Marketing in Tough Times
By: Cathy Taylor
How to market when the going gets tough
Marketing in Tough Times
When the economy is slow,
companies often do the
opposite of what’s best for
their business. Down times
are when you need to
escalate your marketing
efforts, not reduce them. In
fact, it’s the most critical
time to make a plan to get
in front of prospects as
well as re-connect with
current clients. If you
aren’t, your competition
will be more than happy to
take care of your prospects
and clients for you.
Whether marketing in a
print medium, radio,
television or just
networking, you have a
limited amount of time to
get your message across. You
want to initiate interest
and be memorable when the
contact has ended. Let’s
take a look at what it takes
to win with print
advertising.
Money-making Headlines
Winning headlines accomplish
many things. They first
attract your prospect’s
attention; communicate a
strong benefit; and appeal
to the self-interest of the
reader. You know you have a
healthy headline if it
answers the reader’s
question, “What’s in it for
me?” A good headline
reflects that intimate
understanding of your target
audience.
Tests show that a good
headline can be as much as
17 times more effective than
a mediocre headline even
when the exact same body
copy is used. Headlines are
a powerful tool, and that’s
reason enough to get it
right the first time.
Successful marketers tell us
to spend 70 percent of your
time coming up with the
headline in 17 words or
less.
“On the average, five
times as many people read
the headlines as read the
body copy. It follows that,
unless your headline sells
your product, you wasted 90
percent of your money.”
David Ogilvy, Ogilvy &
Mather Worldwide Hot Button
Benefits Use strong verbs in
your copy to communicate
your most valuable asset –
your benefits. Don’t confuse
benefits with features; one
is the sizzle, the other is
the steak. Sizzle always
sells more. For example, a
masonry business benefit is
the security one feels when
buying a durable,
long-lasting solution.
Bricks and blocks, and
first-class assembly, are
the features.
Benefits are always from
the buyer’s point of view;
features are the facts about
your products, which help
build credibility. Both are
necessary in your
advertising, but benefits
are what close the sale
because people buy based on
emotions, and then justify
their decision with logic.
Good headlines stir emotions
and motivate response. Here
are 10 of the most powerful
words used in successful
headlines today:
Secrets of
Amazing
Breakthrough
The Truth
Free
Sale
How to
Discover
New
Facts You
Example headlines using
these keywords:
Little Known Secrets of How
Brick Buildings
Withstand Earthquakes
10 Reasons New Contractors
Need Highly Skilled
Craftsmen
The Truth about Building
Safe Schools from Stonework
Facts You might not Know
about the Legal Issues of
Ergonomics
Discover How Breakthrough
Scheduling Provides Improved
Quality
Compelling Body No one
likes to be sold or
manipulated – they want to
be communicated with and
shown. If you have a product
or service they want, your
copy can’t be considered too
extensive as long as you
keep them engaged. And
that’s the trick – you need
to know intimately what your
target market wants. Always
put yourself in the reader’s
shoes when analyzing your
promotion.
The body of your message
is where you articulate your
unique selling position. How
do you differentiate your
construction company from
every other? Tell them how
your solution solves the
void in your marketplace (a
void that they have as
well). Your body copy should
grow from what specific
action you want your
recipient to take. Make them
an offer they can’t refuse;
for example, offer to
educate them (free of
charge) about your business.
If you want them to pick up
the phone and call your
company for a quote or
consultation, then give them
a good reason to do so.
Write each line so
compelling that readers
can’t wait to get to the
next one. Always test
messages, track campaigns,
and make changes as you go
to improve those results.
Practical tips for
telling your story include:
always use fonts that are
easy to read, such as Times
New Roman, Arial and
Verdana. Make it
conversational instead of
cute; you want to create
rapport with your reader.
Make use of subheads that
break up large blocks of
text and create critical
white space. Use photographs
that support your copy or
graphics of past successful
projects with dynamic
captions. Include as many
testimonials as you can; you
can’t have too many
testimonials.
Call Them to Act If you
don’t ask for the order, the
answer is always “no.” Your
call to action is a
beginning step to converting
a prospect into a buyer. The
best kind of advertising
makes them an offer they
find irresistible. Tell them
exactly what actions or
steps to take – for them to
either call, fax, e-mail or
write your company, as well
as visit your website for
more information.
If you send them to your
website, make sure you have
a two-step process in place
that includes a second
strong call to action so you
don’t lose them at that
point. You could use case
studies that depict your
quality craftsmanship and
on-time scheduling.
Emphasize customer service
and, while you have them,
don’t forget the opportunity
to up-sell. What additional
services might you offer
that they could benefit
from? You’ll be amazed at
what needs you can unearth
just by asking.
About the Author
Cathy Taylor is a
marketing consultant with
over 20 years experience.
She specializes in strategy
and plan development, as
well as management of
communications and public
relations programs in both
the high-tech and small
business sectors. She can be
reached at Creative
Communications:
creative--communications@cox.net