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Will You Add? - Your Own Business: Marketing and Advertising Plans
Set Design - My Future Back Stage Career ng plan for each campaign or even for each advertising method you use. Every advertising method is unique and the way you get your messages across may vary. I typically use Five Points when I sit down to determine what to do in any particular advertising situation.What is a Set Designer?A Set Designer is someone in charge of creating an environment for a production to be staged in. “An environment can be composed of sound, light, clothing, performance, structure and space.” (2005, ScenographySchool SubjectsSet Design requires mainly subjects to do with the arts. Art is an essential starting point. Drama, as knowledge of how actors work and utilise the stage is essential. Construction subjects such as wood, plastic and metalwork should also be considered. Study of society and the environment and well as history helps to bolster the knowledge base required to do natural/historic set designs.Training RequiredIn the uber competitive world of set design, to gain employment you will need at least a MFA [Master of Fine Arts] style official certification in Set Design. You can gain this degree through select universities and tertiary institutions throughout Australia.In short Like every stage career, Set Design is difficult to break into and requires a will of steel. You need talent to get noticed and a flexible and agile mind to deal with the situations that arise as a Set Designer. Set Design is an essential for a successful production and there will never be a real shortage of Set Design jobs for the determined. Point One – The reason or purpose for the advertising. You will determine this much like Point One in your marketing plan, but make it more specific based on the particular time and place of the ad. Point Two – Explain the number one USP/benefit you will offer in the advertising message in order to meet what you wrote in Point One. For example, if your purpose is to attract new paying customers, you may tout one hour service on their tires. Or you may offer guaranteed satisfaction with a no-hassle exchange or refund policy to help people feel better about trying your product or service for the first time. Remember, you know your business is special, but they don’t know it yet! Point Three – What are additional USPs/benefits that you offer, but are not the main USP/benefit? If they are interested in your number one USP/benefit, any additional ones may help “close the deal.” For example, if you offer one hour service on tires, you may also offer a clean comfortable waiting room with free coffee and snacks. If you offer guaranteed satisfaction, you may also wish to point out your wide selection of trusted brands and free consultations to help the customer determine what brand is best for them. Point Four – Define your target audience for this advertising campaign. Depending on the actual time and place of the ad, it may be your broad target as explained in Point Three of your marketing plan or it may be a more specific subset of the target. For example, your overall target may be all women over 18, but your specific message for a particular ad campaign may be more effective if it only addresses college educated women older than 45. Or your tire shop may target all car owners within a 15 mile radius, but your windshield leaflet will be for car owners within 1 mile. Point Five – Here you’ll explain just what it is you want your customer to do. You may simply wish for them to call you or visit your website for more information. Or possibly you want them to come into your office for a consultation. Maybe you just want them to make a purchase immediately. Whatever you want them to Create a Magic Connection with Clients, Leads, and Business Associates -- Part II You already know that you want your own business. You have carefully analyzed your options and chosen the business that is the right one for you. You have completed the first basic steps and are ready to really get started. If you want to be successful from the very start, you’ll need at least a basic marketing plan.Part I of this article explored how Neuro-linguistic Programming (NLP) pinpoints ways to gain instant rapport with clients, leads, and business associates, and more specifically, how we can use physiology, matching and mirroring to create instant magic communication.Part II examines how NLP uses tonality and words to establish rapport.TONALITYWhile physiology accounts for 55% of communication among humans, tonality accounts for 38%. Most people have had the experience of someone saying, “I’m fine. Nothing’s wrong.” While the words on the page seem to indicate that this person doesn’t have a problem, the tone used speaks louder than the words. Without tone the words suggest that the speaker doesn’t have a problem. Consider irony and sarcasm; both are communicated through tonality. If a person says, “I’m fine. Nothings wrong,” in a pleasant voice, she creates a different meaning than if she says the same words though clinched teeth and a low angry tone, or with a flippant tone. Someone yelling “I’m not mad,” isn’t convincing. If this happens in a sitcom, we laugh. In real life, we dismiss the words and read the meaning from the tone of voice. Often tonality is more subtle than these examples, but still a powerful communicator. Boredom, excitement, anger, melancholy, disbelief, questions, enthusiasm, honesty are more often communicated through tone, rather than words.When talking on the phone, it is crucial to be aware of tonality. In a phone conversation, both people are communicating via their tonality, often unconsciously. The business person