Current Events Mean Marketing Opportunity — An Example

According to Nancy Gibbs in Time Magazine,

Trinity Place [a restaurant and bar in Manhattan’s Financial District] offers $3 drinks at happy hour any day the market goes down, with the slogan “Market Tanked? Get Tanked! — which ensures a lively crowd at the closing bell.”

This not only aligns the establishment’s marketing with something already on their customers’ minds — it also turns a negative into a potential positive. People who might otherwise hide their wallets after a bad day on Wall Street now have a built-in excuse to spend extra money.

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Request your free copy of Phil Bernstein’s white paper, The Seven Deadly Advertising Mistakes and How to Fix Them here.

Got a question? Call Phil Bernstein at 503-323-6553.

The Call-to-Action: Make It Easy For the Prospect

When you deliver an advertising message to a group of prospects, you have a short period of time to convince that prospect to take action — pick up the phone, log onto a web site, or walk into a store. If they take the action and don’t get what you promised them, you’ve lost the opportunity to build a business relationship.

Today, I caught a hole in a client’s sales funnel — a disconnect in the call-to-action.

This new client is starting an advertising campaign on several radio stations, including mine on Monday. I wasn’t involved in creating the campaign; a competitor is doing that. The commercial we received on Friday afternoon drives prospects to a web site, with the ultimate goal of getting those prospects to attend an Open House.

Unfortunately, the information about the Open House wasn’t on the home page when I looked at it this morning. It was on another page on the site, but anyone coming to the site would have no way of knowing that. The danger, of course, was that even if the radio commercial “worked” — by getting people to log onto the site — it wouldn’t WORK unless looking at the site caused people to come to the Open House.

Prospects would have entered the sales funnel, and fallen out before buying.

The good news is that somebody did a little advance legwork, caught the disconnect, and notified the client. The client immediately made arrangements to fix the website, and all will be ready when the radio starts on Monday.

I’ll end with a little sales pitch: this is just one of the subjects covered in my white paper, The Seven Deadly Advertising Mistakes and How to Fix Them, which you can still get at no charge by clicking here.

So, click here, already.

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Click this link to subscribe to Portland’s Finest Advertising and Marketing Blog.

Request your free copy of Phil Bernstein’s white paper, The Seven Deadly Advertising Mistakes and How to Fix Them here.

Got a question? Call Phil Bernstein at 503-323-6553.

Best Blow-Off I’ve Heard In a While

When one of your duties is to call complete strangers on the phone, you tend to hear a lot of excuses as to why now isn’t a good time to meet. After a while, the excuses all tend to sound the same.

I heard a new one this morning:

“I’m just killing snakes as fast as I can kill ’em, and the water’s rising.”

I think this meant he’s too busy to get together.

 

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Click this link to subscribe to Portland’s Finest Advertising and Marketing Blog.

Request your free copy of Phil Bernstein’s white paper, The Seven Deadly Advertising Mistakes and How to Fix Them here.

Got a question? Call Phil Bernstein at 503-323-6553.

New Questions Require New Answers

For years, my two biggest advertising clients were an auto dealer and a mortgage company. It will come as no surprise to anyone who reads the business press that the credit crunch has badly damaged both of them. My auto dealer had seven stores a couple of years ago — now he has two. My mortgage company is still kicking, but has had to cut back significantly as well.

It’s easy to assume, in these times, that there’s no new business out there. But in the past six months, I’ve found that there are real opportunities for smart business people. Some are brand-new categories; some are ideas that have been around for years; and some are just new ways of presenting existing products.

The most successful advertising answers a question that the prospect is already asking. Here are some businesses that are doing just that, and seeing strong returns on their marketing dollars:

1. People contemplating their own mortality are wondering how their families will be able to afford burial expenses. Whole body donation companies have an answer. Many people who wish to donate their organs won’t qualify because of the state of their health when they die. Others are worried about burial expenses, especially in tough times. Meanwhile, medical schools, labs and tissue banks need cadavers and body parts. For-profit companies now serve the needs of both sides. They will pick a body up, send needed parts to the facilities who need them, cremate what’s left, and return the ashes to the family. In general, the company picks up all expenses, which can save a family several thousand dollars. There are two of these companies in Portland, and both have gotten strong, measurable results from their advertising.

2. Some homeowners are wondering how they can save their homes. Companies specializing in loan modification have an answer. I put a law firm on the air last Monday. The firm specializes in negotiating with banks and mortgage companies on behalf of homeowners facing foreclosure. I wasn’t expecting much from the first week, and had warned the client not to expect instant results. On Friday morning, I called the client to check in, and was stunned to learn that they had 13 loan modifications in process that had come directly from the radio campaign. I would have been delighted with 13 inquiries, but these were people who had actually come in, met with an attorney, and started the paperwork.

3. Car buyers are wondering what will happen if they lose their jobs and can’t afford the payments. Hyundai heard the question, and came up with their own answer. In January, they launched the Hyundai Assurance program. The short explanation is that if you finance a car with Hyundai and lose your income in the first year, Hyundai will take it back. When January auto sales figures out, most manufacturers reported double-digit sales drops. Hyundai posted a 14.3% increase.

New questions from consumers require new answers from businesses. The companies above have stepped up to the challenge, and they are succeeding in the downturn. How about you?

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Click this link to subscribe to Portland’s Finest Advertising and Marketing Blog.

Request your free copy of Phil Bernstein’s white paper, The Seven Deadly Advertising Mistakes and How to Fix Them here.

Got a question? Call Phil Bernstein at 503-323-6553.

Job Fair Gets Results for New England Financial

It’s tough for financial services companies to recruit good representatives. The best ones combine a strong knowledge of investments and finance with the ability to teach and counsel — and you have to be able to sell.

Recently, New England Financial was an exhibitor at the Clear Channel Career and Education Fair at Lloyd Center. Below, Jon Lawry of New England Financial talks about how it went:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3fb4J75x_UA]

Our next Career and Education Fair will be Wednesday, May 20 at Clackamas Town Center. If you’d like to be part of it, call Phil Bernstein (that’s me!) at 503-323-6553, or email me here.

________________________________________________________________________

Click this link to subscribe to Portland’s Finest Advertising and Marketing Blog.

Request your free copy of Phil Bernstein’s white paper, The Seven Deadly Advertising Mistakes and How to Fix Them here.

Got a question? Call Phil Bernstein at 503-323-6553.