Advertising STRATEGY – the foundation of getting results
Advertising STRATEGY – the foundation of getting results
By Duane Christensen
Strategy is one of those words in advertising that is rarely understood. I’m attempting to give you an easy-to-understand explanation. Hope it helps. Let me know if it does.
An advertising strategy is formed by evaluating your current market situation. You must know your competitors. You should know who in your industry is #1 and #2. Maybe you’re one of them. If you are…rock on! You always need to defend your position on the rung of the market share ladder. There’s always someone farther down the ladder that is trying to take over your position. And for most businesses, they’d like to be a position or two higher…but they don’t know how to get there.
In order to gain market share and a consistent flow of new customers you need to position yourself as “something” people will find favorable. Something that makes them think, “Hmm, that’s important to me.” Usually, it shouldn’t be something that another business already claims. Unless it’s someone farther down the “ladder” and you can do it much better.
I’m going to clarify with some examples. If you are an auto dealer…with a behemoth competitor that claims and SHOUTS the “best price” because of the volume they do…you want to stay away from Price as your main strategy. You can talk some “price” so people know you’re competitive (which you are) and they’re not making a huge financial blunder if they do business with you…but it’s not how you want people to remember you. You can’t win that battle. The Big Guys have too much money and pound PRICE into everyone’s head.
So WHO should you be? Well, you have to go above and beyond in other areas. Like service and “non-pressure” sales tactics on your lot, for example. Not everyone wants to do business with the puky price pushers and pressure sales dudes. Take me for example. I wanted to buy a Nissan quite a few years back. And the Big Guy was the only Nissan dealer in town. I talked to a rude sales jerk for about 10 minutes and decided I wasn’t buying from him or his company. I drove 180 miles and bought the same exact Nissan.
Maybe you’re in the floral business. There seems to be a floral shop on almost every street in my town. You have to know your competitors. Buy flowers from every one of them. Rate them on flower quality, design, helpfulness, etc. When you know as much as possible about your competitors, then you can begin to create a strategy for your ad campaign. If nobody is toting that their flowers will last an average of one day longer, why not BE that florist? All you have to do is figure out how to make your flowers last an average of a day longer. Piece of cake, right? J Why is that a good strategy? Because flowers tend to be a short-lived investment that makes people question the purchase anyway. But if you honestly and creatively tell people that your flowers will last an average of a day longer than most other floral shops’ flowers…now you’ve got their attention. Especially, if your pricing is close to the average. Florists will probably say phphphtttt! to me about that. Ok…if that’s not possible…come up with something else. Think out of the box, think like Einstein, think like a true entrepreneur, whatever it takes to give yourself a true edge up on your competition.
PRICE is a bad strategy. Very few businesses can get away with it. Like Wal-Mart. Their business model is based on low price. But it couldn’t have been done without a lot of thinking, strategizing, and hard work by Sam Walton. Take ME again as an example. I rarely shop at Wal-Mart. I’d rather do business with the local biz if possible. But sometimes the local store falters and gives me a very bad customer service experience. That makes me sad because I do not want to be a Wal-Mart shopper.
Small business owners have to be on their toes at all times. All your customers are gold. Your customers are doing business with you because you have convinced them that you’re BETTER. And they’re willing to pay a little extra for that. Do NOT take your customer for granted.
You can have a much more intelligent and profitable advertising strategy than Wal-Mart. You just need to THINK about what your customer wants. Trust me it’s not just about price. It’s about VALUE. You can add value to a sale that doesn’t cost you anything at all. Or very little anyway. Here’s a cheap value adding tip…make your customer feel special. C’mon…you can do better than just having a “greeter” at the front door, can’t you? Think about how you can add value and make your customer feel special…then do it. Or train your employees to recognize and take advantage of circumstances to make a customer feel like they matter. A lot of times that might cost a little bit too. But it’s way worth it in the long-run with the positive word-of-mouth.
What if you’re a siding company? Who are your competitors? Vinyl siders. Cement board siders. Cut-it-on-site siders. Cheap-ass siders. Which one are you? What’s the benefit of what you offer? Maybe your strategy could encompass what you are NOT. If you’re NOT the cheap-ass sider…tell people you’re not. Here’s a couple of samples of ad copy that might get people’s attention… “Hey, if you want your siding to last longer than 7 to 10 years, you’ll probably like what we have to offer.” OR… “When you go to sell your house in 8 years…is your potential buyer going to be warned by her inspector or realtor that she may have to think about re-siding within the next year or two? Probably.”
