Never Get a ”Real„ Job (25 page)

BOOK: Never Get a ”Real„ Job
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Know how to wow. Make your marketing materials aesthetically appealing. Be conscious of your brand’s design work. Competitors with better-designed tactics will win every time. Don’t feel the urge to overdesign everything you produce either. This often leads to the same reaction as underdesigned work. If you don’t have a creative bone in your body, be a tasteful minimalist.

 

Make sure that the design of your marketing package sets the right tone, feel, and level of professionalism you would expect from a trusted brand. If you think it looks unprofessional, scrap it until you create something that works.

 

Create Top-Quality Marketing Campaigns That Don’t Break the Bank

 

Who needs a marketing director or creative department? By using low-cost tech products, inexpensive Web services, and crowd-sourcing marketplaces—where you can hire several hundred creative people for the price of one—your start-up can produce high-end marketing campaigns for little money. Here are 11 of my favorite products and online services that will help you produce and execute your marketing campaigns on the cheap.

 

1.
99designs.com
enables you to sponsor design and creative media competitions online where tens of thousands of creative freelancers compete to win cash prizes—and
you
only pay for the winning designs. Cost: Varies.

 

2.
OvernightPrints.com
is an online short-run printing company that lets you print almost any type of high-quality, full-color marketing collateral on the cheap. Cost: Varies.

 

3.
Voices.com
lets you choose a spokesperson for your videos and audio spots from tens of thousands of professional voice-over talents. Cost: Varies.

 

4.
Flickr Creative Commons
(
flickr.com
) is a user-generated photo repository that lets you select from millions of photos and use them royalty-free for your marketing materials. Cost: Free.

 

5.
iContact.com
is an e-mail marketing service that allows you to easily manage intuitive e-mail marketing campaigns to your opt-in subscribers. Cost: Free to $240 per month.

 

6.
Flip Video Camcorders
are handheld devices capable of shooting standard or high-definition videos for your Web sites and social media networks. Cost: Starting at $99.99.

 

7.
Qik.com
is a mobile video service that lets you record and share live or prerecorded videos instantly from your mobile phone. Cost: Free to $49.99 per phone per month.

 

8.
JayCut.com
is Web-based video editing program that lets you professionally edit your media anywhere, anytime on any computer. Cost: Free to varies.

 

9.
Involver.com
is an app company that specializes in professional, dynamic applications such as video players, RSS feeds, polls, slideshows, and coupon modules for Facebook Fan Pages. Cost: Free to varies.

 

10.
Picnik.com
is an online photo-editing program that enables you to import files from your computer or social media networks and add effects and text. Cost: Free to $24.95 per year.

 

11.
Google AdWords
is one of the Internet’s most prominent ad-buying platforms and enables you to bid on and buy ads globally on Google as well as various other mediums, including television. Cost: Varies.

 
 
 

Encourage repeat business with a finishing touch
. Even though a customer might have paid you for your service, that doesn’t mean that your marketing job is over quite yet. Nothing says thank you more than a small, unexpected gesture. There isn’t much that’s better for your business than taking advantage of the opportune moment when your client is at his most satisfied state with your service to solidify life-long loyalty, encourage the spread of word-of-mouth, and engage the satisfied customer with an incentive to use your services again in the future.

 

For example, Sizzle It!, offers a year’s supply of free coffee with a customer’s first purchase. The coffee arrives at the client’s office along with a personalized thank-you note, a referral offer, and free coffee mug with Sizzle It!’s logo, marketing message, and contact information. This gift keeps our brand relevant by getting our marketing real estate in a place where it can serve as a potential conversation starter among coworkers. Who wouldn’t be curious to know why a coworker received free coffee for a year from a “video company?”

 

You have one shot to get this right—so don’t mess it up. Simply handing someone crappy marketing materials will put a bad taste in his mouth at the worst possible moment. Your finishing touch must provide your customer with real, tangible value. It also needs to be as purposeful for your brand as it is useful and thoughtful to your client. If you’re going to give something away, make sure it serves a dual purpose: to thank the customer and to call him back into action. Giving away pens and pads is all well and good, but if you fail to make them into effective selling tools by only including your logo and contact information, you’re missing out on a valuable opportunity.

 

Don’t pass up the chance to ingrain your brand in your customer’s mind and turn them into a lead generator or a repeat customer. One happy client can pay off 10 times over.

 

THINK GUERRILLA, NOT GODZILLA

 

As you’re well aware by now, you don’t exactly have an unlimited checkbook to spend on marketing and advertising, which is all the more reason to make sure that everything you do or produce performs at the top of its game. To be a successful start-up marketer, you need to produce results on the cheap and become an 800-pound
guerrilla
. This is why it’s important that you learn to turn any circumstance or space into an effective marketing moment for your brand—one that converts eyeballs into cash.

 

Don’t rely on expensive ads
. I love listening to ad salespeople pitch me case studies and statistics. Often these facts and figures are anything but the norm or what can be expected. Those case study subjects who broke the mold didn’t just magically place their ads into a newspaper or e-blast and automatically get that response; they found a way to maximize the medium by inserting the right message content and creativity. Whether you decide that your brand and marketing messages will be most effective in churches or bars, your challenge isn’t to determine
how much
it will cost you to get your messages there, but rather how you can get them there with minimal, if any, up-front costs.

 

Find the best ways to control and disseminate your own brand and marketing messages while taking advantage of the audiences and eyeballs advertisers pay big bucks to target. Instead of taking out a newspaper ad, you might decide to drop neighborhood-specific flyers with special offers into your neighbors’ mailboxes. If an event sponsorship is too steep, you might consider attending as a guest, mingling, and then handing out business cards and marketing materials to attendees.