that wants to create magic and rapport doesn’t leave tonality to chance.Tonality incl You’ll notice that I said “basic marketing plan” and not “full blown business plan.” This is because I am not of the belief that a micro business needs to spend the time on a lengthy business plan right at the start. You do need to commit some concepts to paper so you have an initial plan to start, but a detailed business plan is quite simply out of most people’s reach at this point of the game. Unless you are investing and borrowing large sums of money, I say keep it simple and invest your time doing activities that get you closer to making money. Creating a detailed business plan will eat up the time that is better used doing such money-making activities. Plus, creating a detailed business plan now may misguide you down the road unless you already have intimate knowledge of you business. If you’re starting on a shoestring, I say build the business plan as you go along and learn. You can start with a basic marketing plan, which will become part of the business plan in the future. When you grow more, know more and maybe need borrowed capital, then finish your business plan. If you still feel you need one now then do it. The marketing plan that I use is a simple seven points. It is short but powerful. It is your roadmap at launch and beyond. The budget and specific details may change as you grow, but the basic principals will most likely remain the same. As always, run your marketing plan and business ideas by your trusted support group. This includes friends, family and experts such as your accountant and lawyer. Creating Your Marketing Plan As I mentioned before, your marketing plan is your roadmap to success for launching your business and beyond. And although I don’t think you absolutely must have a formal written business plan in place before launching your micro business, do not attempt a go at it without a written marketing plan. Your marketing plan can be as lengthy as you wish to make it, if that fits your specific needs, but basic seven point marketing plan should be enough with which to start. You probably will expand it with more details later, but the only one you are impressing with a 15-page plan to start with is yourself. Here are the seven points I suggest for your marketing plan: Point One – The first point explores and explains the reasons for your overall marketing strategy. By “reasons” I mean the purpose you are doing marketing and what you wish to achieve in general. As an example, a reason for your marketing may be to attract customers to your shop to fix their tires. Another reason may be to get interested traffic to your website to browse and consider your products or services. Yet another is you may want to let the decision makers at many corporations know about you and your new company. These are the basic reasons for your marketing campaign. Obviously, you will never reach every single possible person for your business, but you will continue to reach out to as many as you can. These reasons are not the same as goals. Goals are specific and measurable, while reasons are general and not measurable. The goals become the measuring sticks for the reasons you are in business. Some goals based on the above reasons might be informing 25 car owners about your tire shop or getting 30 new visitors to your website. Point Two – If Point One is your broad marketing strategy, then Point Two are your tactics. The second Point offers an explanation about how you will achieve the reasons you laid out in Point One. For example, for your attracting customers to your tire shop, you may choose to use ads in the phone book and newspaper, you may mail out coupons or have them placed on care windshields, or you may place billboards. For a new website, you might list that you will purchase keywords on Yahoo and Google, place banner ads on similar websites, or issue a press releases about happenings at your business and on your website. This point will basically be those that you plan to use at launch and soon after. You’ll develop a longer list in Point Four that will be your guidelines for the future during your growth phase. Point Three – The third Point is to whom you will be targeting your marketing. Not surprisingly, this is called your target market. These should be the people who have the desire, need, or potential to purchase your product or service. Make sure this is who you are after; it makes no sense to market to 50,000 people if only 10 are possible customers. Your target for the tire shop example might be all car owners within 15 miles of your shop. If you are offering custom-made promotional products for companies, then your target market might be heads of marketing. If your website sells items featuring university football teams, then you probably want to reach university alumni and fans of the team. By knowing to whom you will target your marketing, you will be able to better create an effective marketing message and spend your money more effectively by utilizing methods that get right to the people that are most likely to become your customers. Point Four – This is basically a list of every marketing and advertising avenue that you think you will employ in the future. This is not necessarily at the early stages of your business because some may be cost prohibitive or you may not have grown to the point to where you can actually fulfill the demands of the numerous customers that may respond. Basically, this can serve as a guideline for the future and as a wish list of methods you’d like to utilize at some point. But try to be realistic about costs, needs and even your willingness. TV may either be too costly or just wasteful for your particular business. Or