Are You Using All 7 of These Highly Effective Marketing Tactics?
by Bob Leduc
Published on this site: February 18th, 2004

Here are 7 well known, highly effective marketing tactics many
small business owners overlook when developing their marketing program.
How many have you overlooked?
- Be Unique
The best way to beat your competition is to promote a distinct
advantage your customers cannot get from a competitor. This is
often called your USP (short for Unique Selling Proposition).
If you don't already have a distinct advantage, create one.
Add something to your business you're not already doing. One network
marketer I know doubled her sign up ratio by providing complimentary
sales leads to her new distributors for their first 4 months.
- Use Testimonials
Collect and use testimonials. Testimonials from satisfied
customers are similar to referrals. Both provide your prospect
with evidence that your product or service produced results for
other customers just like them.
I've performed many tests using the same messages with and without
testimonials. Those with testimonials always increased sales,
often by as much as 65% or more.
Don't wait for satisfied customers to volunteer a testimonial.
Instead, follow up with some customers soon after completing a
transaction.
Ask what they liked best about your product, service or business
opportunity. You'll get many flattering compliments. Ask for permission
to use them in your promotions.
- Make An Upselling Offer
Upselling is a proven technique you can use to get more money
at the point of sale. Customers will never be more receptive to
an attractive offer from you than when they're paying you money.
Offer your customers or clients the option to upgrade to a better
product or service at a special price. Or, offer the option of
adding a related item to the sale for a special combination price.
Many will accept your offer.
An upselling offer can increase your average sale by 30 percent
or more without creating any advertising expense.
- Trivialize Your Price
Demonstrate a low cost for your product or service by breaking
down the price to its lowest time increment. "$325 per year"
frightens many customers away. "Enjoy all of this for less
than 90 cents a day" attracts them to the low cost.
- Stress Benefits Before Features
A feature is what something is. A benefit is what it does.
For example, my favorite donuts are now delivered in a re-sealable
box. That's a feature. The donuts stay fresh for a week after
I first open the box. That's the benefit.
Promote the benefits of your product or service before you promote
the features of it. People never buy something to get a feature.
They always buy to get the benefit produced by the feature.
- Focus On The Headline
Always include a headline with your ad, sales letter or webpage.
Include your biggest benefit in the headline to grab your prospect's
attention. Otherwise, many prospective customers won't read your
promotional material.
When you develop a new promotion, test different headlines to
find the most effective one BEFORE you test anything else. After
you find the headline that attracts the most readers you can test
to find the most motivating copy for them to read.
- Include a Powerful Offer
Never advertise without including an offer. An offer provides
the reason for prospective customers to respond.
The best way to get a big response from your advertising is to
make an offer your prospects cannot refuse.
Are you using all 7 of these tactics in your promotions? If not,
revise your marketing program to include those you've overlooked.
You'll immediately enjoy a big increase in your sales and profits
without increasing your expenses.

Bob Leduc spent 20 years helping businesses like yours find
new customers and increase sales. He just released a New Edition
of his manual, How To Build Your Small Business Fast With Simple
Postcards ...and launched BizTips from Bob, a newsletter
to help small businesses grow and prosper. You'll find his low-cost
marketing methods at: http://BobLeduc.com
or call: 702-658-1707 After 10 AM Pacific Time/Las Vegas, NV.

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