Friday, February 20, 2009

Consistency and Frequency Matter

I was inputting new e-mails into my Insight list recently and was reminded how many business people do not have e-mails at their Web sites. If you are one of these people, I hope that this Insight will give you a reason to change your e-mail. If you do, please let me know. I want to keep sending you Insights.

Why does having your e-mail at your Web site matter?

In marketing, which is communicating with your customer, you are smart to take every opportunity to tell your story. You want to reinforce your message frequently. An important part of your message is your business's name. Your customer finds you, remembers you, and refers you by your business's name. Therefore, you want to repeat your business's name at every opportunity so that your customer has easy reference to it.

If you are marketing smart, your business Web site domain name is your business's name. Allow no shortcuts. Make your domain name your complete business name. Then, every time you give out your Web site, you are giving your business's name. If your e-mail is at your Web site, every time you give out your e-mail, your are giving out your business's name, too.

You are also giving out your Web site address. In so doing, you are making it easy to know your Web site address. When your e-mail is at your Web site, every time that you give out your e-mail, your are subtly promoting your Web site.

Think about it.

How many times do you give out your e-mail address? How many times does someone use your e-mail address? How much reinforcement of your Web site would you receive if every time someone e-mailed you they saw or typed your Web site? How easy would you make it for them to go to your Web site and learn more about your business?

E-mail has become the preferred business communication method. This presents a marketing opportunity similar to that presented with snail mail. When someone sends you a envelope via snail mail, that person writes out your business name and address, right? Every time your business name is written, that name is reinforced to the person writing. If you have your e-mail at someplace other than your Web site, every time your e-mail is written, you are reinforcing some other business. That is akin to having your snail mail sent to another business's address. Why would you want to promote Yahoo or Hotmail or some other business?

You don't. You want to promote your business.

In marketing your business, consistency and frequency matter. They solidify your business in your customer's mind. They promote and encourage your customer to do business with you more often. They remind your customer that your business exists. Having your e-mail at your Web site offers both. That is a little thing that makes a big difference in marketing your business. If you don't have your e-mail address at your Web site, change it. Do so today.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

A "Super" Opportunity Missed

During the past few days we have witnessed the one time each year that press and advertising meld. The topic which brings these two normally opposing teams together is the commercials aired during the Super Bowl. To many in marketing, including me, the action of press and advertising joining forces is amazing. However, this has become a cultural phenomenon. The "Super Bowl commercial watch" is as big as the game. To some, the commercials are more important than the game.

What's up with that?

When I sold television advertising, clients often commented to me about the cost of the Super Bowl commercials, which this year was three million for thirty seconds. Unable to grasp paying that much for that little a time, these clients were shocked. They thought that the dollar outlay was foolish. They couldn't believe that a business could reap enough from the ad to make spending three million worthwhile. "Why would someone do that?" they asked.

I replied, "Because they get more than the normal thirty seconds."

First of all, they get thirty seconds to sell to the largest audience of the year. Although some viewers may be taking a break during commercials, with that large an audience you have a good chance to reach more people than at any other time.

Second, before the game the press anticipates the commercials and gives them lots of buildup. Last Friday the Today Show had a significant segment previewing the commercials with two experts commenting on them. "In general," one noted, "this year's commercials are more pragmatic. Many are promoting Web sites, such as monster.com and carrerbuilder.com. Denny's has a surprise, which we cannot disclose, and Pedigree takes a different tack on adopting a dog by never showing one in the commercial."

Although they cannot show more than five seconds of any commercial in their sneak peeks, the attention drawn to the commercials by the news segments feeds the viewers’ desire to see them. No other commercials get this buildup. The buildup permeates all media: online, radio, and print. The commercials may air on one network, but all media cover them.

Third, after the game the talk about these commercials continues. Viewers are able to vote online for their favorite. Coworkers debate which one they liked best. The press spends much of Monday reviewing and discussing the fans' favorites, the critics' favorites, and the anchors' favorites. In fact, once a commercial has aired on the Super Bowl, it has the potential to be forever a part of the media's Super Bowl coverage. A television show, The Greatest Super Bowl Commercials, aired for one hour last Friday. This gives a company with a good commercial an opportunity to get that commercial aired again and again and again several times every year around the Super Bowl for no additional dollar outlay.

Think about it. Can you think of any other commercial which receives this amount of attention from all the press and all the country for that amount of time?

In light of this attention, why don't local businesses prepare special commercials for the Super Bowl and get local press coverage about their commercials? The "Super" opportunity is certainly there. Local press would love to pick up a story about a local business which took the extra effort to prepare a "Super Bowl" caliber commercial.

This doesn't happen because local businesses do not know how to use publicity, much to their detriment. Although this is the only "Super" opportunity, local businesses have many other press opportunities that they miss, too.

Which of them have you missed?