perhaps you’re shy, so you won’t be speaking at the Chamber of Commerce nor doing newspaper interviews. This list can be as long or as short as you desire. Try to think as broadly as you can about what might work for your business. Look at what other successful companies do. Think about all of marketing, which can include advertising, publicity, promotions and publicity. Take your time at this Point and really give it some thought and research Some examples that you may not consider at first include things like using your circle of acquaintances to help with word-of-mouth, classified ads, fliers that can be placed around town or on doors, flea markets, joining community and business organizations for networking, trade shows, bumper stickers, and direct mail. Point Five – This Point explains what makes you special, or what your niche in the marketplace is going to be. You will have to decide on this because you will have to communicate it to your customers. Your focus should be on what differentiates you and your business from all of your competition. In marketing terms, this is known as your unique selling proposition, or USP. Your USP/niche can be based on speed, customer service, prices, quality, selection, or whatever you determine you can offer better than anyone else. Do focus on reality and be reasonable in your own expectations. Make sure your USP/niche is valid, within your capabilities, what you will really do to make your business unique and also what will actually matter to your target market. Point Six – The sixth Point focuses attention on what you wish the overall public perception or identity of your business to be. This most likely will be an extension of Point Five and you USP/niche. Once again, make it real and make it what you can attain and deliver. Your identity is basically how the public perceives your business and the way that they will feel about it. It doesn’t have to be one single point. For example, you may want to be considered the fastest and friendliest in town. Or maybe you wish to be considered the least expensive with the widest selection. On the other hand, you may want to be the most exclusive with the highest prices and best quality. Point Seven – You’ve been waiting for this one, your marketing budget. This is especially hard at the beginning because you may literally have no idea. But it is generally true that you have to spend some money to make money. If you can’t get enough people to know about you, you’ll have a hard time getting the paying customers you need to survive and flourish. In the beginning, it is probably what you can afford. But you need to establish some guidelines now for the expectation of your marketing budget. The best way I know of is to base your marketing budget on projections of your overall revenues for the first year. A general guideline to start with could be 5%, but you may determine it should be 2%, 7% or more than 10%. It’s up to you and your knowledge of the market and your estimations of how much you can afford to invest in the first year. In the first few months of your new business, you can expect to alter this number based on how things go. You can also expect to change it from year to year based on overall revenue growth and profits. But you have to start somewhere and have an idea of what your limits will be. Creating an Advertising Plan Now that you have a marketing plan to serve as your general roadmap, you’ll also want to create a brief advertising plan as well. The advertising plan is a natural extension of the marketing plan, but serves as a more specific guide for you advertising campaign and the messages you wish to get across. You should create a new advertising plan for each campaign or even for each advertising method you use. Every advertising method is unique and the way you get your messages across may vary. I typically use Five Points when I sit down to determine what to do in any particular advertising situation. Point One – The reason or purpose for the advertising. You will determine this much like Point One in your marketing plan, but make it more specific based on the particular time and place of the ad. Point Two – Explain the number one USP/benefit you will offer in the advertising message in order to meet what you wrote in Point One. For example, if your purpose is to attract new paying customers, you may tout one hour service on their tires. Or you may offer guaranteed satisfaction with a no-hassle exchange or refund policy to help people feel better about trying your product or service for the first time. Remember, you know your business is special, but they don’t know it yet! Point Three – What are additional USPs/benefits that you offer, but are not the main USP/benefit? If they are interested in your number one USP/benefit, any additional ones may help “close the deal.” For example, if you offer one hour service on tires, you may also offer a clean comfortable waiting room with free coffee and snacks. If you offer guaranteed satisfaction, you may also wish to point out your wide selection of trusted brands and free consultations to help the customer determine what brand is best for them. Point Four – Define your target audience for this advertising campaign. Depending on the actual time and place of the ad, it may be your broad target as explained in Point Three of your marketing plan or it may be a more specific subset of the target. For example, your overall target may be all women over 18, but your specific message for a particular ad campaign may be more effective if it only addresses college educated women older than 45. Or your tire shop may target all car owners within a 15 mile radius, but your windshield leaflet will be for car owners within 1 