Tag: mistakes

  • How to Avoid The Five Biggest Radio Advertising Mistakes

    How to Avoid The Five Biggest Radio Advertising Mistakes

    Have you ever said the following: “I tried radio but it didn’t work”? Many business owners have that complaint. The fact is radio is just as effective (if not more effective) as any other advertising medium. The reason a spot (commercial) fails is more often due to one or more of these five mistakes given below.

    Mistake One: Phone Numbers.
    Especially if more than one are given. Now I understand that if your phone number is the ONLY WAY a customer can possibly do business with you then you must have a phone number in your commercial. But for everyone else – phone numbers are a waste of time, which is something you can’t afford to do with just 30 or 60 seconds of commercial time.

    Why? Because most people are listening to their radio in their cars or at work. In both cases trying to remember or even write down a phone number is expecting way too much from the listener. And if, as some advertisers do, you have more than one phone number the listener just isn’t going to bother at all.

    The best solution is to not give out your phone number at all, but instead offer a very compelling reason why people should seek your business. They’ll find it if they’re interested. Remember there are many ways to find a business’ phone number… phone books, the internet, even calling the radio station (many stations keep lists of current advertisers handy with contact info).

    Mistake Two: Price points.
    If you think it’s hard for a radio listener to remember a phone number just try adding a bunch of other numbers. I’ve heard many business owners tell me, “Well so what if they don’t remember the prices? This way they’ll know we have a lot of items on sale!”

    The problem here is you are again assuming that the listener cares enough to not totally tune out all those price points. That’s a very dangerous assumption. Do you ever hear the radio personalities reciting lots of numbers or price points when they’re talking (outside of reading commercials)? No. Why? Because they know that the typical radio listener expects to hear clear and concise information. Not a lot of numbers that don’t relate to anything.

    You’re better off keeping price points in your print advertising where people can take the time to look over all the information. For radio spend your time giving people compelling reasons to do business with you instead of sale prices.

    Mistake Three: Confusing locators (the way you describe where your business is located).
    “We’re located just a half mile off Interstate 512 in the Gas-Lamp Strip Mall, 2899 West 333rd Street, with convenient free parking four days a week.”

    Again, you’re expecting a lot from your listener.

    Don’t do lengthy directions. State your location as simply as possible:
    “Downtown at the corner of State and Lake.”
    “Just off I-512 at the Big Town Exit”

    What about street address numbers?

    Unless your address can be seen perfectly from at least a half a block away, don’t use it. Most businesses don’t have street numbers on their doors anyhow or if they do it’s so small you can’t read it until you’re right in front of it.

    The best solution for a locator? Direct people to your website. You can insert a Google Map or Yahoo Map locator that can give anyone precise details on how to get from where they are to where you are.

    Mistake Four: Too many advertising cliches = Major turnoff.
    “Friendly Professional Staff”
    “Storewide Savings”
    “Number One In Customer Service”
    “Dependable and Trustworthy”
    “The Best Prices”
    “We Will Not Be Undersold”

    There are dozens more of these tired cliches. Why are they tired? Because you can hear them in radio commercials right now, and if you were to get in a time machine and go back 50, 60, 70 years you’d hear them in commercials from then. They’re worn out because everyone uses them and to most consumers they’re pretty much meaningless.

    If everyone is using them then what makes them special? Nothing. If every business is using them then what sets you apart and helps a listener remember who you are? Nothing.

    The old adage from Lenny Bruce says it best: “If you have to tell them you’re hip, you’re not.” That holds true for all of those advertising cliches. There is a basic expectation of service from all businesses that includes most of those above cliches. You can’t be in business without meeting those basics, and everyone knows it.

    So why waste your advertising time with it?

    Instead give people meaningful (personal) compelling reasons to do business with you. And by personal I mean your customer. What are your best customer’s personal reasons for doing business with you? Find that out and talk about that in your commercials. You’ll be amazed at the difference in response.

    Mistake Five: Not being convenient.
    I don’t mean in terms of hours or location, though those are definitely factors. But more important, does your radio commercial (or any of your advertising) make it hard for people to get what they want?

    “Mention this ad for a free can of cheese whiz”.
    “Bring in the coupon from last Sunday’s newspaper”.
    “The first 12 people to call in the next five minutes get a five percent discount”.

    Making people do extra work to get something is only worthwhile if the payoff is incredible (i.e. “The first caller right now gets one million dollars!”). Very few customers will actually care enough to jump through hoops to get a five percent discount or even a 15 percent discount. But more importantly you’re telling the vast majority of potential customers that they have to do something extra besides just showing up at your store. And most people don’t want that extra hassle. What you should be doing is rewarding them equally for showing up. Remember, your customer is doing you a favor by showing up – not the other way around.

    Just offer great values and great service to everyone all the time. Also remember, value doesn’t mean low prices. It means CONVENIENCE. All your customers really care about is how fast you can give them what they want and how nice you are about it. As pointed out in Mistake Four – let your best customers tell your story. Nothing compels people to act more than hearing why other people prefer your business over everyone else.

    Article courtesy of John Pellegrini.

  • 7 Retail Marketing Mistakes

    7 Retail Marketing Mistakes

    Are You Making These 7 Retail Marketing Mistakes?

    As an independent retail store owner you have to wear LOTS of hats – including Chief Marketing Officer. Check to see if you might be making one of these common Retail Marketing Mistakes…

    #1. Your Marketing is “All About Me”

    If had to pick the most common (and most deadly) retail marketing mistake, this would be it. Everyone thinks that their products, their services, their promotions, and their store are far more fascinating than they really are. It’s only natural. To you, the most important thing in the world is – you!

    I hate to be the one to break it to you, but your customers don’t really care that much about you, or your store, or your products. Like you, what they care most about is themselves.

