Thursday, July 29th, 2010
The black cloud may have lifted, but there’s a long way to go before the economic balance is restored. So, it’s no surprise that some companies are using vouchers and special offers to entice customers to their website or venue.
Popular websites such as Moneysavingexpert.com, Vouchercodes.co.uk, and the many others floating around in cyber space, seem to have bred over the last few years. Nowadays, it’s the norm to choose which restaurant you go to based on the vouchers available. There is almost a guilt attached to paying full price for anything when there are so many offers on the market all ready for the taking. However, whilst bagging a bargain is great for the consumer, how great is it for your business?
Vouchers, discounts, special offers – they all have the power to increase foot fall and bring a new range of clientele to your books. There is an opportunity for businesses, by offering savings, to reach consumers who wouldn’t normally have access to their products or services – bringing longer term benefits in addition to short term profits. The trial may be all that a consumer needs to be persuaded that the quality of what they receive, or their enjoyment of it, is worthy of the higher price tag. In this instance, the consumer may continue to buy from the company even when the offer has expired.
Research recently undertaken by online agency fast.MAP on behalf of Promotional Marketing magazine supports this idea, showing how discounts can entice people over from competitors’ brands. A whopping 76% of the people asked, said that they’d try an alternative to their usual brand if they were given a coupon of 40p or more on a purchase of £2. 28% of these went on to say that after being tempted to use another brand they have remained loyal to this brand because they preferred it.
It is common sense to take heed of the population’s financial situation and respond to it. After all, Pizza Express has been running a two for one offer throughout the recession and it seems to have been a great success. However, it is important to acknowledge the possible consequences of such long term offers. What happens when they finally come to an end? Will the regular customers continue to eat at full price, or will they simply drift away? After all, who wants to pay full price for something you’ve been having for half price for over two years?
There is a real risk of devaluing your product/service if you aren’t careful with your use of offers. Will reaching new clientele be at the expense of losing your existing one? What if people become immune to your offer, do you then reduce it further? It takes a careful balancing act to reap the benefits of your offer, without paying the price.
We’re told that the best things in life are free. That’s all well and good for the consumer, but not so much for the struggling business owner who needs to make a profit. The key to maintaining the value of your product is to ensure that any discount you give is earned. If your customers don’t have to do anything to get their voucher, they won’t value it. Whether it’s asking them to subscribe to your newsletter, or giving discounts to people who spend over a certain amount of money, there are ways to make sure you protect your brand’s reputation.
Don’t overlook the positives of using offers and vouchers to draw customers in. A coherent strategy needs to be put in place to monitor their effectiveness and long term consequences, but that doesn’t undermine their potential in the work place. Research commissioned by Valassis, a leading coupon service provider, at the end of 2009, shows that there has been a 28% increase in the number of consumers looking for a promotional offer in the last twelve months alone.
Posted in B2B Marketing, B2C Marketing, Business Lists, Consumer Lists, Email-Marketing, Mailing Lists, Uncategorized
Thursday, July 1st, 2010
The budget has finally been announced, providing, as expected, a mixture of responses. However, no matter how the budget may impact your business, remember that your marketing should be the last thing to feel the strain.
It’s the same old story that we’ve been repeating since the recession hit, but it’s an important one. Marketing spend is one of the most vulnerable sectors when cash flow slows down. Unlike many other departments, marketing is often dismissed as a luxury. After all, getting customers isn’t the be all and end all of business, right?
If costs need to be cut, something has to suffer the blow. But at a time when you’re relying on new sales the most, it isn’t a great idea to stop the source of them. In the short term, marketing budgets can seem extravagant, but they’re crucial for a company’s long term success.
As a marketing company, we’ve seen our fair share of what marketing can do and which companies prosper the most. A successful business needs to move forward, not just tread water. For that to happen, a company needs to constantly bring in new customers and not simply rely on existing ones. Putting your head down and hoping the storm passes is financially draining and ultimately unsustainable. And, even if you do make it through to the other side, you’ll more than likely find that your customers won’t be coming out of the other end along with you.
