SOLVING THE NO-MONEY
MARKETING CRUNCH.
How to get big results with super-cheap
fliers.
by Dr. Kevin Nunley
Index
of Articles
Rita started her home-based
business after a long illness. Her insurance wouldn't cover
all her medical costs. She figured she could bridge the
difference by selling her popular gift mugs.
Friends and the hospital
staff had been delighted with them. She found herself busily
filling orders for her customers' relatives and associates.
"Wow," she thought. "This
could be the answer to my prayers. Selling my gift mugs
could earn the extra money I need each month."
One problem remained. In
order to make the plan work, Rita needed lots of new customers.
Word-of-mouth from friends and past clients was wonderful,
but she needed a more powerful way to get the word out quickly.
A man at an ad agency told
her to have nice brochures printed, mail them to hundreds
of businesses, and place a weekly ad in the Sunday newspaper.
"But you don't understand,"
she protested. "Anything I spend on marketing has to come
out of the grocery money. I can't afford any of the conventional
marketing options you're talking about."
It's a situation that most
of us have been in at one time or another. All the wonderful
marketing ideas the experts talk about--radio ads, mass
mailings, card decks--all take money. They require more
money than we can spend without sinking down the debt drain.
Here's one of my favorite
solutions to the "no money" marketing crunch. For about
20 dollars you can have your corner copy shop print up 1000
fliers. A cheaper, more effective way to market has never
been invented. A well-designed flier is like a full-page
ad delivered directly to your carefully targeted prospect.
No multi-thousand dollar newspaper ad can make that claim.
Keep your flier copy simple
and to the point. Your prospect may only glance at it before
tossing it in the trash. You must make your offer within
the first three seconds as her eyes run over the page. Start
with a banner headline that sells the benefits your product,
service, or organization will bring the prospect. Let them
know how their life will be easier, happier, or more successful
after they have bought from you.
Instruct the potential
customer how to buy what you sell. A short "call me today!"
or "stop by our store at lunch!" greatly increases your
response. Include your name, phone, fax, email, website,
location, hours--and anything else that makes it super easy
for the prospect to contact you.
It costs no more to have
your flier copied on colored paper, so choose a color that
grabs attention but won't make your copy hard to read. Lighter
colors are best.
Many successful fliers
have no pictures. Line drawings are easily copied. A photo
needs to be half-toned first to give a clear photocopied
reproduction. Your copy shop can prepare the photo for you.
Also pay attention to the quality of the copier. Some of
the newer, better maintained machines turn out photo copies
that look as good as offset. The better copy shops often
charge slightly more, and you may find the increase in copy
quality well worth the slight increase in price.
Many shops have machines
that staple rubber bands to each copy. This makes it easy
to attach your flier to door knobs at homes and businesses.
Be aggressive, but polite, when distributing your flier.
Leave no stone unturned. Drop the fliers off on car windshields,
under doors, on counters, light poles, community and office
bulletin boards, and at schools.
Enlist the help of young
people and youth groups to go door to door for you. Tell
others with fliers that you will pass their's around if
they do the same with you.
I once put one of my fliers
on a light pole in San Francisco. A year later a friend
called in hysterics. "You're in StarTrek IV!" While shooting
on location, the movie crew had left my flier in the background
of a scene. There was my photo and flier displayed prominently
between Spock and Kirk. My message reached millions world-wide
for the cost of a single copy--2 cents.
And that's my two cents
about fliers--one of the world's cheapest publicity weapons.
Kevin Nunley provides marketing
advice and copy writing for businesses and organizations.
Read all his money-saving marketing tips at http://DrNunley.com/.
Reach him from his site via email.