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Article Title:
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Why A Brochure, A Website, And A Business Card Is NOT Marketing
Article Description:
====================
These activities certainly sound good and worthwhile. Having an
appealing website is great. So is a brochure with strong copy and
a great logo. Here's the problem. All of us have limitations
when it comes to time, money, and energy.
Additional Article Information:
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896 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2006-08-24 10:36:00
Written By:     Judy Murdoch
Copyright:      2006
Contact Email:  mailto:judy@judymurdoch.com
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Why A Brochure, A Website, And A Business Card Is NOT Marketing
Copyright � 2006 Judy Murdoch
Highly Contagious Marketing
http://www.judymurdoch.com/workbook.htm
Recently, I worked with a local community group to develop 
marketing that would help them grow their membership. The 
organization I worked with is new and focuses on creating 
opportunities for business, non-profit, and government work 
together to achieve common goals.
At our first meeting, I asked the group, "What is it we want to 
accomplish?" Some of the answers that came back were:
* "Redo the brochure"
* "Fix the website so it's easier to sign up for events"
* "Do a documentary on member success stories"
And so on.
Sound familiar?
When you put the words "marketing" and "accomplishments" (or 
"goals" or "objectives") together, what we usually think of are 
specific activities such as what to do with the website, or what 
events to offer, or getting a classier look for the company's 
promotional materials. That's what the work group participants 
were talking about: the specific activities they thought would 
help the organization increase membership.
These activities certainly sound good and worthwhile. Having an 
appealing website is great. So is a brochure with strong copy and 
a great logo.
Here's the problem. All of us have limitations when it comes to 
time, money, and energy. Having lots of money helps but 
ultimately, you can't implement every cool marketing idea that 
shows up on your radar.
So how do you choose? How do you make sure that every marketing 
activity will contribute to getting your business to where you 
want it to be? How do you make sure that each action you take 
contributes to your marketing effectiveness?
Here's where marketing strategy comes in. When you set marketing 
objectives and create a strategy to meet those objectives, it's 
easy to decide which marketing actions (or tactics) are going to 
give you the biggest bang for your buck.
So what's the difference between marketing objectives, 
strategies, and tactics and how does each insure that your 
marketing gets results?
MARKETING OBJECTIVES are what you ultimately want your marketing 
to do for your business. In other words, what role does marketing 
play in the success of your business? Marketing objectives 
usually describe the number of customers you want, sources of 
revenue, and market share, just to name a few.
Example: The organization I worked with had two objectives: 1.) 
to double their membership in 2006. 2.) to increase the percent 
of members who own small businesses (versus non-profit and 
government).
MARKETING STRATEGY describes how you will use your money, time, 
people, and other resources to achieve your objectives. Some of 
the issues addressed by marketing strategy are: what markets do 
we want to be in? How will we reach our audience? What products 
and services will we offer? How do we want to stand out in the 
minds of our customers?
Example: An issue that came up again and again for the community 
group was "it's difficult to describe what makes us different 
without sounding New Agey." They had been trying but they just 
couldn't say it in ten words or less. On the other hand, everyone 
agreed "when the organization is right for someone, they almost 
always sign up after attending one of our events." That is, 
experience with the group is one of their best marketing tools.
From a strategic standpoint, this meant: (1.) Don't spend time 
and money on approaches that require strong copywriting to be 
effective. This meant putting on hold any major changes to the 
website and to the brochure and (2.) Time and resources should be 
focused on encouraging prospective members to attend live events.
To encourage prospects to attend, the group asked current members 
to invite people in their networks who were likely to appreciate 
what the organization had to offer-essentially, they chose a 
word-of-mouth marketing strategy to grow the membership.
MARKETING TACTICS are the specific activities you do to fulfill 
your strategy.
Example: Once they decided to focus on word of mouth marketing 
(as opposed to changing the website or redoing the brochure) the 
group needed to come up with activities members could do. They 
created a simple "outreach" card which listed membership 
benefits, where to go for event information, contact information, 
and a coupon that gave a $10 discount to first time visitors. 
Next they distributed cards with an emphasis on getting cards to 
members who tended to be "connectors" (people who had broad, 
diverse contact networks and who were enthusiastic proponents of 
group).
Two final points here:
1. The Chinese general and philosopher, Sun Tzu said, "Strategy 
without tactics is the slowest route to victory. Tactics without 
strategy is the noise before defeat." To get results from your 
marketing, you need to employ strategies AND tactics. Companies 
that tend to get bogged in "analysis paralysis" are those that 
have good strategy ideas but fall short when it comes to 
executing tactics. Companies that overly emphasize tactics tend 
to "spray and pray" by implementing random marketing activities 
that don't support and reinforce one another. Without appropriate 
balance between strategies and tactics, you are likely to be 
wasting your marketing dollars.
2. It's more important to set marketing objectives and strategies 
that you'll use than it is to create ones that are profound 
and/or impressive. If your marketing objectives and strategy are 
three sentences written on a legal pad, fine. As long as they 
support your goals for developing your business and
as long as you take action to put your strategy into practice.
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Judy Murdoch helps small business owners create low-cost, 
effective marketing campaigns using word-of-mouth referrals, 
guerrilla marketing activities, and selected strategic alliances.
To download a free copy of the workbook, "Where Does it Hurt? 
Marketing Solutions to the problems that Drive Your Customers 
Crazy!" go to http://www.judymurdoch.com/workbook.htm 
You can contact Judy at 303-475-2015 or judy@judymurdoch.com
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