Keep customers trust:
If a company falls off the radar for a significant length of time, most people will presume they’re struggling – and that’s not a great image to create for potential, or even existing, clients. Buyers like to deal with businesses that they believe are safe and secure, not ones which appear on the verge of going under, and likely to take their hard earned money with them. The companies that keep their brand in the spotlight and establish an image of strength will be the ones rewarded by customer loyalty.
Win a larger market share for less money:
The recession and the new budget will affect millions of people, not just you. Everyone is trying to survive in one way or another. They can usually be split into two groups – those that are going to fight even harder for business, and those that will attempt to tread water (remember them?). The more people that cut their marketing and disappear from public view, the more your marketing efforts will be rewarded. As fewer companies compete for business, and cheaper marketing avenues are offered as incentives, you’ll find yourself with a larger market share for a lower price than normal.
Give offers which reflect the current financial climate:
Just because there is a financial downfall, doesn’t mean that business stops, but it does change the way customers buy. People will be looking for offers and promotions, so it’s your job to offer them what you can. This is the perfect time to reach out and show potential customers why they should buy from you. Adapt your sales to fit the current economic climate and you’ll be reaping the rewards for a long time to come.
Posted in Uncategorized
Monday, June 21st, 2010
There’s a very large World Cup bandwagon going around and everyone is jumping on it. Even anti-football fans can’t escape the abundance of flags and the backdrop of boozy cheers which are erupting around every corner. And with all this excitement surrounding the event, is it any wonder that businesses are scrambling to get in on the action?
The exposure that can be harnessed through an association with the World Cup can be invaluable to businesses globally. Along with all the merchandise (official and non-official) that has been cropping up, there are thousands of companies who have integrated the event into their own products. Walkers crisps have brought out a range of specially created flavours to represent the countries competing, whilst Coca Cola, one of the many World Cup sponsors, has launched the Fifa World Cup Trophy Tour amidst a multitude of other marketing initiatives associated with the event.
Friend vs Folly
But, how good an idea is it to join in the buzz which surrounds the World Cup and can anyone do it?
Depending upon your type of company, there are plenty of opportunities for marketers to exploit the event. For pubs in particular, broadcasting the games and offering mid-match snacks is a natural extension of their business. However, there are more tenuous links being made by companies desperate to keep up with the current trend.
World Cup themed competitions and offers are everywhere, and their popularity depicts a certain amount of success. However, could it be too much of a good thing? The market is so saturated with World Cup related products and offers, is there a chance that the message you’re putting out there is getting lost?
Let us know what you think…
Posted in Uncategorized
Monday, June 7th, 2010
I recently read a news story about a two year old girl who had caught a 20lb fish with her Barbie fishing rod. Amidst a whole hoard of professional fishermen and expensive equipment, the toddler with her toy rod and worm for bait, reeled in the catch of the weekend – a 30 inch Muskie. I’d like to bet that nobody had marked her out as competition or considered a Barbie rod a vital piece of equipment, and yet the result was clear. A perfect example as to why you should always keep an open mind.
Whilst logic can be relied on to determine many things, there are some things that will ultimately defy it – and never more so than with human behaviour. Analysing facts and figures can help to some extent, but ultimately there is no way to know what somebody is going to do or how somebody is going to respond without testing. It’s a crucial lesson to learn regarding your company’s marketing.
It’s easy to get stuck in a rut when it comes to marketing. There are a million tasks to do every day and it can be difficult to find time to overhaul your current marketing strategy – particularly when it is working fine. However, why should we be content with ‘fine’, when with a little bit of time and effort that ‘fine’ could be turned into ‘remarkable’?
As technology advances and your customers change, it’s crucial to ensure that your marketing is still relevant. If you’ve never branched out to email marketing, how do you know that it won’t make a positive impact on your sales? Without ever experimenting with different direct mail inserts, or promoting your products through SMS, how can you be sure that it won’t produce better response rates? Keeping an open mind about potential marketing opportunities is vital if you want your company to continue to progress. After all, you never know what might happen. Perhaps you’ll make a great catch too.