    The trick for you as a retail marketer is to stop thinking about what you offer and start focusing on what your customer wants. It’s the only way to build the kind of customer relationships that engender real trust, strong loyalty, and repeat business.

    If most of your outbound communication (emails, facebook posts, postcards, newspaper ads, etc.) is about your products, your services, your promotions, or your store and not about what’s interesting, helpful, useful, beneficial, or entertaining for your customer, then you are making this marketing mistake.

    #2. You Don’t Track Your Results

    If you don’t track the results of your marketing efforts it’s impossible to tell if they are successful, or to what degree they are successful .

    Of course, tracking your results takes forethought and planning. (See Retail Marketing Mistake #7!)

    You have to be very clear about what your primary goals are for each of your marketing efforts – generate sales? attract new customers? re-activate inactive customers? build relationships? What you hope to achieve affects the way you track your results and how you judge your success.

    Some marketing results are easy to track, some are a bit more complicated, but it’s always worth it. With marketing (as with almost every area of business), if you can measure it, you can manage it.

    #3. You’re a “One and Done” Marketer

    I can’t tell you how many times I’ve had a great conversation with a retailer who’s super excited to share a major marketing success and when I ask them, “So, when is the next one scheduled for?” they look at my like I have three heads.

    Most of them honestly hadn’t considered repeating their successful event!

    Or here’s what used to happen to me when I owned the Mackinaw Kite Co… We’d forget from year to year, month to month what we’d done and what worked. I’d find myself scratching my chin and saying, “Yeah, now I remember that thing we did last year. That was really great. Huh, wonder why we didn’t do that again this year?”

    One and done doesn’t cut it. You spend too much time and effort getting your marketing right to only do something one time. If it is successful keep on doing it again, and again, and again.

    #4. You’re Unhappy If It’s Not a “Home Run”

    Hey, who doesn’t like to hit a home run?! It’s fun. The problem is that if you expect all your marketing efforts to be a home run, you’re bound to be disappointed – and you might stop swinging the bat.

    Most of your marketing efforts will be “singles.” Not every email will get an 80% open rate. Not every in-store event will create a stampede of customers. Not every non-profit organization will be a top partner.

    Celebrate your singles!

    It’s the accumulation of lots of singles that will, in the end, cause you to win the game. Any good sports fan will tell you it’s not the team with the most home runs that gets to the World Series.

    Just keep hitting lots of singles and I guarantee you’ll end up with a lot more “jingle” at the end of the year.

    #5. You Don’t Adapt Good Ideas

    There is no shortage of good – even great – ideas for attracting new customers, driving traffic, creating loyalty, increasing sales. But you may suffer from a lack of marketing imagination.

    If you see an idea that’s working for your colleagues in another industry, imagine all the possible ways you could adapt it for your business.

    And don’t just watch other retailers. Watch your local realtors, chiropractors, builders, manufacturers, car dealers, dentists, or anyone else you can lay your eyes on. You may find some marketing gold if you can adapt ideas from other kinds of businesses. How do you think banks, restaurants, and liquor stores all ended up with drive-thru windows?

    While you’re at it, don’t forget to adapt your OWN good ideas!

    If the ’12 Days of Christmas’ promotion worked for you, adapt and do a Spring Fling Deal of the Day during the week of spring break. Who said the concept had to be used only at Christmas? Who said it had to be 12 days long? Fashion week, Mother’s Day, graduation, Father’s Day, Back-to-School… what works for you?

    Adapt!

    After nearly every speech I give to a mixed industry group someone comes up to me and says, “I really loved your ideas for the pet store, but do you have any ideas for my bike shop?” Those store owners are making this retail marketing mistake and they are doomed if they can’t adapt.

    #6. You Don’t Pay Close Attention to the Details

    The nitty-gritty. The down-and-dirty. It’s the execution of the details that will often make or break your marketing efforts.

    Paying attention to the details is certainly what will take your retail marketing to the next level and is where you’ll really maximize your efforts.

    Here’s a perfect example. My friend, Paul, just sent out his second email newsletter. It had a great subject line, really compelling content, and a strong call to action asking readers to pass it along to their friends. I thought my brother would find it interesting so I forwarded it, and that’s when I noticed…

    There was no place in the email where my brother could click to subscribe to the newsletter. AND Paul’s website address wasn’t hyperlinked in the email. Readers would have to copy/paste or manually type the web address into their browser bar to visit his site and sign up.

    So while Paul’s email accomplished the goal of strengthening existing relationship by delivering good content, he really missed a golden opportunity to build his list by not paying close attention to the details.

    #7. Your Marketing is Scattershot, Not Strategic

    You know who you are… you do a little bit of this, a little bit of that, and a little bit of the the other. You try marketing tactic after tactic in hopes that some of your stuff will work.

    Your marketing efforts spring from a need for cash, rather than from a thoughtful, well-designed strategic plan.

    The good news here is if you try enough stuff, some of it will work. And if you repeat the stuff that works (see Retail Marketing Mistake #3), you’ll start to get some traction. Activity and effort is way better than doing nothing.

    But strategic activity and effort is lots, lots better.

    When your marketing is based on a strategic plan, all of your tactics work together to enhance each other and achieve your overall goals. Each effort builds upon the other and the sum becomes greater than the parts.

    And the cool thing is, strategic activity is not only more effective, it’s easier. Better, easier – who doesn’t love that?!

    So, how’d you do?

    Are you making any of these Retail Marketing Mistakes? If you are, don’t get down on yourself. Almost everyone makes these mistakes from time to time. The question is…

    What are you going to do about it?

    (From Bob Negen’s blog at www.whizbangtraining.com. Used with permission).

    Bob Negen Training