mile. Point Five – Here you’ll explain just what it is you want your customer to do. You may simply wish for them to call you or visit your website for more information. Or possibly you want them to come into your office for a consultation. Maybe you just want them to make a purchase immediately. Whatever you want them to Get Paid With Consumer Products For Surveys Done 5-page plan to start with is yourself.If you were searching for ‘consumer product, free paid surveys of america', you are likely looking for a list of companies that offer them. If so, read on before deciding on which paths to take. Online surveys typically pay between five and up to seventy-five dollars for each one you fill out.Not only that, but many people don’t know that you can even get paid to play games, and you can play them for an unlimited number of hours. On top of everything else, you are often sent five dollars for each person you refer to the website, and in turn, also receive money based on the work that they complete as well.You can turn your time into dollars when you are filling out online surveys, as well as get free movie tickets just to give your review of the movie that you watched. Isn’t it cool that you can go to the movie theatre for free to see the newest coming releases?The good thing is that there are free, high paid surveys for all ages, and is not limited to certain age groups. Everyone has a chance to make extra money from the comfort of their own home. This is easy to accomplish when you take online surveys and earn extra cash, not to mention help improve the quality of products companies are going to produce. So if you're still looking for 'consumer product, free paid surveys of america' – your best bet is to source for a quality database of consumer product companies specializing in using online surveys for getting opinions. There are certainly many good paying surveys that can be found where you can answer for either cash or free products. The problem h Here are the seven points I suggest for your marketing plan: Point One – The first point explores and explains the reasons for your overall marketing strategy. By “reasons” I mean the purpose you are doing marketing and what you wish to achieve in general. As an example, a reason for your marketing may be to attract customers to your shop to fix their tires. Another reason may be to get interested traffic to your website to browse and consider your products or services. Yet another is you may want to let the decision makers at many corporations know about you and your new company. These are the basic reasons for your marketing campaign. Obviously, you will never reach every single possible person for your business, but you will continue to reach out to as many as you can. These reasons are not the same as goals. Goals are specific and measurable, while reasons are general and not measurable. The goals become the measuring sticks for the reasons you are in business. Some goals based on the above reasons might be informing 25 car owners about your tire shop or getting 30 new visitors to your website. Point Two – If Point One is your broad marketing strategy, then Point Two are your tactics. The second Point offers an explanation about how you will achieve the reasons you laid out in Point One. For example, for your attracting customers to your tire shop, you may choose to use ads in the phone book and newspaper, you may mail out coupons or have them placed on care windshields, or you may place billboards. For a new website, you might list that you will purchase keywords on Yahoo and Google, place banner ads on similar websites, or issue a press releases about happenings at your business and on your website. This point will basically be those that you plan to use at launch and soon after. You’ll develop a longer list in Point Four that will be your guidelines for the future during your growth phase. Point Three – The third Point is to whom you will be targeting your marketing. Not surprisingly, this is called your target market. These should be the people who have the desire, need, or potential to purchase your product or service. Make sure this is who you are after; it makes no sense to market to 50,000 people if only 10 are possible customers. Your target for the tire shop example might be all car owners within 15 miles of your shop. If you are offering custom-made promotional products for companies, then your target market might be heads of marketing. If your website sells items featuring university football teams, then you probably want to reach university alumni and fans of the team. By knowing to whom you will target your marketing, you will be able to better create an effective marketing message and spend your money more effectively by utilizing methods that get right to the people that are most likely to become your customers. Point Four – This is basically a list of every marketing and advertising avenue that you think you will employ in the future. This is not necessarily at the early stages of your business because some may be cost prohibitive or you may not have grown to the point to where you can actually fulfill the demands of the numerous customers that may respond. Basically, this can serve as a guideline for the future and as a wish list of methods you’d like to utilize at some point. But try to be realistic about costs, needs and even your willingness. TV may either be too costly or just wasteful for your particular business. Or perhaps you’re shy, so you won’t be speaking at the Chamber of Commerce nor doing newspaper interviews. This list can be as long or as short as you desire. Try to think as broadly as you can about what might work for your business. Look at what other successful companies do. Think