Posted in B2B Marketing, B2C Marketing, Business Lists, Consumer Lists, Email-Marketing, Mailing Lists, Uncategorized
Friday, May 21st, 2010
Next time you read a sales letter, pick up a brochure or look at an advertisement, take note of how far you read before you decide whether to keep it or throw it away.
People are busy. They’re working, having meetings, looking after children, shopping etc. They don’t have the spare time to read through every page of sales copy that comes through their door or into their inbox each day. At most, the majority of people will read the first couple of lines before deciding whether or not it deserves any more of their time. This is why it’s crucial to make those opening lines count.
There’s no room for teasers in sales copy. The idea to ‘save the best till last’ isn’t a great one when most people won’t get that far. To save your copy from hurtling straight to the bin, you need to make sure you hook your customers from the off. That means putting any unique selling points, special offers, or great benefits at the beginning.
Yes – this is simple stuff and most of us know it. Unfortunately, there are times that we all forget and instead waste our crucial opening lines wittering on about trivialities.
However, there is one place where you can benefit from putting a selling point last – in the PS. On a quick glance, a PS. stands out. Anybody scanning a document will usually read it along with the first couple of lines. So make sure you a) include one and b) make it count.
The idea that you need to hook your customers from the beginning is something that can also be applied to web pages. Most visitors will require some persuasion before they will take the effort to scroll down the page. So, it’s your job to persuade them and you have half a page to do it.
Remember, the world moves fast. If you want to catch new customers you need to be clear, concise and to the point.
Posted in Uncategorized
Monday, March 29th, 2010
So you want to target a select market with a specific offer in order to incite a set response – surely the same rules apply no matter what your channel of communication?
Yes, I know many of you long time email marketers are probably jumping up and down right now, asking, ‘How can you be serious?’ But, many people are still approaching email marketing in the same way as they approached their direct mail campaigns.
Naturally, there are certain principles that remain the same (e.g. careful targeting, personalisation, calls to action), but there are many differences too. These need to be identified and responded to if you are to fulfil the true potential of your e-marketing campaign.
So, let’s start from the top…
Getting your emails delivered. Direct mail, or ‘snail mail’ as it is often referred to, may take a day or two to get there, but most of the time (forgetting about all the postal strikes last year) your mail is delivered. Unfortunately, there’s a little more skill involved with getting your emails delivered.
Due to the increase of spam filters, the content of your emails and how you send them has a huge impact on whether or not they arrive in your recipients’ inboxes. Trying to send mass emails out using your regular Outlook account, particularly if you’re using the CC field for the names of your recipients, can cause you delivery problems. As can sending your campaign from a server with a reputation for spamming. Using spam-like words such as ‘Free’ or writing subject lines in capitals with one too many exclamation marks, all can affect the number of emails that pass through the filters. Not forgetting the heavy rate of bounce backs and changed addresses, which are often changed more regularly than residencies. It can seem a bit of a minefield if you don’t know, and adhere to, the basic rules of email marketing.
On the up side, emails are delivered almost instantaneously; much more useful for last minute offers and breaking news than the old snail mail.
Another point to remember is that emails are much easier to unsubscribe to than direct mail. Recipients are only one click away from opting out of your updates/offers/newsletter. So, it’s more important than ever to make sure that what you send out is relevant to your target group. At first glance it may seem that this is a huge disadvantage of email marketing, but if people are opting out it is highlighting that there is something wrong with either your targeting, or your email content. Identifying a problem and rectifying it could actually help you to reach a higher response rate in the long run.
Along the same point, bombarding your customers/prospects with direct mail isn’t perhaps the most effective method, but it causes significantly less damage than bombarding people with emails. Not only will you cause people to opt out (we have just identified how easy that is), but if continuous emails are sent to large groups of the same people, there’s a chance you will be branded a spammer and your emails won’t get delivered, or worse, your account suspended.
Designing emails as against direct mail, has both its benefits and its downfalls. On a positive note, emails can be a lot easier to design, even if you don’t understand html. If like many e-marketers you use a professional e-marketing system, chances are that you will have free access to some email templates. These can be customised simply by changing colours, inserting your own text and uploading your own images, and takes minimal time and effort. Particularly cost effective when you think about the paper and printing costs of a direct mail campaign.
