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Small Business Marketing Liverpool

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Adams
0151 5463344
7 Randles Road
Prescot
Agent Marketing Ltd
0151 7070427
33 Parr Street
Liverpool
Simpson Direct
0151 7032620
102 The Tea Factory
Liverpool
Code Marketing
0151 7097934
42 Whitechapel
Liverpool
Murray Consultancy
0151 2250220
Corn Exchange
Liverpool
Six Senses
0151 2261000
15 Old Lodge Close
Liverpool
White Marketing Ltd
0151 7071243
Cranbrook House
Liverpool
Promo
0151 7078808
5-6 Bold Place
Liverpool
Direct Data Services Ltd
0151 2271938
Cotton Exchange Building
Liverpool
Hind Sight
07947 816675
Units 120-122 Century Building
Liverpool
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advertising and marketing: how to guide

(first appeared in August 2009 edition of Practical Marketing e-bulletin - subscribe here )

When many small business owners and professional service firms think of marketing they immediately think of advertising. This is inevitable, I suppose, as it’s one of the most obvious examples of marketing communication.

All too many small businesses therefore use advertising when they perhaps don’t understand how it works and haven’t got the right message or offer to appeal to their target market.

Advertising alone is unlikely to help you achieve your marketing goals and unless you have a set of clear objectives, an exceptional message and concrete ways of monitoring the response rates you could find you waste an awful lot of money very quickly.

You wouldn’t be alone in feeling your advertising spend is wasted and many others have felt forced to advertise for all the wrong reasons too. Here are some of the most common reasons I’ve heard business owners give for advertising:

“We have to be in the Yellow Pages – every other solicitors firm is in there.”
“The local paper was doing a 10-page feature and said they wanted us to take part, we felt flattered and didn’t want to miss out.”
“No, we don’t measure how many sales come as a result of our weekly adverts but we’ve been doing it so long it must be working.”
And there are many more which include being pressurised by advertising sales people, being sold an unbeatable offer or offered an exceptionally low rate. But to be honest none of these reasons are good enough unless you are convinced advertising will deliver the results you want.

Take a break before you advertise
It’s very easy to avoid wasteful marketing and advertising but it does involve a bit of thought. Luckily – once you’ve considered the questions below you need never feel forced to advertise again.

What business goals are you trying to achieve? For example do you want sales growth, to break into new markets, to launch a new product or to protect your market position against new competitors? Be as specific as you can when setting your goals – this will help determine what marketing path to take.

Who’s in your target audience? Considering this really carefully will give you all kinds of clues as to where and whether you should be advertising. If you consider this in relation to the publication you are thinking of advertising in and can convince yourself your target audience will see it and respond positively, maybe it’s the right thing to do. The more targeted you can be the better the result.

Is your message clear? If you are selling a product do you have a very clear reason for customers to buy your ‘widget’ rather than someone else’s? If a service, have you really captured what it will give to your clients?

What action do you want people to take? All too often adverts...

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