Business Holiday Gifting & Supporting your Local Businesses

 I’ve had several clients tell me that they are giving a gift certificate to a local restaurant, movie passes, groceries, gas cards, etc. These are wonderful, thoughtful gifts and it’s great to support local businesses. (Ahem: I’m a local business too?) However, when you give these gifts, give them in a way that your recipient will be reminded of your gift all year long and that they’ll know it’s from you–not the grocery store.

Here are some ideas:

GIFT CERTIFICATES & CARDS: don’t just hand them an envelope, give them a gift certificate in something they’ll use often. If it’s for a coffee shop, slip it into a clear travel mug with your logo on it. Gift cards can be presented in this mini metal business briefcase or a useful jotter. Slip a restaurant gift certificate into a branded wine tote with a nice bottle or wine or sparkling cider.

FOOD GIFTS OR GROCERIES: put them in a branded insulated re-usable tote bag  they’ll be able to use over and over again. Or create a custom food gift which includes your own branded merchandise and/or your imprint on ribbon or on a reusable item such as a cutting board. And here’s a nifty coupon/shopping list pocket-book to slip a grocery store gift certificate into.

GYM MEMBERSHIPS: this is a great gift to give your employees and your company: the gift of Health. Slip a gift certificate into a branded waterbottle or gym bag to make it yours.

Need more ideas? Email me back; if I publish your solution I’ll send you this cool little “tech trap” for your next trip!

More on QR Codes

 Learned a couple new things with this article, hope you find it helpful too!

http://mashable.com/2011/11/11/qr-code-marketing-tips/

I’m a FINALIST!

WOW! I’ve just been informed that I’m a finalist in the very prestigious 2012 PPAI Pyramid Award Competition!!! I won’t know if I’ve won the Gold, Silver or Bronze award until the ceremony in Las Vegas on January 4th, but to be chosen as a finalist is a high honor.
 
I have Merchants Bank to thank for this honor as well, for allowing me to work with them to develop the program I submitted. Thank you Merchants!
 
I created 5 “door openers” for Merchants; you can see one of them on my home page. I’ll get the rest of them up on the “case studies” tab shortly.
 
The purpose of a “door opener” is to serve as a tool to 1) get you noticed and 2) communicate a message and 3) do so in a way that creates a personal connection so you’re able to start a conversation. Merchants has only begun implementing the program, but so far one representative has garnered enough new commercial business that the program has already paid for itself 45 times!
 
Please let me know if I can design any “door openers” or similar programs for your own business.

How much contact is TOO much?

Last week, in a misguided attempt to be helpful, I sent out what was meant to be a series of holiday gift ideas – by email. By Thursday, I’d found out exactly how much contact is too much. BIG difference between getting daily emails from somebody you SUBSCRIBE to, and daily emails from somebody you didn’t.

As luck would have it (or somebody/something wiser watching out for me), I came across an excellent article in one of my industry mags on new research on the “ideal” amount of customer contact. Here’s the article:

KEEPING IN TOUCH WITH CLIENTS THROUGH MAIL, TELEPHONE AND E-MAIL IS A GOOD THING–TO A POINT. NEW RESEARCH DECLARES THE IDEAL AMOUNT OF CUSTOMER CONTACT.

Message Received
By: Tama Underwood

Which of the following unsolicited forms of communication would you prefer to receive from a company with which you once did business: a surprise phone call, an unanticipated e-mail or an unexpected letter or package in the mail?

Whether you realize it or not, the third one is correct.

New research has found that most consumers tolerate twice as much direct mail as phone calls and e-mail. This is outstanding news for the promotional products industry because fitting a stress ball through a phone line or wrapping up a t-shirt in an e-mail just isn’t going to happen. However, slipping a product—no matter how small—into a mailing is sure to increase its acceptance on the recipient’s part.

A study conducted by marketing professors at University of California, Riverside; Boston College; and Southern Methodist University looked at the communications between auto dealerships and their customers for 39 months. It found that, during three-month increments, the ideal level of client communication is three telephone contacts, between three and four e-mail messages and nine to 10 mailings. Exceeding these volumes, the study found, generates an increasingly negative customer response.

The common idea is that businesses need to communicate with customers all the time, but it’s time to rethink this, says Andrea Godfrey, an assistant professor of marketing in the School of Business Administration at the University of California, Riverside, and a co-author of the study.

Contrary to past marketing studies on the same topic, this latest study shows that combining marketing channels can also be detrimental. For example, one telephone call brings the number of ideal e-mails to between five and six. Yet, when there are three to five telephone calls, the ideal number of e-mails drops to two or three.

For direct mail, the study found that one mail contact allows for five e-mail contacts before a customer starts to spend less. Five mailings, however, indicate e-mails are best limited to one.

The research focused on personalized communication with existing customers through various channels. Such communications can remind customers of needed services, announce new products and locations, survey satisfaction or introduce promotions.

Hope this article is helpful; I’ll behave now. :-)

Why the QR code is failing

“Great article on why QR codes fail and what we can be do about it.”

 

Social Media “not your thing”?

“You literally can no longer afford to think that social media is “not my thing.” As a consumer, you’ll be losing money; as a prospective employee, you’ll be passed over; and on a much larger scale as a business owner, you will lose touch with your customers.”

See rest of this very compelling article: http://hubmagazine.com/html/2011/hub_44/sep_oct/237230944/integrated-media/index.html

You may wonder why I keep nagging you to get on board with social media. After all, my main form of communication is dimensional media, just about as opposite as you can get from ”the cloud”.

But marketing today is not a choice of one media over another; it’s about starting and having a conversation wherever your “audience” might be. I might specialize in very tangible touchy-feely-smelly-tasty dimensional media, but I communicate what I do through blogs, social media, email and my website. I call people. I belong to several local organizations so I can get to know other businesses, and they can get to know me. You could legitimately call networking a form of media. And of course I give out physical reminders of what services I offer through branded merchandise – just another form of media.

So yes, getting up to speed on social media is a daunting task, but you can make it easy on yourself by hiring experts to get you over that learning curb, such as Green Gorilla Marketing, who will literally hold your hand over your mouse to help you set up your Facebook account if that’s what you need. I personally recommend them, but there are others. And you can bet they are making themselves known to you through multiple forms of media.

BRILLIANT Case Study #3

This is a followup brilliant Case Study of a the promotional project I shared with you last week for the commercial photographer. Due to the overwhelming success of his first program with the “Scarecrow”, the client had decided to create yet another program targeted at a similar targeted audience, that is; media and art directors in the Washington DC metropolitan area. Here’s what Cliff Quicksell put together for him next:

In a nutshell:

Objective: A targeted piece was developed to target 300 qualified media buyers and art directors in an effort to secure appointments, shooting for a 20% response rate, or 60 new client meetings.

Strategy: Postcards were sent in groups of 25 then followed with the mailing tubes. Postcards told clients that they would receive a unique gift and would want to give my client a call. Enclosed in the tube was a light-sensitive sound chip that when activated rang like a phone. The offer gave the recipient an activated phone card with 60 minutes in exchange for a ten minute meeting.

Results:  the mailer generated an amazing 28% response rate, 84 appointments and generated over $85,000.00 in new business.

Brilliant!

See full details (click on the image below)

Do you have a case study of your own to share? If so, fill in comment section below and we may publish it in a future posting!