About Ant Hodges

Christian Businessman, father of two, husband of one. Expertise in digital marketing, graphic / web design and email marketing

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Dec 01

The power of your brand.

Do you know the power or value of your brand?

Today I received a letter in the post. Well not really a letter, just a badly written CV from a recruitment agency. No letter from them saying... "Hello, this is the CV of the week" or "I thought I would send this onto you as I thought this person would be well suited to your business" - nope just 1 side of A4 written in Times New Roman, printed in black and white, with a small mention of who it was from with the logo on the envelope.

(Me pictured with the failed marketing attempt)

The importance of your brand

Without mentioning names and showing you the logo to know who this came from I want to pick some holes in this failed attempt to get me to respond to this direct mail piece if I may (This is where my rants start)

2nd class post!

Now I hear what you are all going to say to me... it's cheaper. I know that. But how great does it make me feel that I am not even worth a first class stamp. Are you de-valuing your brand with this 2nd rate option and making me feel like it is not even worth opening it?

No covering letter

Not even a flipping compliment slip!

Now in a previous post I talked about guerilla marketing - targeting those you want to get under the skin of and putting time and effort into it. This is a case example of where people get this so wrong. I have not subscribed to receive any mail from this organisation. My details are in the public domain so they are entitled to send mail to me. But where is the personal touch to engage me?

When approaching a person you want to do business with - first impressions count. Sending this without explaining why it has been sent, what the agency would like me to do with it (other than put it in file 13) or even printing the CV on headed notepaper... cheapens the brand by a huge margin.

Lack of thought / effort

When sending something like this through to people you are opening up an opportunity to engage them. Think about how, when they open the envelope, they are going to react. Having something like a business card at least attached to the headed notepaper gives direct contact details so I can contact them.

Don't assume your target knows what to do with what you are sending them. Yes this is a CV... now what? Frame it? Make an origami swan out of it? Roll it up and smoke it? Tell me what I am to do with it and then I may have some kind of notion of responding to you!

Even the formatting is rubbish! BOLD BLOCK CAPITALS for headings, the name at the top in normal weight font, lists of information without numbers or bullets... and above all nothing really WOWing me about this potential member of staff for my business. Health and Safety courses and Fire Safety Training... should this not be on everyones CV if they have worked in large organisations where this is run of the mill stuff? Also... sending this out for another customer service advisor? Why, they are ten to a penny. Is this a real person or just a dummy to get me to ring up and you will try and sell me someone else? Everything is far to vague.

Target who you want to target with specific information. Research the person you are targeting. Find out what will make the proposed candidate different from the next Joe/Jane Bloggs. Why as a small branding and design agency would I need someone who used to sell windows over the phone, or used to arrange rental washing machines? Send me a CV of a photoshop genius and I may take some notice.

The crux of the matter

Think BRAND POWER. Always send branded collateral out in the post. Pre-printed headed notepaper. A decent weight paper printed off your own printer with your logo on the top. Stapled to a compliment slip or business card at least.

Your brand is key to the survival of your marketing. Put a very high value on it. Don't let your staff cheapen it and undo the hard work that has been done with the history of your brand with efforts like this that have been put together in five minutes and mass mailed.

Filed under  //   Branding   Marketing   Rant   Tips  
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Nov 30

4 easy to implement, low cost marketing methods for you!

Marketing, advertising and promotions need not be expensive. Many people think that they have to have a large budget for this kind of activity.

I have listed below, four methods that are either free or are very low cost solutions for your marketing. These are not the be all and end all - these are aimed to get you thinking in the right direction.

Granted, every business is different and will require different strategies - use these as inspiration in terms of developing the strategy that will fit with your business / organisation.

  • Previous contacts / clients

Look at the unconverted leads that have been in contact with your organisation in some way shape or form within the last 6 to 12 months. People that have visited your website, signed up, created an account, sent an enquiry form your contact form. People that you have sent quotes to after telephone enquires, or those you have spent an hour with understanding their company in order to quote them afterwards.

What about you current database of previous customers that have made it all the way through to the pint you took their money? People often forget to ever make contact again. Use this database of existing or previous clients to market your services again. Products/service that relate to those previously bought, or just letting them know of new lines that you are following.

  • Upselling - ‘You want fries with that?’

Think about the times that you pop into any of the fast food outlets on the high street and when you order yourself the triple decker meat patty sandwich with batavia lettuce, hot chilli sauce all on a toasted sesame seed bun... what is the standard response? Do you want fries with that Sir? Would you like to super-size your meal Madam? They seem to have no problem doing it, why can’t you?

Adding that extra little thing on and getting and extra 10-20% is a result! That is an extra 10-20% that you would not have had otherwise.

Another way of thinking is to make a list of your products then see how they might work best with each other. See how you can package them up. Offering packages of services is a great way to show your customer how they are getting value for money. If three of your products each cost £50 on their own, package them together and reduce the cost from £150 to £135. Then point out the £15 or 10% saving that they will be getting. The old supermarket buy 2 get 1 free works well too.

  • Guerilla marketing

Write a list - write down a list of the companies that you want to target. Any good military attack will start with researching the enemy. Go on the offensive knowing who you are going to target. Understand who the company are, who it is you want to speak to and how what you are going to say will be relevant to them.

