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The Three Must-Have Marketing Pieces
by Erin Ferree

Published on this site: August 3rd, 2006 - See more
articles from this month

You've designed your logo. Now you need to create some great marketing
pieces to promote your business. But what pieces to create? There are
so many options available that it can be difficult to decide which pieces
will be the strongest and best ay to publicize your business. No matter
what that business is, we recommend these pieces as a first step toward
marketing it.
- Business card
Making a great first impression often begins with your business card.
Your business card is typically the first of your marketing aterials
that a new client will see. It should clearly tell your client who you
are and what you do at first glance.
A business card is a convenient way to introduce yourself at networking
events, and it's key to passing your contact information along when
you meet someone.
Important elements to include when designing your business
card include:
- Your contact information, including your business mailing address.
Including a mailing address greatly increases your credibility and
makes you look much more established! If you're concerned about privacy,
a Post Office box or mailbox is a great way to go.
- Your logo, as discussed in many of the other articles in our library.
- Strong secondary graphics and design elements, which we refer
to as your visual vocabulary.
- A list of your services, which is especially important if youoffer
multiple services or if your business name doesn't specifically
make clear what you do. Be concise when creating this list, so that
all of the relevant information will fit on the business card.
Combining these elements will result in a business card that does more
than just pass along your contact information -it will also build your
brand.
The best practices for using your business card include:
- First of all, be sure that you carry your cards with you at all
times - keep a stack in your desk, your car, your briefcase
or purse, and your wallet. This will ensure that you always have a
card available when you meet someone who should have one!
- Take your business cards with you to business meetings, networking
events, conferences, trade shows - everywhere you go that's business
related. And be sure to take some with you to the gym, the grocery
store - you never know where you'll meet a potential client.
- Don't pass business cards out at random - wait until you've made
a connection with someone or until you've been asked for it. Making
a connection with a prospect will lead to a sale far more often than
just "dealing cards" to everyone you meet.
- Include a copy of your card with correspondence or packages - It
automatically puts a "business spin" on all of the mail
you send out. It also provides a backup return address, in case the
envelope has been damaged or thrown away.
- Give copies of your cards to business partners and other possible
sources of referral and business partners, so that they can hand them
out when they're telling people about your services - it makes the
referral more likely to produce results.
- Website
Having an online presence is a "must" if you want to be taken
seriously in today's business world. A website is also a great marketing
tool that can help you to find, educate, and prequalify prospects and
to cut down the time and energy involved in your sales cycle.
Important characteristics to consider when designing your website
include:
- Design elements that are related to your logo and brand identity.
The shapes of elements on your website and the color scheme should
be evocative of your brand identity. We refer to these as your visual
vocabulary.
- Consistent, easy-to-use navigation systems that enable your website
visitors to find the information they need quickly.
- Making the site and navigation expandable-easy to add on to,
so that your website can grow with your business.
- Preparing the images properly for the web, to make them clear
and quick-loading.
- Clean, easy-to-understand text content. Pretend you're writing
on a 10-year-old's level when you create your text, so that rushed
clients can.
- Coding the site using style sheets and templates so that updating,
revising, and expanding your site is as easy as possible.
- Cross-platform and cross-browser compatibility, so that everyone
will be able to access your site, regardless of the type of computer
they use.
- A basic level of search engine optimization. ALT tags, title
tags, keyword-rich text coded in HTML, headlines, and META tags.
These will help to ensure that your site gets great rankings in
the search engines, so that people visiting Google and Yahoo can
find your site.
- Easy-to-maintain, which will enable you or a web developer to
keep your site current with a minimum of effort.
- A website promotion plan. Once your website is designed, coded,
and posted, it is important to market the site. There aremany ways
to do that - ranging from exchanging links with other sites, to
in-depth Search Engine optimization, to including your web address
in your email signature, to article writing. These are just a few