There are lots of strategies you could use. The main thing is to be a business of value…but don’t try to copycat the “#1” in town. Find a strategy that fits you and only you. Then, start pounding “who you are” into people’s brains. If it’s a strategy that people care about (if it hits “hot buttons”), then you’ll start grabbing a bigger piece of the pie and moving up the ladder a bit. Slowly at first…but surely. Be patient.
Remember that your strategy can’t be a lie. You’ll go out of business faster than you thought possible if your ad messages and STRATEGY doesn’t match your “in-store” reality. In my experience, bad word of mouth travels eleventeen times faster than good word of mouth.
Start doing your research on your competitors. The more you know, the faster you can start taking a few customers from them here and there.
Watch the video related to advertising strategies
A commercial created for John Durham’s Advertising Strategy class at the University of San Francisco. Cinematopgrapher/Editor- Joshua Clark-Collier Screen writer- Alix Khoury Director- Sally Yee Crew- AJ Zollar, Edward Mesa, Jeanette Gunawan, & Yuliya Shapiro Actors- Astro Araujo, Emi Hashisaki, Chevigny Brady, Kerina Hayashi, & Chloe Dickson Voice over- Pierre Le Bourdonnec
Help answer the question about advertising strategies
What kinds of marketing and advertising strategies for Philippine products?What do you think are the easy and simple approach that can be very effective in the broad market?
Say am selling TUBA in USA.
not allowed sampling on premises
About Author
Duane Christensen is a radio ad/campaign writer and strategist for a unique radio group. His passion is helping each one of his customers’ businesses thrive.
I was producing similar multimedia piggybacking ads 10 years ago. Ad pioneering ain’t easy.
I had the same challenge when I was an editor of my school newspaper. To help get more readers, I created a contest. I hid a $100 gift card (which was given to me by a local business in exchange for ad space) somewhere on campus. Then on the front page we had a big teaser about it. You can create a treasure map, or sneak in a secret code about where to find the prize somewhere within an article (like having the first letter of each sentence spell out the location or something). Word gets around fast that something is going on and before you know it everybody is scouring the pages looking for clues. It gives them a reason so pick up a newspaper and in doing so they'll see all the great stuff your publication has to offer. Hope that helps…it sure helped me. Good luck!
Depending on the size of your dealership-if its relatively small-the very best thing is to have your business on a busy and prominent corner.
A large sign that doesnt have to be glitzy or costly.
And WORD OF MOUTH!
It works in my town.
Larger? You can get some cheaper TV spots on local, late-night to start. Write your own and show yourself as well as the lot.
Inherent to the car business is the barrier of mistrust of the consumer to overcome. Seems goofy television spots are remembered but if you use radio, keep it factual. Use smaller newspapers to start also highlighting certain cars. Also, surprisingly, you can reach an audience with an ad on paper restaurant placemats.
Success to you.
Apple was founded on April 1, 1976 by Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak and Ronald Wayne[3] (and later incorporated January 3, 1977[4] without Wayne, who sold his share of the company back to Jobs and Wozniak) to sell the Apple I personal computer kit at US$666.66. They were hand-built in Jobs' parents' garage, and the Apple I was first shown to the public at the Homebrew Computer Club.[5] The Apple I was delivered in June, and was paid for on delivery. Eventually 200 Apple I computers were built. The Apple I was a motherboard (with CPU, RAM, and basic textual-video chips), not a complete personal computer as it is known today.[citation needed]
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internet marketing, e-mail blasting, telemarketing, free newspaper ads (Buy & Sell offers free post of advertisements), fliers, referrals, etc
Most companies copy because it works. Branding is one way of marketing. The most successful company that has branded its product is Coke-A-Cola. Many know the brand just by the logo. Nike is another great company that everyone knows the logo. When you use an advertising company they basically use the same techniques for all their clients. Is it wrong? Not really. Another technique is holding a promotion or contest with a service or product. It gets people to think. Do you think reality tv was created for fun and entertainment? Wrong. It was created for companies to promote their products.
If you go to Adweek there are many ideas for advertising and marketing. You will be amazed.
While I have no concrete answers, may I suggest you read this wonderful novel 'How Starbucks Saved My Life'. While it is about a true story about a man's downfall and back to success… it also reveals the principles and philosophy of Starbucks and a bit of its marketing strategies. The book is so engaging u ll probably finish it in a day.
Upper middle class — professional employees at the upper part of corporate ladder such as financial analysts.
edit: Characteristics of the typical BMW Target Audience here: http://64.233.167.104/search?q=cache:jWSgUMc79DIJ:higheredbcs.wiley.com/legacy/college/kotabe/0471230626/text_cases/bmw.doc+bmw+target+market&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=ca