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Your Marketing Budget: Cost Effective Isn’t a Synonym for Cheap   
By George Kenefic, Director of Enterprise Development, and Mary Schmidt, Marketing Advisor, The Loan Fund

 

Article 31 May 4, 2008

Your Marketing Budget: Cost Effective Isn’t a Synonym for Cheap

By George Kenefic, Director of Enterprise Development, and Mary Schmidt, Marketing Advisor, The Loan Fund

Whether you publicize your business through advertising, public relations, brochures or direct-mail appeals, make sure your message is consistent, integrated and versatile enough to be used in multiple ways. And make sure your campaign is measurable, or you’ll never know if it’s working.

This is especially critical in a weak economy, when consumers become conservative about spending. This is when it’s even tougher to draw customers to your door (or to your Web site if customers are unwilling to pay escalating delivery costs).

Know your target market.

Unless you know where to find your target customers and how they gather and process information, you might as well throw money into the wind. Once you’ve confirmed your targets, consider how many benefits you can get from the same marketing dollar. Save money and time by keeping messages simple and consistent and by repeating them in every medium (when you’re truly sick of your message is when people start remembering it). Any article you write, for example, can be recast as Web site content, a blog entry or an event handout.

Creative ads don’t guarantee results.

Best-selling authors Al Ries and Laura Ries in their book The Fall of Advertising and the Rise of PR contend that advertising lost its effectiveness when it became a creative art rather than a tool to boost sales. The same has been said of the press release. While consumers enjoy clever ads (and their creators love the awards they generate), they don’t necessarily boost a client’s sales. For example, can you remember your favorite Super Bowl commercial? What was the company advertising? Did you buy anything because of the ad? If you decide to advertise, make sure you’re doing it where your target customers will hear or see your message. Getting their attention is a separate challenge.

Public relations = personal relations.

A good PR contractor costs at least $750 per month in New Mexico (and at least $5,000 per month at the national level). Before you spend money on a contractor or on press-release services such as PRWeb, make sure you have something newsworthy to say. Having a customer rave about you is the best PR there is, so consider spending your PR budget on employee training, renovations to your building or customer-appreciation events.

 

A brochure never closed a deal.

Have you ever bought anything simply because you loved the brochure that described it? Of course not. The traditional glossy brochure might even be unnecessary in today’s Web-enhanced economy, but if you think it’s essential, spend the money to have it professionally designed. Why risk coming across as a penny-pinching amateur (and undermine your negotiating power) by using the generic templates and clip art that came with your computer software when an excellent graphic designer can create a professional-looking brochure for less than $1,000?

Direct mail: Will they read it?

A terrific response rate using direct mail is about 2 percent. If you spend $5,000 to design, print and mail 5,000 postcards and half of the 100 customers who respond spend an average of $50, the result is a net loss: You’ve spent $5,000 to earn $2,500. And once you calculate all the other costs involved in sales, you could end up even further in the red on just one campaign.

If you do use direct mail, make sure your message provides value in the form of information that improves a customer’s business or life. Invite customers to a seminar or offer a free educational report. Rather than forcing potential customers to open an envelope, send a postcard: It has plenty of room for a message that can persuade people to buy your product or visit your store. And it can do double duty as a handout at events.

The same message can be sent by e-mail, thereby pleasing customers who might otherwise resent your business for wasting finite natural resources.

Finance New Mexico is an initiative of the New Mexico Small Business Investment Corporation (NMSBIC), New Mexico Small Business Development Center (NMSBDC), Empowering Business Spirit (EBS), the New Mexico Venture Capital Association (NMVCA) and other partners to assist individuals and businesses in obtaining skills and funding resources for their business or idea. To learn more about resources available to New Mexicans, go to www.FinanceNewMexico.org.


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Empowering Business Spirit  is a network of business-serving organizations committed to making Northern New Mexico the perfect place to start and grow a business.  Bizport is your online resource for business development. If you would like to start or expand your business in Northern New Mexico , contact us:

Scott Beckman,
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email: scott@rdcnm.org

 

Nancy Chatfield,
EBS Marketing Coordinator:  
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email: nachatfield@rdcnm.org


 Latest News

Attention Youth!
Second Annual Statewide Business Plan Competition

Lt. Governor Diane Denish and ENLACE director Ron Martinez present a cash award to third place winners Alfredo Hererra and Kevin Montoya of Española at the reception of the 2007 competition.
Lt. Governor Diane Denish and ENLACE director Ron Martinez present a cash award to third place winners Alfredo Hererra and Kevin Montoya of Española at the reception of the 2007 competition.

The New Mexico Governor in partnership with the New Mexico Youth Entrepreneurship Network (YEN), Empowering the Business Spirit (EBS), the Regional Development Corporation (RDC), the NM Small Business Development Centers (SBDC), and the ENLACE Youth Entrepreneurship Project are proud to provide an opportunity for New Mexico students to compete in the Statewide Youth Business Plan Competition to be held Wednesday, October 1, 2008 in Tucumcari.

This statewide competition will provide a forum for youth from all corners of New Mexico to generate a business idea, work with school sponsors to build it into a business plan, and submit it for entry. A panel of business leaders will judge the entries and choose the top 12 business plans from the two age groups ( 12 – 15 and 16 – 18) to be presented at the Governor’s Summit on Economic Development.

At the competition, the students or student teams who place in the top five in each of the two age groups will win start-up capital for their businesses. Click here for more information or click here to download the Business Plan Competition Packet.

Deadline for all entries is September 1, 2008. 
Email Marcia Brenden at mbrenden@cesdp.nmhu.edu for more information.


  
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Biz Events   

MARKETLINK, a user friendly business skills training program
Monday, September 15, 2008 at 9:00 AM
This course was developed for people who are poised to grow an existing business or organization.

Make a Million Conference, Albuquerque
Thursday, September 18, 2008 at 8:00 AM
www.makeamillion.org Conference in Albuquerque.

Northern New Mexico Business Expo, Your Passport to Opportunity
Wednesday, October 22, 2008 at 9:00 AM
The largest NNM gathering of industry, suppliers, government and business advocate organizations

 


    

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