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Low Cost
Marketing Ideas For Retailers
By Debbie Allen, All
Rights Reserved
PERSONAL MARKETING
Believe in YOU. Effective self-promotion begins with a strong belief
system IN YOU. Believe in your ideas, concepts, products and services, but
most of all believe in what you have to offer others. Strive
for continuous improvement and always do your personal and professional
best.
These words of wisdom will benefit you and your customer. The advice will
increase your self-esteem and confidence, empowering you to approach
customers with the confidence to let them know how your products and
services can benefit and improve their lives.
Self-promote to serve others! You help others by promoting the benefits
they will experience by using your products and services.
Promote the "benefit of your product or service" to the customer. For
example, a store that sells hair or beauty products can say, "We help
people look their best and feel their best." Repeat the benefit in your
selling conversation and in ads, brochures, business cards and all other
marketing materials. It's not
self-serving or pushy to promote your products and services. Instead, you
are providing superior service when you explain the features of a product
and how it will be useful to the shopper or let customers know about newly
arrived merchandise.
EXPERTISE MARKETING
Discover your core essence. By knowing your purpose, vision, mission and
uniqueness, you will discover the foundation on which all your marketing
should be built.
Identify your store's area of expertise. Also known as your Unique Selling
Proposition, or USP. Carry it through on all your marketing efforts.
People have so many choices when they walk into a retail center. You must
identify what you do that makes you and your store uniquely special.
Differentiate your store
from the competition.
Your USP should be reflected in all marketing efforts. Feature it in your
catalog, on your website, and so on, to let shoppers know that it is your
store they want to visit when they are seeking certain items. Leave
shoppers with no doubt about what you sell.
Example:
A women's clothing store that sells glamorous, high fashion apparel should
promote this image in their ads, on the entire floor and window displays
so that when a women is seeking that look, she knows to visit that
particular store.
SUCCESS DRIVEN MARKETING
Be passionate about what you do. Passion builds commitment. Commitment
leads to success. Being passionate means caring about your customers. Make
new customer contacts each day.
It's vital to get customer contact information before a customer makes a
purchase. This will ensure that you get the addresses of browsers as well
as purchasers. When requesting the contact information, tell the customer
how the information will benefit them, such as "If you like what we have,
we'll let you
know about upcoming promotions." You can also offer them a free gift, such
as a candle, for adding their name to your mailing list. Do not sell or
distribute the contact information to others and let the customer know
that you won't.
Stay in touch! Send at least five handwritten thank-you notes a day. Write
them during downtime. It will make your customers feel that they are
important to you. Personalized notes also stand out from mass-produced
marketing materials that most retailers rely on to draw shoppers.
Example:
Promote special events, such as book signings or fashion shows, by sending
invitations, calling or e-mailing your top 20% VIP customers to let them
know about the forthcoming event. It's important to keep a list of
shoppers' likes and dislikes so you can contact them about events that are
of interest to them.
For example, a lover of mystery novels will appreciate having advance
notice of the appearance of a popular mystery writer at a book-reading
event.
RELATIONSHIP MARKETING
Business success is about relationships, and relationships take time.
Build relationships with customers, prospective customers and other
retailers in your center.
Know what the competition is selling. Let's say you outfit a shopper with
an ensemble of slacks, blouse and jacket, but you're missing the correct
slacks' size. If you know that a nearby competitor sells the same slacks,
you can make a call over there to find out if they have it available and
then send the shopper
over if it is. It's a three-pronged winning situation: You make the sale
of the blouse and sweater, the customer will get the ensemble she's
seeking, and now you have a relationship with the competitor, who may send
you tons of business in return.
Ask for referrals. Find out if the customer has friends or relatives who
may be looking for your products. If they do, give them several of your
business cards or marketing brochures that they can hand out. Sometimes a
referral may come about unexpectedly. For example, a customer who has
redecorated her home may get compliments from guests on her décor and
requests about where she bought her
items. If you've given the customer business cards or brochures, she could
give one to her friend and say tell her I sent you. People love to do
this.
Example:
Ask customers for their opinions on your products and services, such as,
"Would you like to give us a testimonial for doing business with us?"
Testimonials express what customers like about your store and are terrific
to incorporate in your marketing materials.
NETWORK MARKETING
Refine your 15-30 second commercial. Write out your personalized
commercial and define what you do in terms of benefits for your customers.
Once you have your commercial written out, practice it until you have it
down cold. Try this at your next staff meeting. Ask each salesperson to
write out their unique and personalized commercial – then open the
conversation for discussion and review.
Example:
A salesperson should not state that they are simply a salesperson – but
instead inform how they help customers and offer benefits. They might do
this by calling themselves retail consultants, product specialist or
retail expert and then expand on the benefits of what they sell.
IMAGE MARKETING
Promote value, not price. Your customers and potential customers are
looking for value and they believe you can provide it. Your challenge is
to promote and sell the value of your products and ask your visitors to
take action to receive the value.
ONLINE MARKETING
Add an effective signature (text message at the end of an email) to every
email you send. Your signature should include your complete contact
information, a hyperlink to your website, an offer of something for free
on your website to increase online traffic and your unique selling
proposition.
By Debbie Allen
(1,094 words)
Bio: Debbie Allen is one of the world’s
leading authorities on sales and marketing. She is the author of five
books including Confessions of
Shameless Self Promoters and
Skyrocketing Sales. Debbie
has helped thousands of people around the world attract customers like
crazy with her innovative, no-cost marketing strategies and secrets to
sales success. Her expertise has been featured in
Entrepreneur,
Selling Power and
Sales & Marketing Excellence.
Sign up for her FREE 6-week e-Course
Business Success Secrets Revealed ($97 value) and take the
online business card quiz to rate you marketing online now at
www.DebbieAllen.com.
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