of the best strategies to promote your site - and, to cover them
fully we'll need to create more articles. Watch for those here -
our articles in August, October, and November 2005 will cover those
topics.
- Follow-up piece
A follow-up tool such as a post card, HTML newsletter, or note card
is essential to make sure that your services stay "top-of-mind"
with the people that you meet. It's said that a prospect needs to hear
from you seven times before they will make a purchase. So it's important
to create tools and a system to enable you to followup with your prospects
once you've made that initial connection.
Steps to planning your follow-up method and system:
- Determine how your customers prefer to receive information from
you. Communicating with them in the method of their choice makes
them more receptive to your messages and more likely to buy from
you. Consider whether your ideal clients are "computer people"
or whether they'd be more likely to respond to postal mail.
- Then, consider which media you're most comfortable using to follow
up. Do you have the technical skills to produce an HTML newsletter
or the budget to hire a specialist? And do you have the time to
create articles about your area of expertise? Do you have the time
to apply addresses and postage to post cards? Or do you prefer giving
the personalized touch of a note card, and can you keep up with
the time commitment of following up in that way? Knowing your level
of comfort and commitment, and understanding the time required,
will ensure that you can keep up with your follow-up program.
- If the previous two considerations are in conflict, find a way
to make them congruous. For example, if you have the skills to produce
an HTML newsletter and your clients are "computer people",
but you don't have the time to write articles, you can explore online
article banks that offer free articles for you to include in your
newsletter, such as the one at http://www.ideamarketers.com
. If you don't have time to address and apply postage to post cards,
find a high school student who will do it for you at a reasonable
rate. Be creative!
- Once you've determined the method of communication to use for your
follow-up piece, create a plan for how often you will followup. For
example, if you're doing a post card or handwritten note, quarterly
contacts might be enough. If you're using an online newsletter, monthly
or bimonthly issues are probably best to really capture a client's attention
- your clients probably get a lot of email, and it takes regular contact
to stand out from the crowd.
- Creating your follow-up tools.
Finally, once you have planned your follow-up system, it's time to move
on to the design and content of your tool: the postcard, newsletter,
or note card.
Be sure that your follow-up tool
- Looks professional and uses elements of your visual vocabulary,
to reinforce your brand identity.
- Contains content that is both valuable and accessible to your
audience. Be sure to give good, quality information in your newsletter
or post card, so that people will look forward to receiving it.
And write the newsletter with language on your prospect's level
- don't use technical jargon if you can avoid it, and if you can't,
define the technical terms so that your audience can stay "on
the same page" with you.
- Includes a call to action on non-personalized items like the
post card and newsletter, and/or an offer such as a discount or
special article. These can also be helpful in handwritten follow-up
- giving the people that you're contacting a reason to get back
in touch with you.
- Has some personalized information. A handwritten note card is
personalized by default. If you're using a post card or newsletter
as your follow-up tool, you can personalize it by using stories
from your life, news on your hobbies, or updates on what you're
doing, to make your newsletter more endearing to your potential
clients.
- Offers your potential clients a way to get on and off of your
mailing list easily - you don't want to be sending mail or email
that's unwanted.
- Is sent out regularly. In addition to letting prospects know
when to expect the follow-up, following-up regularly will also show
that you do things professionally and in a timely manner.
These three tools - your business card, website, and follow-up tool -
are the essentials for marketing a small business. Using these marketing
pieces in the ways described above will "get you started off on the
right foot" in your marketing efforts.

Erin Ferree, Founder and Lead Designer of elf design, is a brand
identity and marketing design strategist who creates big visibility for
small businesses. Erin helps her clients discover their brand differentiators,
then designs logos, business cards, and other collateral materials and
websites to reflect that differentiation, as well as to increase credibility
and memorability. To learn more about defining your difference, check
out our eBook, Stand Out, at http://www.stand-out-branding.com
. For more information about elf design, please visit: Logo design at
http://www.elf-design.com


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