How to Use Community Relations to Grow Your Business
by Michele Pariza Wacek
Published on this site: July 21st, 2005 - See
more articles from this month...

Community relations is one of those marketing strategies that
isn't talked about much, even though I venture to say practically
everyone ends up doing it at one time or another. Basically,
community relations is when you and your business become involved
in your community. For instance:
- Your business donates money to nonprofit organizations.
- You or your employees volunteer at a fundraising event.
- You or your employees volunteer for a nonprofit organization.
- You or your employees join a service club.
- You or your employees network and/or volunteer at industry
association meetings or business functions (such as Chamber
of Commerce events). Some people might consider this networking
and not community relations, but I would argue networking
falls under community relations. Regardless, you get the
idea.
I'm going to go through the pros and cons of community relations
in a moment, but first I want to encourage all of you to think
about ways to not only add community relations to your marketing
strategy but also to get better at leveraging those opportunities
to grow your business. But first, let's go through the pros
and cons.
Pros:
- Builds credibility for you and your business.
- Builds personal relationships with customers.
- Works well with advertising - similar to public relations,
community relations is a "soft" sell approach
that can make your customers more receptive to your advertising.
- Can be a stepping stone for PR.
- Creates goodwill (and good karma).
Cons:
- Time - community relations can consume a ton of
it. All that volunteering can suck up a lot of working and/or
leisure hours.
- Long wait to realize results - like public relations,
you implement a community relations plan for the long haul.
And I do mean the long haul (even longer than PR).
- Difficult to track - I'm talking mainly about
the non-business networking activities here. You may never
be able to trace sales to community relations. Actually,
chances are you probably won't. You need to trust it's working
on some cosmic level and let it go.
- No payoff at all - this can happen if you find
yourself donating time and/or money to charities that are
wonderful causes but offer little advertising and/or promotional
opportunities. Now, that doesn't mean I'm advocating only
supporting high-visibility causes. On the contrary, there
are many good reasons to have a community relations program
in place. For one, the good feeling you get knowing you're
supporting a worthy cause (not to mention all the good karma
you build).
Basically, you can sum up the cons to this: spend lots of
time or money for little/no return.
Not a good marketing strategy.
But, it doesn't have to be that way. You can and should find
ways to increase your ROI (return on investment) for all the
community relations activities you take part in. And one good
way to do that is to leverage them into marketing strategies.
Creativity Exercise - How to get a return on investment
with community relations
Grab some sheets of paper and a pen (I like the fun gel pens
myself) and get ready for some brainstorming.
First, list all the activities you're doing that are considered
community relations. Write them all down.
Next, analyze those activities. What ROI are you currently
getting from them? Do your customers know you donate time
and/or money to those activities? Do you get sales because
of your involvement? Are you building your brand and/or awareness
of your business because of your donations?
Don't know? Well, then you probably aren't getting much return.
Next, I want you to brainstorm ways you can start leveraging
those activities. Can you devote a section on your Web site
to telling people about your involvement? Can you use your
Web site to help raise money and/or volunteers for the causes
you support? If there's an event involved, can you more aggressively
market your services during it? (Set out flyers or brochures
or have a really good elevator speech if you're able to introduce
yourself.) Can you send out press releases? Can you have your
logo added to the organization's marketing materials? Or have
the organization link to your Web site?
Try and brainstorm 20 ways you can increase your ROI. Some
will be silly, some will be completely impractical - but that's
okay. All you need are one or two gold nuggets to really jumpstart
your marketing and make that investment in time and money
really start to pay off.

Michele Pariza Wacek is the author of "Got Ideas?
Unleash Your Creativity and Make More Money." She offers
two free e-zines that help subscribers combine their creativity
with hard-hitting marketing and copywriting principles to
become more successful at attracting new clients, selling
products and services and boosting business. She can be reached
at: http://www.TheArtistSoul.com.

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