about all of marketing, which can include advertising, publicity, promotions and publicity. Take your time at this Point and really give it some thought and research Some examples that you may not consider at first include things like using your circle of acquaintances to help with word-of-mouth, classified ads, fliers that can be placed around town or on doors, flea markets, joining community and business organizations for networking, trade shows, bumper stickers, and direct mail. Point Five – This Point explains what makes you special, or what your niche in the marketplace is going to be. You will have to decide on this because you will have to communicate it to your customers. Your focus should be on what differentiates you and your business from all of your competition. In marketing terms, this is known as your unique selling proposition, or USP. Your USP/niche can be based on speed, customer service, prices, quality, selection, or whatever you determine you can offer better than anyone else. Do focus on reality and be reasonable in your own expectations. Make sure your USP/niche is valid, within your capabilities, what you will really do to make your business unique and also what will actually matter to your target market. Point Six – The sixth Point focuses attention on what you wish the overall public perception or identity of your business to be. This most likely will be an extension of Point Five and you USP/niche. Once again, make it real and make it what you can attain and deliver. Your identity is basically how the public perceives your business and the way that they will feel about it. It doesn’t have to be one single point. For example, you may want to be considered the fastest and friendliest in town. Or maybe you wish to be considered the least expensive with the widest selection. On the other hand, you may want to be the most exclusive with the highest prices and best quality. Point Seven – You’ve been waiting for this one, your marketing budget. This is especially hard at the beginning because you may literally have no idea. But it is generally true that you have to spend some money to make money. If you can’t get enough people to know about you, you’ll have a hard time getting the paying customers you need to survive and flourish. In the beginning, it is probably what you can afford. But you need to establish some guidelines now for the expectation of your marketing budget. The best way I know of is to base your marketing budget on projections of your overall revenues for the first year. A general guideline to start with could be 5%, but you may determine it should be 2%, 7% or more than 10%. It’s up to you and your knowledge of the market and your estimations of how much you can afford to invest in the first year. In the first few months of your new business, you can expect to alter this number based on how things go. You can also expect to change it from year to year based on overall revenue growth and profits. But you have to start somewhere and have an idea of what your limits will be. Creating an Advertising Plan Now that you have a marketing plan to serve as your general roadmap, you’ll also want to create a brief advertising plan as well. The advertising plan is a natural extension of the marketing plan, but serves as a more specific guide for you advertising campaign and the messages you wish to get across. You should create a new advertising plan for each campaign or even for each advertising method you use. Every advertising method is unique and the way you get your messages across may vary. I typically use Five Points when I sit down to determine what to do in any particular advertising situation. Point One – The reason or purpose for the advertising. You will determine this much like Point One in your marketing plan, but make it more specific based on the particular time and place of the ad. Point Two – Explain the number one USP/benefit you will offer in the advertising message in order to meet what you wrote in Point One. For example, if your purpose is to attract new paying customers, you may tout one hour service on their tires. Or you may offer guaranteed satisfaction with a no-hassle exchange or refund policy to help people feel better about trying your product or service for the first time. Remember, you know your business is special, but they don’t know it yet! Point Three – What are additional USPs/benefits that you offer, but are not the main USP/benefit? If they are interested in your number one USP/benefit, any additional ones may help “close the deal.” For example, if you offer one hour service on tires, you may also offer a clean comfortable waiting room with free coffee and snacks. If you offer guaranteed satisfaction, you may also wish to point out your wide selection of trusted brands and free consultations to help the customer determine what brand is best for them. Point Four – Define your target audience for this advertising campaign. Depending on the actual time and place of the ad, it may be your broad target as explained in Point Three of your marketing plan or it may be a more specific subset of the target. For example, your overall target may be all women over 18, but your specific message for a particular ad campaign may be more effective if it only addresses college educated women older than 45. Or your tire shop may target all car owners within a 15 mile radius, but your windshield leaflet will be for car owners within 1 mile. Point Five – Here you’ll explain just what it is you want your customer to do. You may simply wish for them to call you or visit your website for more information. Or possibly you want them to come into your office for a consultation. Maybe you just want them to make a purchase