Does
Your Small Business Marketing Suffer From The Bulldog Effect
?
If you're an entrepreneur
responsible for your own small business marketing, there's a
marketing method you should avoid at all costs, which I've coined
the bulldog effect for reasons you will understand shortly. Keep
reading to find out if you're guilty of using this technique in
your own marketing and learn how to fix it.
After a recent weekend jaunt to
San Diego, my husband and I arrived back in Los Angeles tired and
hungry, so we walked the small handful of blocks to a local
all-night diner to grab a quick bite to eat. And it was there that
we were smacked in the face with an example of unusual small
business marketing, to say the least.
We live near a shopping
district where small businesses cater to everyone from people like
my husband and myself to the elderly from the retirement homes
nearby. And it was one store catering to this population of older
citizens that had us in hysterics when we should have been
concentrating on finding some grub.
Your products sell
themselves? Think again
You might think a shop selling
wheelchairs would have it easy in such a neighborhood -- a huge
target audience planted right there, a captive audience if you
will. And you'd be right. During the day, you see almost as many
disabled elderly individuals out shopping as you do
younger/able-bodied people.
So from the sounds of things,
maybe small business marketing tactics aren't as important for a
shop like this because the products practically sell themselves.
Right? Wrong.
Despite the fact that I am not
the target audience, I am a marketer and take notice of new
marketing approaches so that I can try them out myself and share
them with subscribers to my small business marketing newsletter.
But that night, my husband and I just wanted a bite to
eat.
Some things you can't
ignore
As we walked, however, there
was no way to miss the latest marketing efforts of the shop in
question. This shop, which features very little in the way of
shopfront advertising, had put an oversized poster in the window to
promote a new model of wheelchair ... complete with a grumpy,
overweight bulldog planted right in the middle of it.
Sure, it's lovely that the
dog's fanged underbite finally got the recognition it deserved. And
of course the wheelchair came across loud and clear as the other
"hero," the main focus of the image ... other than the dog sprawled
across the seat, smiling that is. (I am also almost certain that a
wheelchair wholesaler created this poster and not the store
itself.)
And you bet the poster got our
attention. However, displayed as prominently as it was, the poster
overshadowed any credibility the store might otherwise have had in
terms of their expertise in finding less-able people the right
wheelchair for their needs. Why? Because apparently, they also help
pedigreed pooches do the same.
Of course I say this in jest,
but use this as a lesson for your own small business marketing
materials. No, I'm not suggesting that you have an image of a
bulldog on your homepage or in your catalog -- and if you do and it
makes sense, by all means continue to do so.
Rather, take this bulldog story
as an analogy to your own marketing and think of ways to make your
small business marketing message clearer and more meaningful to
your target audience.
Rid your own campaigns of
the bulldog effect
Here are some questions to get
you thinking about your own small business marketing:
1) Whether we're talking about
a simple website, a brochure or even just your business card, are
you marketing yourself the way you want to be perceived by your
customers?
2) Some use of characters
(comic book characters, superheroes, etc.) is effective when used
appropriately. Are you using the right type of character to set the
tone for your business? Think critically about how others might
perceive your campaigns.
3) Trusting your own instincts
is dangerous without a reality check. Ask some of your customers
what they think of your current marketing. Bear in mind that if
they are customers, they are, in fact, buying from you despite any
protests they may have with your marketing approach, so take their
feedback with a grain of salt.
4) Ask strangers to your
business what they think of your current marketing. These should
not be people you know or else they will not be as
candid.
5) Test everything! Regardless
of what approach you take, test one version against the next to see
what sells more. Experiment. Mix and match. But measure your
results so that you know that your bulldog should be removed. Or
not.
In closing, first impressions
count, and you need to ensure that the message you're broadcasting
to your prospects is the right one. Use this tail -- I mean, tale
-- to see if there's anything you can improve in your own small
business marketing.
About the author:
Creative director/copywriter Jennifer McCay publishes the
Avenues to Marketing Success Newsletter, which delivers tips
to help you rev up your small business marketing every other week
using the Internet and offline techniques. To subscribe or find out
more, head to http://AvenueEast.com
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