Business Success
10 tips to reach your audience. Synctegrate!
As they say, content is king. But
in advertising and promotion, it’s the presentation that
gets your audience to take a first look. You've got less than
two seconds to grab the attention of your audience before they
move on to the next flashy presentation.
Too much information. We are human
filters —bombarded with more information than we can handle.
Survival means selecting only the most relevant information to
give our valuable time to. Marketers must work hard to warrant
the attention of today’s consumer, so the message must
be carefully-crafted to be effective.
1. Define the process. Be more
specific than declaring that you want to sell your product. Try
to break that down further and define the steps needed to attain
your general goal.
2. Target purpose by media mix. Target
each piece that you create to attain a specific, clearly-defined
goal that supports moving your prospect along a progressive path
through the buying cycle.
If you are doing a first time mailing, your goal
may be to introduce your product and its top-level benefits.
You may focus on getting your audience to take a second look
by associating yourself with a reputable organization or local
event they are familiar with or include a testimonial from a
satisfied client. Follow-up contact may contain more in-depth
information to educate.
3. Branding strategy. Do you
have one? Branding makes a connection with your audience on a
cognitive level and promotes an automatic response. It associates
a feeling or emotion with your product. That is powerful stuff
and what all marketers are aiming for. We are driven by our emotions
and make our buying decisions largely on that basis.
4. Know thyself. Branding involves
knowing the personality of your business and how it is perceived
in your industry. Take a step back to have an objective look
at your business. Define the feel and personality of your company
and make that your common theme.
5. Just do it. Branding your product
is accomplished by a promotional mix that conveys your message
in everything you do at your company. Convey your business personality
in your logo, your company and product name, your bylines, your
colors, your Web site style, your advertising, your musical theme,
your community service associations, your promotional giveaways,
trade show booths, etc. Branding is reaching your audience at
its finest.
6. Get noticed. Grab the attention
of your viewer with a graphic or headline with impact. Target
your message to your market; personalize it; add a twist; share
an antidote or use humor. Use a graphic that shows an incongruous
relationship. Make a claim, but make it an honest claim. Gross
exaggeration will only alienate your audience.
7. Content navigation. Related
content follows with a format that supports your message and
makes it easy to understand and absorb. Use hierarchy and use
it often. Write descriptive headers and presented your message
in short chunks of information. Keep your sentences short and
use simple language. If writing for the web, take this to heart
even more. We are scanners on the Web. Use bullets and keep information
brief.
8. Mix it up. Communicate your
message in several ways and in a variety of medias. Learning
is a subjective experience. Some of us respond to visual media
while others have more success with auditory cues. Others need
a hands-on experience to understand a concept. The more you expand
your media-mix in delivering your message, the more response
you will get.
9. Say it and say it again. Repetition
is the key to learning and persuasion. Communicate the benefits
of your product and then say it again in another way. Keep your
message in front of your prospect with repeated mailings or follow
up, but make it a beneficial experience. Keep the information
useful. Offer a service or newsletter for periodical contact.
10. Synctegrate! Integrate your
information with your design so they look like they were made
for each other. When these elements are insinc, one will support
the other to increase understanding on several levels.
by Kathy Coulston
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