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E-NEWS VOL 2 ISSUE 1
Advertising 101
by Harry Hoover
You have your corporate ID package, a website and are doing search
engine advertising using ReachLocal.com. You have an excellent PR
program in place that includes an nTarget.com-based email newsletter,
guest speaking and media relations. And, you are working feverishly to
retain the customers you have. You are, right?
Then, it is time to ramp up the marketing noise with advertising. From
Professor Hoover's Advertising 101 file, here are a few things you
need to ask before you launch that ad campaign.
What can I tell prospects that would interest them? Consumers don't
care that you are the largest or the best. That's budget-wasting
chest-thumping on the advertiser's part. In fact, most of them aren't
even paying attention to advertising about your type of business at
all. You've got to give the prospect a reason to care. Tell him what
is in it for him. Let's say you are the most knowledgeable Realtor in
your market. Big whoop! How does that help me? Now, if you use your
expertise to sell my house fast and at a premium price, I'm suddenly
very interested. Select the message first before you even think about
the medium.
Who are my prospects? Do you really know who you are trying to reach?
You may need to know where they live, their financial situation, their
media habits, and their purchase habits. Do they have children? What
kind of car do they drive? The more you know, the easier it is to
develop an effective message and to select a medium to reach them.
Can I make the message relevant and compelling? I hate ads because
most of them are so bad. They often are so vague that you don't know
why the company bothered. In trying to reach everyone, they reach no
one. That's what I call the all carbon-based life forms approach. Or
maybe the ad tried to pack in too much information and too many
features. Be direct, concise, relevant and truthful, and then you
might reach someone with an ad.
What's my desired result? Some businesses need store traffic now and
aren't that worried about tomorrow, some need to build relationships
for the long haul, and some need to bolster their reputation. Driving
traffic can be done relatively inexpensively and immediately. The
other two take discipline, consistency, time and money. Be clear about
what you are trying to accomplish and whether you have the resources
to achieve your goals.
Can I deliver? The worst thing that can happen is that your
advertising works too well and you aren't able to deliver on your
promise. Or, you did the unthinkable and lied about your product or
service and are not really able to deliver the benefit you promised.
So, there you have it. Be relevant, impactful, original and truthful
if you want your ads to work.
Harry Hoover is managing principal of Hoover ink PR,
http://www.hoover-ink.com. He has 30 years of experience in crafting
and delivering bottom line messages that ensure success for serious
businesses like Bank of Commerce, Brent Dees Financial Planning, Focus
Four, Levolor, New World Mortgage, North Carolina Tourism, TeamHeidi,
Ty Boyd Executive Learning Systems, VELUX, and Verbatim.
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