However, unlike a direct mail design, what you see when you design the email isn’t necessarily what will confront your receivers. If you’re designing an email campaign you need to be aware of how your email will look in different email service providers – the best method of this is through testing. It is also necessary to be aware that some of your recipients may view your email through a preview pane. Again, it is crucial that you design with this in mind.
If you think it’s looking like email marketing is more effort than it’s worth, you couldn’t be further from the truth. If you are aware of how email marketing works and abide by the guidelines, there are many benefits to be had that you won’t get using direct mail.
As with most things in this life, there are pros and cons to most things, and so a varied diet will usually bring about the best results. Direct mail and email marketing can happily work together as part of your marketing mix. Identify the benefits of each, apply them wisely, and sit back and wait for the results to come in.
Posted in B2B Marketing, B2C Marketing, Business Lists, Consumer Lists, Email-Marketing, Mailing Lists, Uncategorized
Monday, March 29th, 2010
Not too long back, email was the technology of the moment. After only a few months, people were already wondering how they ever managed with the traditional snail mail, and email mania soon swept up everyone, from kids right through to grandmas and everybody in-between.
As society has continued to speed forward and respond to the needs of the newest generation, we have seen the steady rise of social networking. Facebook was initially a phenomenon for university students, when I first joined only a handful of universities had been hit by the craze for ‘Facebooking’, and yet within months its popularity had spread like wildfire. Soon it was no longer a way for young people to keep in touch with their friends, it was a way for the older generation to rediscover old relationships, a way to make friends with people you’d not yet met and, perhaps most telling, a way for businesses to interact with their marketplace.
Social networking has become a key aspect of marketing, giving businesses a cost effective way to reach a larger audience and develop their brand. Many companies now, large and small, have at the very least a Facebook and Twitter profile. Naturally, these work best for B2C companies, but there are still plenty of benefits to be had for companies with a business market too.
Despite the introduction of sites such as Facebook, Twitter, Linked In and most recently, Google Buzz, (to name just a few), email is still a very important part of the marketing mix. In fact, despite what some may say, social networking has actually placed even more importance upon emails.
It’s strange to me that people feel it necessary to choose their favourite digital channel and stick to it (as though you can only use one or the other). Surely, the very point of technology is to build upon what you already have, in order to provide the strongest and most extensive platform on which to market your product/service.
There is a mutually beneficial relationship to be had between social networks and email. Both can help the other to thrive, and together they give you a dual route through to your market. Whilst many have forecast the decline of email, in reality there is room for them both.
It’s usual for companies, and people, to join more than one social network and so most of us use email alerts to tell us when things have been written or posted on to our profile. Can you imagine the amount of time and effort it would take to constantly check every site individually? But more important than its role as alerter, email also has the potential to grow our social network. Many emails now include links to the network sites, encouraging people to follow your company in another way. Articles/newsletters no longer rely on the ‘forward to a friend’ link, but instead give you the option to ‘share this’, allowing them to be posted straight onto other people’s profiles on networking sites – placing your company in front of a whole new audience made up of that person’s friends and followers.
Social networks are a good way to get to know your customers in a more personable way. They are great for sending out mass updates, and their ability to let you send and receive messages instantly is definitely a pro. However, email still offers important advantages. A lot of people like to feel that some thought has been put in to contacting them. Contacting large groups at once (e.g. using Twitter updates) seems less personal, and even sending a personal message from a networking site somehow appears to show less effort than the process of sending and addressing an email.
Email campaigns allow a level of targeting that is difficult to replicate online. Multiple email lists are able to be managed and saved along with additional information about each recipient. At the moment, tracking an email campaign is still more widely understood, and the analytics available offer more insight into your customers’ behaviour, than a social network campaign.
Reports have shown that, in contrast to people leaving email in favour of social networking, on average, users of such sites check their email much more frequently. This gives your marketing campaign much more chance of getting seen and opened.
So, email’s safe. It has not been upstaged but instead has become part of a rather fabulous double act. Who says you can’t have the best of both worlds?
