Effective Marketing on a Shoestring Budget: Part THREE

In this BRILLIANT post 😉 on Effective Marketing on a Shoestring Budget, Part THREE:

1) The Three Most Important Words in marketing;
2) The Master Key to Creating Value;
3) An advanced “local marketing” example of the Shotgun/Laser Principle I revealed in Effective Marketing on a Shoestring Budget, Part ONE.

Marketers Are Paying Attention to the Wrong Things

In this day and age of PPC, Twitter, Facebook, Google+… Pinterest, Instagram, Tumblr… shall I go on? Adwords, SEO, WordPress, LinkedIn, Slideshare, Webinars, Aweber, YouTube…

…yada yada yada…

…it’s easy to get distracted by all the BS (that’s Bright, Shiny 😉 ) objects and forget the REAL basics of business.

As I’ve said elsewhere on this blog, all the above platforms are simply vehicles. They aren’t marketing, they are WAYS to USE marketing.

Almost all of the marketing principles that I teach on this blog were learned PRE-internet; they worked ‘back in the day’ with direct mail, sign ads, print ads. These principles work today with all the wonderful tools that the internet and social media have given us. And they’ll work TOMORROW with the Next Big New Thang comes along.

To really get ahead, then… we’ll have to go backwards a bit. Rediscover the roots. Uncover the lost ‘mysteries’ of HOW to market. And then apply those principles today and forever, using whatever medium makes the most sense.

The Three Most Fundamental Things About Marketing

bags o cashWant piles upon piles of cash? Pay attention…

The most important words for you to learn and NEVER forget: the Market, the Message, and the Medium.

Most folks go about establishing their on- or off-line business the wrong way.

They begin bass-ackwards, saying “Oooh, I’d better learn Pinterest” or some such nonsense. “That way I can show pictures of my widgets.”

Phooey.

Not that there is anything wrong with Pinterest. You’ll see a sharing button at the end of THIS page. But Pinterest is only the Medium. It’s a way to communicate with other human beings.

Nothing wrong with widgets, either. But a lot of folks come up with the widget before they identify WHO might be interested in buying the fool things.

The most important, first and fundamental thang about MARKET-ing is the MARKET.

Duh.

In case we’ve forgotten, “The Market” is the group of people that you can identify as having certain values or common interests.

The Market

When most folks talk about pursuing their passion and turning it into a business, they stop at the first and most obvious benefit: the fact that being passionate about something gives them boundless energy to work at something for hours without pay… so that they can one day charge for their work.

Like I said… that’s obvious. Mm, cliche, even

The “lifestyle business” mantra: be passionate about something, work at it, become a world class rock star at it… get paid.

The fact that work at something hard and get good at it when you perceive it as play is self-evident. 

Identifying your target market begins by identifying with your target market; you know what keeps them up at night.

The less obvious benefit about being passionate about something is the deep and personal insight it gives one into the problems and practicals of that particular pursuit.

That's me, grabbing two points for a head kick at a recent tournament in Alamosa, CO

That’s me, grabbing 2 points for a head kick at a recent tournament in Alamosa, CO. Smiling while fighting is my ‘secret weapon’ 😉

For example, my being a martial arts competitor at 45 years of age gives me intimate knowledge into the pains of an aging athlete’s preparation for combat sports.

Getting my body to perform stuff at 45 that I learned at age fifteen is no mean feat; I have to keep limber, relaxed, and execute technique with a pretty cool head… sometimes while fighting  opponents half my age.

Performing at this level, at this age,  is the problem.

The exact mental and physical prep routine I use is the practical.

Because I am passionate about martial arts, I’m able to connect with other martial artists and instantly have rapport with them because we both face the same kinds of problems.

And when the time comes that I have a solution to offer them… they know, like, and trust me. Because, well… I’ve been in their shoes. Or out of ’em; most martial arts are practiced barefoot 😉

Identifying your target market begins by identifying with your target market; you know what keeps them up at night. When you find the solution to your own pain, you find the solution to the pains of others. Knowing your MARKET… those people that share a particular set of interests, ideas, or problems… is the first and never-wavering principle of marketING.

