Advertising Agents Leeds
This page provides useful content and local businesses that can help with your search for Advertising Agents. You will find helpful, informative articles about Advertising Agents, including "Stop before you advertise". You will also find local businesses that provide the products or services that you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Leeds that will answer all of your questions about Advertising Agents.
F Watson Ltd
0113 2420321
30-40 Crossland Court
Leeds
F Watson Ltd
0113 2420321
30-40 Crossland Court
Leeds GB.LS119PR
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Kirklees Advertising Services
0113 2432061
8 York Place
Leeds
Kirklees Advertising Services
0113 2432061
8 York Place
Leeds GB.LS12DS
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W P A Pinfold Ltd
0113 2448549
E X Libris
Leeds
W P A Pinfold Ltd
0113 2448549
E X Libris
Leeds GB.LS119QG
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Byrne & Co Ltd
0113 2431423
Design Innovation Centre
Leeds
Byrne & Co Ltd
0113 2431423
Design Innovation Centre
Leeds GB.LS27EY
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Advertising Management
01924 822558
4 Church Farm Close
Wakefield
Advertising Management
01924 822558
4 Church Farm Close
Wakefield GB.WF33SA
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Marketing Services Solutions Ltd
0113 2423233
Solution House
Leeds
Marketing Services Solutions Ltd
0113 2423233
Solution House
Leeds GB.LS121AL
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Viacom Outdoor
0113 2422294
5 Latchmore Industrial Park
Leeds
Viacom Outdoor
0113 2422294
5 Latchmore Industrial Park
Leeds GB.LS126DN
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C2 Advertising
0113 3835332
4 Park Place
Leeds
C2 Advertising
0113 3835332
4 Park Place
Leeds GB.LS12RU
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Creative Marketing Services
0113 2877973
Hollingthorpe Hall
Leeds
Creative Marketing Services
0113 2877973
Hollingthorpe Hall
Leeds GB.LS268BZ
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Miller Advertising
0113 2458622
Design Innovation Centre
Leeds
Miller Advertising
0113 2458622
Design Innovation Centre
Leeds GB.LS27EY
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10 QUESTIONS TO ANSWER BEFORE YOU ADVERTISE Acting as the marketing department for a number of clients I realise how often your business must be approached with apparently un-missable opportunities to advertise in this magazine, that newspaper or increasingly now online – on directory sites and other people’s websites.
But before you commit to what could be an expensive marketing investment you really should stop – and go through this set of questions to satisfy yourself that you really are going to get the best return on that investment. 1. Who reads the publication or refers to the website? Ask about the target audience – there’s no point advertising top end furniture in a newspaper that is read by people on a low income or listing your specialist consultancy firm on a site read by consumers.
Newspapers and many magazines will be able to share profile data with you – by way of the age, sex, socio economic grouping – for their readership. Websites can provide less data – but if you review the site yourself you’ll be able to get a feel for who you think it’s targeted at and whether that matches your target audience.
2. How many people read this media? Newspapers, national magazines and commercial radio stations should be able to provide audited readership and listening figures for you. Even local publications will be able to tell you their circulation figures.
If you are considering advertising on-line on a website, ask about the number of unique visitors they get each month and for any further breakdown they can give you on visitor numbers. Don’t be fooled by being told how many ‘hits’ they get. This is a nonsense figure which counts every web page visited whether by a real person or a search engine spider.
Failure to supply you with meaningful readership figures should ring alarm bells.
3. Have I got something worth offering? The most successful advertising, unless you have the luxury of being able to afford advertising purely to raise brand awareness which of course most smaller businesses can’t, is an advert that has a compelling offer for the reader. It might be a price or promotional offer, but it could be that you are offering a unique product or service. Think hard about what will arrest your audience on the page.
4. What will my call to action be? What do you want people to do as a result of reading the advert? Do you want them to call you, visit your showroom, request a quote, click through to your website - what?
Be clear on your call to action and perhaps even get others to review your ad to make sure the call to action is as clear to them as it is to you.
5. What do I want from the ad (leads, sales, downloads)? This is critical if you are to judge the effectiveness of your advertising. Do you expect to make a sale straight off the page – or will your advert simply generate a lead which will need to... |
Click here to read more from Second Opinion Marketing