immediately. Whatever you want them to Great Crested Newts - Implications for UK Businesses and Developers hop. If you are offering custom-made promotional products for companies, then your target market might be heads of marketing. If your website sells items featuring university football teams, then you probably want to reach university alumni and fans of the team.Is your UK business likely to be affected by the Great Crested Newt? This amphibian species, legally protected in the UK under the Wildlife and Countryside Act, is common in many parts of Southern and Eastern England. In addition to the animals themselves, their habitat, consisting of ponds and ditches where they breed and land up to 500m from their breeding ponds/ditches, is protected by legislation. The legislation was strengthened in 2000 and the implications are still filtering through to business, with increasing impacts being felt particularly on business activities involving development and use of land, including brownfield sites.If you undertake an activity that harms this species or its habitat without having first obtained a site licence from DEFRA, you are likely to break the law and potentially face a significant fine. This applies regardless of whether you already have planning consent for a development activity.So if you have a pond, ditch or other water body on or near some land you are planning to develop, are you likely to have this species? Some factors that increase the risk of Great Crested Newts being present in a particular water body in England are as follows (in approximately decreasing order of importance): Water body close to (within 1km) of other ponds; Any combination of hedgerows, scrub, woodland, rough grass, derelict land connecting, or nearly connecting, the water body to other nearby ponds; Any of the following: scrub, hedges, shrubberies, woodland within 200m of water body; Water clear; Fish absent; Water body largely unshaded. Leg By knowing to whom you will target your marketing, you will be able to better create an effective marketing message and spend your money more effectively by utilizing methods that get right to the people that are most likely to become your customers. Point Four – This is basically a list of every marketing and advertising avenue that you think you will employ in the future. This is not necessarily at the early stages of your business because some may be cost prohibitive or you may not have grown to the point to where you can actually fulfill the demands of the numerous customers that may respond. Basically, this can serve as a guideline for the future and as a wish list of methods you’d like to utilize at some point. But try to be realistic about costs, needs and even your willingness. TV may either be too costly or just wasteful for your particular business. Or perhaps you’re shy, so you won’t be speaking at the Chamber of Commerce nor doing newspaper interviews. This list can be as long or as short as you desire. Try to think as broadly as you can about what might work for your business. Look at what other successful companies do. Think about all of marketing, which can include advertising, publicity, promotions and publicity. Take your time at this Point and really give it some thought and research Some examples that you may not consider at first include things like using your circle of acquaintances to help with word-of-mouth, classified ads, fliers that can be placed around town or on doors, flea markets, joining community and business organizations for networking, trade shows, bumper stickers, and direct mail. Point Five – This Point explains what makes you special, or what your niche in the marketplace is going to be. You will have to decide on this because you will have to communicate it to your customers. Your focus should be on what differentiates you and your business from all of your competition. In marketing terms, this is known as your unique selling proposition, or USP. Your USP/niche can be based on speed, customer service, prices, quality, selection, or whatever you determine you can offer better than anyone else. Do focus on reality and be reasonable in your own expectations. Make sure your USP/niche is valid, within your capabilities, what you will really do to make your business unique and also what will actually matter to your target market. Point Six – The sixth Point focuses attention on what you wish the overall public perception or identity of your business to be. This most likely will be an extension of Point Five and you USP/niche. Once again, make it real and make it what you can attain and deliver. Your identity is basically how the public perceives your business and the way that they will feel about it. It doesn’t have to be one single point. For example, you may want to be considered the fastest and friendliest in town. Or maybe you wish to be considered the least expensive with the widest selection. On the other hand, you may want to be the most exclusive with the highest prices and best quality. Point Seven – You’ve been waiting for this one, your marketing budget. This is especially hard at the beginning because you may literally have no idea. But it is generally true that you have to spend some money to make money. If you can’t get enough people to know about you, you’ll have a hard time getting the paying customers you need to survive and flourish. In the beginning, it is probably what you can afford. But you need to establish some guidelines now for the expectation of your marketing budget. The best way I know of is to base your marketing budget on projections of your overall revenues for the first year. A general guideline to start with could be 5%, but you may determine it should be 2%, 7% or more than 