Solve a problem for yourself first, then share it; this is the Master Key of Creating Value.

The Message

Once we find solutions, the next step is to craft a message about it.

Notice I said, craft a message. There is a particular way to present useful information to your target audience. WHAT particular way? Well, it varies with the audience, of course. You’ll have to see what others in your space are doing that works. begin there. Then begin branching out and testing other approaches as well.

Perhaps the best way to know how to reach others in your space is to think about the last solution YOU got or bought, and retrace steps to see how THAT came about.

Marketing is not one size-fits-all.

HOWEVER..! The one central component of EVERY marketing message should be this:

The Unique Selling Proposition.

Your USP is the ONE thing that separates you from everyone else in your space.

Think about it… if you and all your competitors offer pretty much the same thing, you are in a ‘commodity’ business. The name of the game in commodities is to offer your goods or services at the lowest price possible.

That’s a LOSING proposition in any industry… making it cutthroat, unfriendly, fiercely competitive and ultimately, unprofitable. Not the kinds of ways I prefer to do business.

The usual way people market is this:

“We’re the BEST!” or;

“We have the lowest PRICE!”

Phooey again. Everyone says that stuff. It’s an expected, “salesy” message and it commits the first mortal sin of marketing by making you predictable.

Even WORSE: it makes you  forgettable.

Hat tip to master marketer Dan Kennedy for the following, BRILLIANT observations…

Your Unique Selling Proposition

I’m willing to bet money that this line is memorable enough that you’ll know the company it goes with right away:

“When it absolutely, positively has to be there overnight!”

Hmm. FedEx, right? You got it. No mention of price in there, BTW. They haven’t commoditized themselves; they’ve made themselves the only company that can solve your particular problem.

How ’bout this one?

“Hot, fresh pizza delivered to your door in 30 minutes or less, or it’s FREE!”

Didja guess Domino’s? You guessed right. Again, notice that there is no claim of high quality… only that it will be fresh, hot, and THERE in half an hour or less.

Domino’s may have gotten away from their original USP but they were built on it.

How about YOU, dear fellow Stepper? Can you describe what is different about the service YOU provide, or the problem that YOUR product solves, in about a dozen words or so?

Simple Says It Best

Your Unique Selling Point doesn’t have to be fancy or overstated. My son and I started a small service business (that recently had its first $500 profit day) with a simple, four-word USP.

In our community of Colorado Springs, there are just a few hardware stores that will still repair a torn screen door. Even so, the homeowner has to jimmy it out of the track himself… take the door to the store in his truck (or a borrowed truck)… wait 7-10 days for the hardware store to call him back… come pick it up, pay for it, take it out to the (maybe borrowed) truck again and jam it back into the track at home.

Phew.

Or..! Check THIS for a Unique Selling Point:

“We come to you.”

Our hero, the homeowner need not fuss with all that. Courtesy of our USP he knows he can call my son or me, set an appointment… and fifteen minutes after we arrive write us a phat check for $45.

Done.

Problem solved.

For you math nerds out there, the material expense for replacing the fabric in a screen door is just under $4. With more than one screen door in many homes, and good planning as to scheduling homes all in the same zip code… it’s easy to see how Pierce and I got a $500 profit day recently.

Quoting Dale Gribble: Sh-sh-sha! 😎

Finally… The Medium

SO it’s certainly evident that we need to identify a group of people with a need, and we need to tailor our message to address that need. NOW we are ready to tackle Pinterest, or PPC, or YouTube, or blogging or WHATEVER… to reach our market.

But what Medium to choose?

Simple. If you know your Market and your Message, the Medium will present itself.

Yes, certainly you may want to try all the different ways… even the Newest Big Thang… to reach your Market with your Message.

But I have two crazy ideas:

1) Don’t go broke or crazy trying them all at once.

2) Spend 80% of your time, resources and energy doing what WORKS ALREADY for your Market, and the other 20%  testing other Messages and Mediums.

