Marketing

5 Easy Ways To Do Marketing With Low Or Even No Budget

When we talk or even think about “Marketing”, it seems fancy and luxury, because first come to our minds are the expensive commercials on TV/ YouTube, or the billboard on the busy freeway exit, or a full page on a flashy magazine. To me, “marketing” just means have people know about your service, product and brand. Talking to your neighbors and friends about your product and service is marketing; wearing the T-shirt with your company logo is marketing; even holding your own written book on the bus and pretending you are reading is marketing too! So it could be inexpensive, and as easy as a routine you do every day.

I come up a few inexpensive and relatively easy marketing ideas that everyone can do – especially for those one-man show business owners out there (I truly understand the pain):

  • Ask your friends and family to help. Spread your service/product information on all over your social channels, ask you friends and families to spread them out too.
  • Be your own brand. Wear the clothes you are selling, use the makeup products you are selling when you go out. If it is a service that can’t really show, be the service speaker, talk about that all the time, not in the hard-sell way (you will lose all your friends very soon…), but the knowledgeable and professional way. For example, if you operate a house cleaning service, talk about how to clean up the stains in the oven, the grease in the microwave, how to polish the hard wood floor on your website, on your social channels, ect. Continue reading “5 Easy Ways To Do Marketing With Low Or Even No Budget”
Marketing

“Buy One Get Second One Half Off” Still Works

Today my mom and I went shopping for shoes. We were in a shoes store and about to pay for my mom’s walking shoes. The cashier told us, today they ran “buy one get the second one half off” promotion. She asked if we wanted a second pair. Honestly, I usually ignore this kind of promotion, but I did need a pair of sandals, so I turned back and looked…I didn’t realize we’ve spent quite some time in the store to look for shoes for my mom, if something met my need, I should have found it before we walked to the cashier. No surprise, I couldn’t find anything, but I spent another 5-10 minutes in the store to try on shoes.

When I went back to the cashier, there was a long line. Everyone was carrying at least 2 shoe boxes. Even though I knew those marketing tricks, still couldn’t avoid it. “Buy one get the second one half off” is commonly used, and kind of old fashion, but still tempting and obviously working.

 

 

Marketing

Choose A Book By Its Cover

Do you judge a book by its cover? Yes I do. Well, to be more precise, I choose a book by its cover. I usually pick the book that has pretty or interesting cover/name on the bookshelf first when I am in a bookstore.

One day last week when I wandered in a bookstore, I found a book that had a pretty girl on the cover. I picked it up. The book has an interesting title “In order to live”. I opened and read the introduction, then I realized this is a sad and inspiring story about a brave young girl and her mom, who escaped from N. Korea to seek freedom. I liked the book immediately and found it available in the public library. I reserved it right away.

I believe I am not the only one, who picks a book by its cover. It doesn’t mean that this book is better written than the others. It is just because it has a pretty cover, so it has a higher chance to be picked, to be read, and to be reviewed, and all these would definitely help its book sales. In my case, I didn’t buy the book, but I am writing a blog post about it.

Similar to product, service, even professionals who work in their industries, the “cover” is important.

Marketing

What Is The Smartest Way To Do Marketing?

Well, I think the smartest way is to have someone pay for your marketing, and at the same time you are making sales on it.:)

Making hand crafted greeting cards is one of my hobbies, so I have several stamps/paper stores that I usually shop in the local. My favorite stamp store is small, locating inside a busy shopping mall closed to a university (location is the key).  It sells stamps, but also sells blank cards, paper, inks, color pens, and some crafting tools, all the hand crafted card accessories. I like everything there, but my favorite part is the classes! The store has different kinds of classes to show people how to use stamps, paper, colors and tools to make cards!  They have hundreds of stamps in the store. I enjoy browsing all the cute little stamps, and the sample cards created by those stamps. However, too many choices are not always good. It is hard for a consumer, like me, who doesn’t really have a target before I get into the store.

So those classes are essential to drive sales. I didn’t interview the owner, I didn’t know how much sales she/he made a month, but I was the one paid $35-50 for one and half hour class. Before or after the class, I usually spend at least another 20 bucks to buy the stuff I will use/used in the class. I also invited friends to join classes with me. I, as a consumer, paid for the marketing and make sales for the store. Think about they can take as many as 10 people per one class, and 1-2 classes a day…

There were 3 local stamp/paper stores I shopped a lot before 2010. During the economy recession, one got shut down. That one was a chain store. It is easy to understand, when people lose jobs, who care about crafting? Those leisure/hobby type of stores are the ones get hit the most when economy goes down. However, that little tiny store has survived, and it has a lot more classes now.:)

 

Marketing

When To Send Emails To Your Users

I used to advocate sending notification to users to increase website engagement. Similar to Facebook, send an email to a user to tell her who commented on her post and who updated the status, and expect the user to click on the email and engage on the website. I think this is a genius idea, every UGC website should do that. However, when I think more, it is not worth of doing if most of the website content are not submitted by the users and the amount of subscribers are not significant, because the actions on non user submitted content won’t trigger any emails. And if not enough subscribers or activities on the website, the triggered emails will be very limited. Even though some users would click back to the website, but the engagement is not going to move the needle. The whole service is wasted.

When we think about using email to increase traffic, we have to check the percentage of activities from subscribers over the amount of website content first. For example, you have 1000 articles on the website, but only have 1000 subscribers, daily activities from subscribers are not much. Instead of thinking to use email marketing, it might be better spend the time on SEO, social exposure, and website feature enhancement, etc. Email marketing requires huge amount of resource, from research, design, test, deliver, analyze to improve, then run through the whole cycle again. Plus you have to pay for the email service!

So the idea, sending notifications to users is genius, when you have the substantial amount of subscribers and relatively high engagement on the site.