Posted in Email-Marketing, Uncategorized
Friday, March 26th, 2010
Why follow ups are so important…
Over recent years, society has become obsessed with getting immediate results. Most of us demand it as a basic right, expecting to get anything we want, whenever we want it. In many ways, this expectation has helped us to create a faster, more efficient society which can provide for such demands. However, not everything can be delivered here and now – some results take time. This is especially true of marketing. So many companies sabotage their marketing through impatience. If a campaign doesn’t produce results instantaneously, we write it off. Unfortunately, this is the way to a whole heap of failed campaigns.
Not once, not twice, but three times; this is the average number of times a prospect will be contacted before they respond. Selling takes time, as does building up an awareness of your brand. If your company name isn’t readily familiar to your potential customers, expect it to take a while for you to develop a relationship between you and them.
Following up your initial mailing with another letter, an email, or even a phone call, can significantly increase the response rate of your marketing. Some companies have seen between a 25% to 50% improvement on their initial response. Why – because even those who intended to respond initially have probably forgotten. Contacting your prospects again and reinforcing your message, along with a strong call to action, helps your message to stand out amongst the zillions of others and gives people another chance to reply.
So, next time you’re doing your marketing plan, make sure that you factor in follow ups. It’s all about keeping up a consistent contact with your market (without bombarding them), and reminding them about who you are, where they can contact you, and what you can do to help.
Posted in B2B Marketing, B2C Marketing, Business Lists, Consumer Lists, Email-Marketing, Mailing Lists, Uncategorized
Wednesday, February 10th, 2010
Christmas is barely over and already the next celebration is on its way. Sometimes it feels like the entire year is spent hopping from one occasion to the next – no wonder there’s never enough time to get anything done.
Still, with Valentine’s Day looming, it’s the perfect opportunity for all you restaurateurs, hoteliers, venue managers and retailers to give your February profits a big boost. As well as doing your bit for romance (something all too rare in the grey February days).
Whether you’ve got the perfect love nest for couples or the best venue for an anti-Valentine’s Day party, business should be booming this February 14th.
Send Out Invites
Don’t expect people to know what you’ve got planned for Valentine’s Day – tell them! Send invites out via email or post, put up posters or place signs up around your premises. Millions of people across the UK are looking for something to do on this one night of the year, and it’s your job to tell them why they should come to yours.
Create An Impact
With new customers coming through your doors, it’s crucial that you create the right impression. After all, those one off customers could turn into lifetime investments. Think about what you can do to make your customers feel extra special (A rose on every table? A glass of champagne on arrival? A free box of chocolates with every purchase?) Details make up an overall impression. People remember the small things. So a little touch here and there can be all you need to create a big impact.
Improve Sales and Customer Satisfaction
Think about creating a special Valentine’s Day package to make your customers feel special. Creating a specific package is an effective way to up-sell to your customers with relatively little effort. For example, a hotel may choose to offer a more romantic experience than the usual bed and breakfast deal. As part of a Valentine’s package they may provide fresh flowers on arrival, breakfast in bed and a late check out – all things which will make the stay more memorable, and which customers will pay extra for. Happy customers and a bigger profit! It’s all about providing a great experience for your customers, offering good value for money and increasing the average spend of your customers. It’s a win win situation for both sides.
Happy Valentine’s Day!
Posted in B2C Marketing, Consumer Lists, Email-Marketing, Uncategorized
Wednesday, January 27th, 2010
It takes more than a bit of snow to keep the Whichlist.com team out of the office for too long. With the aid of some heavy layers (and an ice pick) we all finally made it up the hill last week. Yes – the Whichlist.com office is at the top of a rather big hill if you didn’t know. Think Ben Nevis… Everest… you get the picture! So, the whole team was back in the office bringing marketing solutions to companies around the UK.
But, it seemed that after getting up the hill, the excitement of getting back down it proved too much for some of the staff.
Still, it’s not a bad way to spend a lunch hour!
Wishing you a successful year’s marketing!
Love the Whichlist.com Team
Posted in Uncategorized
Who we have worked with, both past and present;