Ask the following questions:

Where does my Market gather?

How is it being reached already?

How many ways can my Message be delivered?

Can I use the Shotgun/Laser Principle to refine my methods?

Can I use “Psycho”graphics to approach the Market in an unexpected, lower-competition manner?

Ask better questions, get better answers.

My Most Recent Application of the Shotgun/Laser Principle

So back to the ‘local business’ example and my son’s and my mobile screen repair biz for a moment.

Most of the folks we get calls from are homeowners. They have seen our USP “We come to YOU!” on our Facebook page, our Google Plus page, a roadside sign, whatever… they call us, we come to the work, we save their address and send them a thank-you card. Done deal.

But SOME of our calls have come from real estate professionals. Builders, landlords, fix-and-flippers, property management companies.

The real estate gang have come to be our most ‘preferred customers.’

Realtors tell their clients to call us for a cheap facelift. Builders have us come on-site and build piles of screens in an assembly-line setup.  And property managers call and drop nine jobs on us at once. It’s AWESOME.

So the “Shotgun” approach makes us money from a lot of little fish… and every once in a while we get a shark caught in our net. One local property management company has sent us four thousand dollars worth of business. Happy time.

Laser, Baby!

melissa resources pageSo what if there were some way to get a list of all the real estate related businesses in a particular geographic area. Oh wait… here we go:

Melissadata.com is one of my favorite sources of marketing data.

Here I got me a list of ALL the real estate and real estate-related companies in zip code 80920.

Plus their addresses.

And some of their phone numbers.

Wow, cost dang near six bucks too 🙂

Aww, lookee. How thoughtful of them to accept PayPal.melissa paypal order

So for all 57 real estate-related businesses’ names and addresses I’ve spent $5.56.

Next we’ll upload the comma-separated values data to my SendOutCards account. That will shoot 57 postcards in my handwriting (topic of another post guys, you gotta see this) at a cost of about a buck apiece.

Now each of them are gonna get a postcard with our Unique Selling Proposition on it;

“We Come To You.”

uspIf even ONE of them takes my follow-up phone call, or calls me first…

…and if that one does only HALF the business that Brunk and Brunk has with us…

That would be about another two thousand dollars’ worth of biz just for a couple hours’ work.

I think it’s worth it 😉

Okay Steppers! Would love to hear your thoughts on this ‘pillar’ post, Effective Marketing on a Shoestring Budget Part THREE. We covered:

1) The Three Most Important Words in marketing;
2) The Master Key to Creating Value;
3) An advanced “local marketing” example of the Shotgun/Laser Principle I revealed in Effective Marketing on a Shoestring Budget, Part ONE.

Awright let’s stretch those fingers Steppers! Your comments come next. Love to hear from ya.

Keep Stepping,

Kurt

 

 

 

 

Comments

  1. The Market is always an important point. By the way, I have noted this information for using in the near future. I have pleased to read the entirety of the post. Thanks and keep it up!

  2. tom says:

    very good information given here. i have bookmarked

  3. Great tips, thanks for share Valuable services here. Waiting for next post!

  4. I truly admired your article. Those 3 ms that you said are extraordinary. With the movement to on the web, I’ve seen a considerable measure of organizations disregard alternate mediums accessible to them.

  5. terryzurcher says:

    man kurt again im learning tons of great info and you are give me good deriction. your blogs are wasted on me brother thanks for takeing your time to share with us. WOW! again thanks……….terryindallas

  6. I really appreciated your article. Those 3 ms that you mentioned are great. With the shift to online, I’ve seen a lot of businesses neglect the other mediums available to them.

  7. PPC advertising plays a great role inviting the customers making the conversions. It is probably the shortest way to let people know that they exist and then make sales over the internet. Thank you for your the most important of three words for me and I never forget that “the Market, the Message, and the Medium.”
    adhitz recently posted…Tired Of Promoting Your Blog? Just Sell ItMy Profile

    • kurtf
      Twitter:
      says:

      Yes, PPC has worked for me in the past with one of my companies. However, this particular blog has been promoted with exactly ZERO expenditure on PPC ads.