Take the fight personally... fight for every last part of your business. Write to your customers/contacts with personal letters. Don’t just use a template, mention things like ‘It was great to meet you last Tuesday, the lunch was great wasn’t it’ or ‘Hope you had a great time on holiday last week’ - Follow these up.

Only focus on between 10-12 at a time - don’t get bogged down with the broadcast marketing that can cost the earth and return little. Focus on the few that you really want to get until you get a firm no, or a firm yes. Then move on with the work or to the next one on your list.

Give them more of your time - Saying something like ‘I’m in the area in a weeks time, when would be a good time for me to pop in for a 10 minute coffee?’ may be too forward for some prospects, but great for others. Laying on networking functions for your clients and prospects and inviting them along FREE of charge may work in your favour in a number of ways. Speaking to the venue and negotiating free usage of the room, saying... that you hope to get a number of business people along who may return to use the facility, inviting them in on the event, having a guest speaker to give an insight and your clients will hopefully rave about you to any potential prospect.

Think from your customers point of view - they are busy, there may be a need, you can fix that need. If you come at the right time and have done your research correctly you will land the easy fish. If they are the business owner and they are too busy worrying about running the business then they may not have the time to look at and sort out the part of the business that is lacking the service you are offering. Many people are prepared to pay for someone else to do something if it will save them time!

  • Email marketing

Time and time again I get emails from companies that get email marketing so wrong. They use it purely as a sales tool. If done correctly this can work well, but rarely on it’s own do companies see a good return on this.

Our strategy for successful email campaigns:

  1. Use Auto Subscriber/Contact Management - normally built into your website as a ‘subscribe me’ form and then managed by the email marketing software that you will use to send the emails.
  2. Keep the content appealing for your target audience. Useful information, simple wording, short sentences, relevant imagery. Once you have these things sorted then you can think about your sales pitch - but keep it short and sweet.
  3. Ensure that the design has cohesion with your brand (look and feel as a minimum). Always get a professional in if you don’t have any experience in coding marketing emails. They are completely different for coding for the web, so if you are going to ask your web developer to do it, ensure they have done it before and know the vital differences.
  4. Only use tried and tested delivery systems - Use systems that have been in the marketplace for a while. These systems are tried ans tested and work for enough of thier customer baser
  • Other methods

There are many other easy methods to get your marketing right including: joint ventures, collaboration, PR and article writing, blogging and forums posts - for more information contact me on 01793 238697 or visit www.toinfinity.co.uk.

Filed under  //   Marketing   Tips   toinfinity  
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Nov 28

Top tips for marketing success

Keep your eyes firmly on the target
  • Narrow your focus
  • Try not to be all things to all people
  • Find your target market and stick to it
  • Don't be swayed by the little jobs you know you can do when you need to focus on what you really want to be doing

Tell people what makes you different
  • Serve in a tight niche market
  • How are your services/products packaged together
  • The value you place on a belief system or cause, such as the environment or religious persuasion
  • The work ethic you foster internally with you staff - encouraging and relaxed or dictatorial and stressful
  • The price of your products or services 

Create products or packages
  • These help to define how people will relate to and makes engagement with your brand easier
  • Increase the chance of people remembering what you do
  • Create products or packages from a number of services that you offer. e.g: garden design + supplier procurement + onsite project management = complete package
  • It helps to generate something bigger that just one service that you provide
  • Use levels, stars, platinum - gold - silver etc

Pull together a marketing tool kit
  • Brochures
  • Website/s
  • HTML email newsletters
  • Adverts ready to go into business / trade press
  • Leaflets detailing offers you can make
  • A library of your own stock photos (Products / portraits etc)
  • Networking membership
  • Client list (customer relationship management process)
  • A list of prospects/people you want to work with
  • Exhibition stands and roller banner stands

Start at least 3 of these lead generators
  • Advertising
  • Networking
  • Referral systems
  • Public relations
  • Web blogs (as part of or separate to your website)
  • Free seminar events with strategic partners
  • Pay per click advertising (Adwords)

Divide and conquer
  • Get a website that has auto subscription to regular emails / newsletters you send out
  • Use an automated email subscription service to send these emails, manage the bounces and unsubscriptions etc
  • Automate electronic products in terms of purchase and delivery direct from your website
  • Get listed - Sort out your search engine listings by optimising your website design and content (Speak to an SEO expert for this work! Your web team may think they know what they are doing but SEO guys and girls are experts for a reason.)

Prioritise your time
  • You are in business to do what you do, not to become a marketing expert
  • Plan a strategic and tactical marketing plan over 6 or 12 months
  • Take one day at a time, you can't eat an elephant in one go, take it bit(e) by bit(e)

The next steps
  • Come to one of our marketing success seminars and hear all this from the horses mouth
  • Hire Creative Rush on a project by project basis
  • Utilise the OnTap services of Creative Rush
  • Take a look at a non-exec director agreement, for regular meetings,support, strategy development and tactical delivery for your entire brand and marketing development

GET IN TOUCH TODAY!

Visit Creative Rush for all
needs or call
+44 (0)1793 600769

Filed under  //   Creative Rush   Marketing   Success in Business   Tips  
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