From: http://www.gmarketing.com/articles/read/122/Keeping_your_Marketing_Consistent.html
Keeping your Marketing Consistent
by Bill Gallagher, Ph.D.
Do you know how many repetitions of your message it takes for all of us to move from absolute apathy towards your product or service to making a buying move, like calling your 800 number to get that "FREE brochure?"
Well, the easy answer is seven, plus or minus two. In other words, it takes from five to nine times for us, to see your ad and pick up the phone and call you. But wait, like your typical reader, we're not paying attention all that often. Usually only about one in three occasions are we even semi-consciously inspecting your ad.
This means that for your ad to be maximally effective it needs to show up in my newspaper, on my TV, or whatever twenty-seven times. Three times the nine we talked just about. So, you can put together a killer ad, but you'll have to wait for about a month for that phone to start ringing! Marketers must learn to be patient. But guerrillas aren't very patient.
There is a way to cut into that number a bit. The answer lies in being consistent, in being consistent with a passion. Let me explain.
After you've decided how you wish to serve the public with your product, products, and service; identified your niche within that public; selected your business name clearly describing what you do; chosen your marketing colors and logo shapes based on your prospective customers' preferences; developed your sub-conscious buying message, your slogan; and, ordered business cards and stationary. Stop!
Before you go on, all of this must be coordinated together. Remember, consistent with a passion! Meaning that your primary and secondary colors must always remain exactly the same. Always and exactly the same. Your type font, type style, and relative type sizes must be the same on your business card and stationary as on the sign in front of your store, as in your future TV, magazine, and newspaper ads. Always the same.
If you decide to advertise inexpensively on local cable TV, for example, you will want the last few seconds of that ad to show your business name, your telephone number, and your slogan. This visual should look exactly like everything else in your marketing. So later, when your future customers are looking through the yellow pages, a sub-conscious part of them will be attracted to your ad because it will be familiar to them. And, many of them won't even remember the TV spot where they first saw your offer.
Said another way, you can shorten the number of needed exposures from twenty-seven down to fourteen or so by having a consistent, clear, consistent selling proposition. This number shrinks even further to about nine, when you use several different marketing vehicles for us to see your consistent message. It looks like you're everywhere. And it looks like everyone, like me, is buying from you, 'cause we probably are!
Gallagher Video Brochure
Bill Gallagher, Ph.D.
Over 500,000 business and salespeople have invested in Bill "Guerrilla" Gallagher's Guerrilla Selling: (Unconventional Weapons & Tactics for Increasing Your Sales) because they are serious about doing a lot more business with less hassle and frustration.
Since 1983, Bill Gallagher, Ph.D., has been in demand as one of the nation's leading authorities on sales, marketing and management, conducting thousands of training seminars and workshops throughout North America and Abroad. His informative commentary has been featured in such prestigious publications as The Wall Street Journal, USA Today, Money and Time magazines. In addition, Bill has appeared on a host of national radio and television shows, including Good Morning America, Today, CNN Headline News, and The CBS Evening News.
Bill's reputation for innovation and quality has earned him repeat engagements with over half the companies featured in the best seller In Search of Excellence. Some of his many satisfied clients include: American Express, Bank of America, Dean Witter Reynolds, Hewlett Packard, IBM, Levi-Strauss, Nortel, National Association of Realtors, Stanford University, and Tyson Foods, Inc. Co-author in the legendary Guerrilla Business series and lead author of Guerrilla Selling, Bill has also received honors for excellence in business training from the governments of Israel, Singapore, the Netherlands, and the U.S. Department of Commerce.
Who is Bill "Guerrilla" Gallagher? Quite possibly the most entertaining and knowledgeable authority on sales, marketing, and the mysteries of the human mind available today. His recommendations are new, fresh, and guaranteed to produce spectacular results for your business!
Since 1983, Bill Gallagher, Ph.D., has been in demand as one of the nation's leading authorities on sales, marketing and management, conducting thousands of training seminars and workshops throughout North America and Abroad. His informative commentary has been featured in such prestigious publications as The Wall Street Journal, USA Today, Money and Time magazines. In addition, Bill has appeared on a host of national radio and television shows, including Good Morning America, Today, CNN Headline News, and The CBS Evening News.
Bill's reputation for innovation and quality has earned him repeat engagements with over half the companies featured in the best seller In Search of Excellence. Some of his many satisfied clients include: American Express, Bank of America, Dean Witter Reynolds, Hewlett Packard, IBM, Levi-Strauss, Nortel, National Association of Realtors, Stanford University, and Tyson Foods, Inc. Co-author in the legendary Guerrilla Business series and lead author of Guerrilla Selling, Bill has also received honors for excellence in business training from the governments of Israel, Singapore, the Netherlands, and the U.S. Department of Commerce.
Who is Bill "Guerrilla" Gallagher? Quite possibly the most entertaining and knowledgeable authority on sales, marketing, and the mysteries of the human mind available today. His recommendations are new, fresh, and guaranteed to produce spectacular results for your business!
Friday, April 25, 2008
Keeping your Marketing Consistent
Posted by Sara Gallagher at 2:27 PM