 

Limited cash demands that you come up with smart guerrilla marketing tactics. Hosting contests, giving away free product samples and gift certificates, wearing T-shirts with catchy marketing messages, adding special offers in your e-mail signature, producing online videos, and conducting local publicity stunts are examples of tactics that can yield high returns on investment for little up-front capital. Look for ways to transform ordinary objects, situations, or cheap materials into effective marketing tools that produce results.

 

You’re an expert (just ask you)!
As the creator of your service,
you
know that you offer your niche marketplace valuable insight and advice. However, simply proclaiming that you are an expert will get you nowhere. It’s not enough to just shamelessly pimp your own service; you also need to become a leading authority for your target customers.

 

Devise a moniker for which you want to be known for marketing and public relations purposes. Perhaps you want to be known as “The Green Dad” with an expertise in outdoor family activities in order to front your sports adventure travel company. To put a face to your gluten-free baking company, you may want others to label you as “The Gluten Free Cooking Queen” whose passion is to teach others to create great quality baked goods without the gluten.

 

Authenticity builds credibility. Don’t speak down to your customers; relate to them. Tell the story of how your service was founded. What problems did you encounter? How did you solve them? Give people a reason to listen to you by offering value to their lives with relevant and targeted information. Offer a fresh perspective in your market. Take a stand, be controversial, and pick a side on issues that are important to your niche marketplace.

 

Once you’ve perfected your message, syndicate your way to success by distributing content through the “expert real estate”—blogs, forums, press releases, newsletters, Web video, and podcasts—in your niche marketplace. Join and lead local industry groups or associations. Find guest blogging opportunities by reaching out to like-minded Web sites and offering your services at no charge. Build online communities centered on your expertise. Remember, no one knows your marketplace better than you.

 

Become a Syndicated Media Personality and Expert

 

You don’t need to be a pundit on a major TV network or a celebrity to attract notoriety, create a buzz, and establish expertise. In fact, as long as you’ve got a valuable message and supportive content, you can transform yourself into a relevant niche expert in a matter of minutes.

 

But remember—tools alone won’t draw crowds or attention. Everyone, including your competition, has access to these resources. When combined with the right message, personality-driven content, consistency, and a multichannel marketing approach, these 11 distribution channels can form a powerful platform from which to build your brand expertise and maximize your SEO.

 

1.
Justin.tv
or
UStream.tv
allow you to produce your own TV program or video tutorial. Forget big budgets, camera crews, or expensive equipment. With these services, all you need is a webcam or any other compatible video camera to host a live video show in seconds. Cost: Free.

 

2.
Blip.tv
enables you to instantly syndicate your videos to various video-sharing sites, such as YouTube, AOL, Vimeo, iTunes, and many more. Cost: Free to $8 per month.

 

3.
Connect with consumers
by signing up for free user accounts on all relevant social networks, such as Facebook, Ning, and LinkedIn. Use profile spaces to position your message, market your service, distribute insights to fans, and connect with prospects, consumers, and enthusiasts. Cost: Free.

 

4.
Start a blog
providing relevant tips, tricks, and advice to readers; connect it with your Web site, and send links to prospects and customers regularly. Don’t use your blog for aggressive selling; be informative and useful, and inject the occasional
passive
sales offer. Your blog must be used as a tool, not a hobby, in order for it to effective. A blog that is dormant for long periods of time will hurt you more than help you; it either shows readers that you really don’t have much to say or that you don’t really care enough about them to be consistent. Make a schedule, make it public, and stick to it. Blogger, WordPress, and Tumblr all offer free blog hosting. Cost: Free.

 

5.
Ping.fm
is a free online service that instantly syndicates your messages, videos, photos, and media content to almost every social network, blogging site, media-sharing site, and micro-blogging site across the Internet. Cost: Free.

 

6.
BlogTalkRadio.com
enables you to become the host of a syndicated radio show and podcast. You don’t need a big-time studio to get your voice on the airwaves. Use this platform to interview guests and stream your message over the Web. iTunes,
PodcastAlley.com
, and
Podcast.com
are also free distribution services to syndicate your message to a wider online audience. Cost: Free to $199 per month.

 

7.
TokBox.com
is a Web-based tool that enables you to host live lectures, seminars, and video chats with up to 200 people, schedule and invite people in advance, and share presentations and documents. Cost: Free to varies.

 

8.
PRWeb.com
can be a powerful distribution channel for your message. PR Web is not a free or inexpensive service, but it is the absolute authority in distributing press releases to members of the press and online news outlets. Cost: Varies.

 

9.
Hootsuite.com
links to your Twitter accounts to schedule tweets, tweet RSS feeds, and shorten elongated URLs. You may also want to consider other popular micro-blogging sites Tumblr and Posterous, in addition to Twitter. Cost: Free.

 

10.
Get syndicated
by posting your expert content across the Internet. The more places your content shows up on the Web, the more opportunities there will be for you to attract new followers to your social media streams, improve your SEO, and sell new clients on your product or service. There are hundreds of Web sites where you can blog and post content, but I highly recommend Facebook Notes,
EzineArticles.com
,
IdeaMarketers.com
,
EvanCarmichael.com
,
GoArticles.com
, and
Scribd.com
. Cost: Free.

 

11.
HelpAReporter.com
is a social media service that connects journalists with sources for their news stories. Cost: Free.

 
 

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