      I may look into solo ads for a webinar event that will market some of my books but as of right now we’re in the no-dollar zone and intend to stay that way.

      Keep Stepping,

      Kurt

  8. Long post. But worth the read. Right now, I’m busy crafting a compelling USP. Hope it converts.
    Lynell Bumpas recently posted…The Trinity CodeMy Profile

    • kurtf
      Twitter:
      says:

      Thanks, Lynell. Here’s some free advice on crafting your USP.

      Just think of what problem(s) your target prospect faces. What keeps him (her) up at night? What do you have to offer that solves that problem?

      Now deliver that solution in a way that no one else can duplicate. Say so in as many words.

      Rather than, “We’re the best” (boring and expected) or worse, “We’re the cheapest” (talking yourself into a corner where you can’t charge enough to be profitable) try simply saying, “we’re the only ones that can do this for you, the way you need it done.”

      Simple.

      For my son’s and my screen repair business, that meant the simple phrase “We come to YOU.”

      Best wishes on crafting a compelling USP. I believe you can do it.

      Keep Stepping,

      Kurt

  9. Iain
    Twitter:
    says:

    I think specifically for her it’s she doesn’t know where to start. She would most definitely benefit from the information here, but she isn’t the kind to go out reading business related blog.

    I usually try to pass on the information to her to help her out.

    When you do check out my blog, I’d love any advice.
    Iain recently posted…Are you an information junkie? Ripping the needle out and taking actionMy Profile

    • kurtf
      Twitter:
      says:

      Does she currently have clients? If so, what kind of clients does she particularly enjoy working for, or what kind did she get very easily? This is a good place to start; your current list.

      The next step is determining where those types hang out. If she photographs horses, maybe attend the rodeo and just walk around as close to the action as possible. Send the best pics, FREE to the cowboys that rode ’em. Hit their facebook page and upload a triumphant moment… with your website and/or contact info watermarked on the photo.

      All of a sudden, piles of folks that dig horses will be looking at that pic, with “photo courtesy of” on it. Then she may begin contacting that person that has probably shared the pic a dozen times and ask him if he knows anyone else that needs pics?

      See where I’m going with this: she needs to get out on the grass and learn and make connections with her target market.

      This is just a beginning, and I’m sure your GF has her own niche, maybe not horses 😉 Have her give me a shout! If I can help her find some clients maybe we could do a blog post about the experience.

      Keep Stepping,

      Kurt
      kurtf recently posted…Effective Marketing on a Shoestring Budget: Part THREEMy Profile

      • Iain
        Twitter:
        says:

        She is a wedding photographer. She has had a few clients, but not enough to sustain herself on.

        I showed her what you said and she thought your idea was great. It’s just a question of acting on it now.

        I’ll ty to get her to give you a shout.

        Thank you for the helpful advice.
        Iain recently posted…Are you an information junkie? Ripping the needle out and taking actionMy Profile

        • kurtf
          Twitter:
          says:

          Ask her to sit and make a list of every client she currently has, with their contact information if she has it. Then, start at the top of the list and call each one, asking how THEY found out about her (even if she already knows the answer) and WHY they chose her (even if she thinks she already knows).

          As she is speaking with each one, she mentions the reason she is doing this is to document the way that people find out about her services because she is “getting serious about my photography business” and needs to track all the ways it happens.

          She is bound to find some Influencers (folks that refer biz), some Fans (folks that would if they were asked) and some Avenues (ways that it happened once before and that can be duplicated).

          I have other programs for her but measuring results and doing things on purpose is an important first step.

          Wait til you see my blog post on reverse engineering profits, Effective Marketing on a Shoestring Budget Part FOUR.

          Keep Stepping,

          Kurt

      • Iain
        Twitter:
        says:

        That’s a great idea.

        I’ll have to pass the information on to her. I like how you said even if she knows how she got the client. That is pretty key.

        I look forward to part four.
        Iain recently posted…Are you an information junkie? Ripping the needle out and taking actionMy Profile

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