The value of freebies
11/09/2008 send to a friend
It’s good to hear again from home business owners, Karen McNulty and Fay Judson of Marketing Plan Wiz. In the latest edition of their e-news they talk about the value of freebies and give-aways. Reproduced here with permission.
Spread the word. Spread the love.
Stuck for ideas on how to spread the word? Gifts, cards and other "things" that you can leave behind with your customers can be surprisingly effective at a relatively low cost. Or you might decide that a free sample of your product or service is what's needed to persuade that person that it really is a good idea to buy from you.
Give-aways
We're now bombarded with information via the Internet as well as through the door and via the usual round of keen "telesalers". So what is it that catches the attention of your potential customer when they need the product or service that you provide? Business cards are always useful, as are brochures and other marketing material, but it's very difficult to differentiate your leaflet/brochure from everyone else's (although we've got ideas on that one too - another Wiz e-article).
Give-aways are a quick marketing trick of leaving something behind and if you get it right, will work every time and, more importantly, often for a very long time as people hang on to the item that they find useful or particularly like.
Leaving objects such as paper clip holders or mouse mats with your new friend not only reminds them how to get hold of you (and if there's room, what you do), but also builds brand awareness as you're constantly visible. Did you know that one of the most effective and cost-effective give-aways is the basic pen? So you don't even have to blow the budget on something high spec - although we would recommend thinking about what fits best in terms of representing your business. (You can get posh pens too though...).
Samples
The other brilliantly easy type of give-away is the "freebie". What better way to show somebody that they really do want/need/like your product? Think how effective those taster samples of food in the supermarket can be, or the free slices of cake on the counter of your favourite cafe. Or, have you thought of offering that "first consultation free "?
On the internet too, free advice, tips and content generally attracts all sorts of visitors to your website and if it's valuable they'll tell other people about it - excellent for getting people to link to you - and there's another subject again.
So what can you give away to kick start your business?
- Karen McNulty and Fay Judson are co-founders of Marketing Plan Wiz.
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Comments
Author: JRHenderson
Date: 11/09/2008
Comment: If you can give your freebie in return for an e-mail address, then you can build one of the most valuable business assets: a contact list that *only* contains people who have admitted their interest in the service/product that you provide.
Website:
Author: Heather Bestel
Date: 11/09/2008
Comment: I always love a freebie.
JR is spot on - we give away a relaxation package(mp3, video and e-book) in return for email addresses.
It's been one of our best moves. After sampling all that lot, our customers are keen to get more.
Website: www.alittlebitofmetime.com
Author: Dee Blick
Date: 12/09/2008
Comment: I encourage my clients to use promotional gifts to encourage a response from many different channels.
Two recent successful examples include a client who had spent years trying to get into a blue chip organisation to no avail. We put together a direct Mailer which included a beautiful pen, engraved with the name of the decision maker and a letter that stated honestly and clearly how we wanted to get in front of them to show our personal service and the pen was a way of doing this. The decision maker actually rang my client and said they had never had such an approach before. They landed the contract after several meetings.
The second example was a client who wanted to bring key members of her target audience, to her exhibition stand. We ordered a five piece desk set, sent out just one coaster and told them to come to her stand to collect the remaining four items. You've guessed it!
I use gifts to get the media responding, to get people going on to a website, responding to important surveys, buying more etc and it always works. It's finding the right gift and combining it with a genuine and compelling message that counts rather than taking a one pill cures all ills approach. Fun and games!
Website: www.themarketinggym.org