as long as they receive satisfying result. They want lower price for the best result they can get. Instead of burning your own business in a price war with your competitors, consider creating a “light” version of your services or products by stripping out non-essential features that will keep yours appealing to a certain segment in the market.

Alternatively, offer a premium version of your service or product
Not all prospects want cheap prices. Many are willing to pay a premium to receive high quality product or service. Or contrary to the point above, you can actually combine several products or services into a premium package that is offered at a higher price tag.

Go online

My favourite part :) You should go online for either promotional purpose or selling your products or services. It’s low cost, easy to learn and easy to do. Blog for your small business enhance your branding, while setting up a website will reach more customers from a rapidly growing number of online shoppers. Don’t forget to use available social media, such as Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn to build a community that can get you marketers and business evangelists.

Try unconventional marketing methods

Spy on your competitors, and learn what they are also doing. If you do your homework well, you may find an innovative idea or two that will increase your profitability while avoiding competition. One idea: Conventional mail box is not obsolete, yet – sponsor your local event flyer (ask for an exclusive sponsorship) that will generate considerable sales leads in exchange for a small amount of money.

Use the power of perception to make your business seem bigger

Customers perceive the value of your products or services. They also do perceive the reliability and dependability of your business based on certain measures. One of the most common measures is company size. Being a two person business doesn’t make you less trusted than your larger counterparts – Setting up an answering machine system that shouts “professional” will do the trick. One tip: Create many “virtual departments” in it, such as marketing department, IT department or customer service department, and have them redirected to your phone – “Inflate” your manpower from two to twenty in no time,



Reduce the size of your ads


Smaller-sized ads will let you advertise more for the same budget. Plus, short marketing messages work better than the longer counterpart. This reminds me of Twitter pushing marketers to create 140-character marketing messages, yet is extremely effective,

Offer giveaways and freebies

Nothing is more compelling than giveaways and freebies. Some argue that freebies are expensive. To certain extent, I agree. However, choosing the right promotional products will cut your cost-per-lead significantly, as unique and free items tend to have emotional bait in them – Having your promo product with your company messages in it neatly placed on a CEO desk is viral marketing!

Do a joint-promotion with other small business

Ask non-competing small business owners serving a similar target market to do a joint-promotion. Cross-selling each others' products or services will give your customers highly related offers, in which will usually produce more sales than marketing on their own.

Benefit from your relationship with your customers

The power of word of mouth. Your existing customers know and trust you – They are your great tangible and intangible assets you already have in your business ecosystem. It’s basically easier to get more business from them than from new prospects. You should “lavish” them by creating special deals – only for your existing customers and make them your PR people – Their endorsement is indeed very effective in term of cost and result than any other advertising campaigns.

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