Straegize, to stand out in the crowd, marketing consultants advise
You think youโre selling widgets to your clients.
But your clients think theyโre buying gizmos from you.
Itโs the classic marketing versus mission issue: Is what your customers think theyโre buying from you the same thing you think youโre selling to them?
Marketing experts in southeastern Wisconsin agree that the ability to answer that question is critical for successful marketing.
โAlthough it may seem elementary, many organizations have no sense of purpose,โ says Alan Gaudynski, who runs Alan Gaudynski & Associates in Brookfield. โIn todayโs competitive market, itโs imperative to develop a sense of purpose that sets your business apart.โ
โDonโt assume they know you,โ adds Todd Robert Murphy of Todd Robert Murphy Marketing Communications in downtown Milwaukee. โThis holds true even if youโre in business for years.โ
Murphy suggests that business owners put together a list of all the products and services they offer, then ask a few existing customers โ without aid โ to develop the same list. โYouโll be surprised at how little they know,โ he says.
The result of such an exercise, Murphy says, is potential new business.
โYou could have been selling all kinds of additional products or services to your own customers.โ
Christopher โKitโ Vernon, chairman and CEO of Blue Horse, a downtown Milwaukee marketing, advertising and public relations agency, advises business owners to develop a positioning statement. Such a statement, he says, forces your firm to take a stand in its industry.
โMarketing without positioning is like communication in a vacuum,โ Vernon says. โYour positioning statement is not a slogan; rather it is the cornerstone on which your company is built โ the lens through which all of your marketing materials are focused.โ
Adds the staff of Core Creative in downtown Milwaukee: โAsk yourself some tough questions about your company. What makes your product or service special?โ
Additionally, the firm advises, โDetermine who you are and/or who youโd like to be; then hammer that message home repeatedly.โ
A logo can convey a firmโs position, the marketing consultants say.
โThink about it,โ says Murphy. โYour logo is the one element of your marketing arsenal that will appear in every form of promotion you use, including letterhead, business cards, signage, display ads, matchbooks, coffee mugs, truck signs, billboards, whatever. Consider your logo an investment in name recognition.โ
If you have a logo, be sure to use it consistently, adds Joan Cotter Pike of Zeppos & Associates in downtown Milwaukee. โTreating your logo consistently and using it whenever you can will help people remember your company.โ
If you donโt have a logo, Cotter Pike adds, develop one. โA clean, simple, memorable logo can help solidify your corporate identity.โ
On a related matter, John Murphy, owner of Murphy Associates, The Shared Marketing Department, in Brookfield, says business owners need to take a good look at their firmsโ names. โYour company name should say what you do,โ he says. Additionally, business cards should say what you do. โThe majority donโt,โ he observes.
The consultants are nearly universal in their call for firms to have a marketing plan that involves solid research.
โDo strategic planning yearly, utilizing information gathered from both internal and external surveys,โ says Diane Chamness of Chamness Consulting in Milwaukeeโs Walkerโs Point area. โInvolve key staff in this planning and review the plan every three months or so, updating as things change within your organization or the marketplace,โ Chamness adds.
McGlinchey & Associates of Brookfield advises firms to set annual or semi-annual marketing goals and then develop a plan to realize those goals. โDefine your target audiences and think about the best channels to reach them,โ the firm says.
Karen Lindsey-Lloyd of Lindsey-Lloyd Communications in Wauwatosa says that in creating a marketing plan, at least the following should be considered: What do you want to accomplish? Who is your target audience? What contacts do you need to make? How will you get your message out? And what action steps need to be taken?
Look at the implementation of that plan as an ongoing process, says Gail Sideman of CourtSIDE Sports Communications and Write On! Promotions in Bayside. โI equate it to planting a seed an nourishing it through the years,โ she adds.
Along with getting clients to speak on your behalf, the consultants also advised firms to gain attention by sponsoring seminars and workshops and by participating in charitable events.
โTestimonials are one of the best and most underused marketing tools available,โ says Dana Burke of Mind Your Business in Wauwatosa. โAnd customers are almost always willing to give them.โ
โHappy, satisfied customers can be your best advertising,โ adds Cotter Pike of Zeppos Associates. โIf you canโt spend much on advertising, be sure to invest in keeping your customers happy.โ
Similarly, a business can get marketing mileage out of special events โ either its own or those it helps with, the consultants say.
โPartnering with charity groups and sponsoring events such as runs, local sports teams and the like can make your company more visible with your target audience,โ says the Core Creative staff. โAligning yourself with the right organization can get you valuable exposure and create feelings of goodwill toward your company.โ
The trick to gaining the right attention from aligning with charities, says Todd Robert Murphy, is to โget caught at itโ rather than blowing your horn about it.
โThe fact is, your potential customers appreciate the fact that your business tries to make our community better,โ Murphy said. โIt makes them feel better about doing business with you.โ
McGlinchey & Associates suggests that firms host seminars for clients or potential clients. To add value to your product or service, look for opportunities to educate and train your customers, they say. If you can help them to better use your product, youโre doing both the customer and yourself a service. At the same time, you establish your company as a knowledgeable source.
Another essential for garnering attention in the crowded marketplace is to set yourself apart.
โZig when everyone else is zagging,โ says Blue Horseโs Vernon. โThe best way to gain attention for your product of service is to be different.โ
June 1998 Small Business Times, Milwaukee
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