10%. It’s up to you and your knowledge of the market and your estimations of how much you can afford to invest in the first year. In the first few months of your new business, you can expect to alter this number based on how things go. You can also expect to change it from year to year based on overall revenue growth and profits. But you have to start somewhere and have an idea of what your limits will be. Creating an Advertising Plan Now that you have a marketing plan to serve as your general roadmap, you’ll also want to create a brief advertising plan as well. The advertising plan is a natural extension of the marketing plan, but serves as a more specific guide for you advertising campaign and the messages you wish to get across. You should create a new advertising plan for each campaign or even for each advertising method you use. Every advertising method is unique and the way you get your messages across may vary. I typically use Five Points when I sit down to determine what to do in any particular advertising situation. Point One – The reason or purpose for the advertising. You will determine this much like Point One in your marketing plan, but make it more specific based on the particular time and place of the ad. Point Two – Explain the number one USP/benefit you will offer in the advertising message in order to meet what you wrote in Point One. For example, if your purpose is to attract new paying customers, you may tout one hour service on their tires. Or you may offer guaranteed satisfaction with a no-hassle exchange or refund policy to help people feel better about trying your product or service for the first time. Remember, you know your business is special, but they don’t know it yet! Point Three – What are additional USPs/benefits that you offer, but are not the main USP/benefit? If they are interested in your number one USP/benefit, any additional ones may help “close the deal.” For example, if you offer one hour service on tires, you may also offer a clean comfortable waiting room with free coffee and snacks. If you offer guaranteed satisfaction, you may also wish to point out your wide selection of trusted brands and free consultations to help the customer determine what brand is best for them. Point Four – Define your target audience for this advertising campaign. Depending on the actual time and place of the ad, it may be your broad target as explained in Point Three of your marketing plan or it may be a more specific subset of the target. For example, your overall target may be all women over 18, but your specific message for a particular ad campaign may be more effective if it only addresses college educated women older than 45. Or your tire shop may target all car owners within a 15 mile radius, but your windshield leaflet will be for car owners within 1 mile. Point Five – Here you’ll explain just what it is you want your customer to do. You may simply wish for them to call you or visit your website for more information. Or possibly you want them to come into your office for a consultation. Maybe you just want them to make a purchase immediately. Whatever you want them to Why Well Produced Career Portfolios Are Replacing CVs ocus on reality and be reasonable in your own expectations. Make sure your USP/niche is valid, within your capabilities, what you will really do to make your business unique and also what will actually matter to your target market.What is a Career Portfolio?The original portfolio used by artists looking for work was simply a collection of works demonstrative of the artists style and ability. Because their works varied in size and shape, portfolios came in all sizes and shapes. Fashion designers would lug a box of their clothing and accessory designs from interview to interview hoping for the big break. Potential employers or commission agents could view the art or garments and decide if applicants were likely to be able to paint or design what they had in mind. In more recent days, people such as architects, whose work has a personal dimension, carried rolls of drawings and photographs to interviews.Now others have realised the potential of portfolios and jumped onto the bandwagon, but with electronic and physical portfolios.A portfolio is, according to a dictionary, "A portable case for holding material, such as loose papers, photographs, or drawings. The materials collected in such a case, especially when representative of a person's work: a photographer's portfolio; an artist's portfolio of drawings."A reworked definition could perhaps refer to a portfolio as, "a collection of evidence, nicely presented, that job applicants show prospective employers to help present their case." It might also be an online or electronic portfolio. But whatever we call it, it differs from a Curriculum Vitae or Resume.Differences between a Portfolio and a ResumeWhile a resume presents a summary of a job seekers qualifications, experience and special attainments etc, it doesn't necessarily contain verifiable evidence. This verifiability of evi Point Six – The sixth Point focuses attention on what you wish the overall public perception or identity of your business to be. This most likely will be an extension of Point Five and you USP/niche. Once again, make it real and make it what you can attain and deliver. Your identity is basically how the public perceives your business and the way that they will feel about it. It doesn’t have to be one single point. For example, you may want to be considered the fastest and friendliest in town. Or maybe you wish to be considered the least expensive with the widest selection. On the other hand, you may want to be the most exclusive with the highest prices and best quality. Point Seven – You’ve been waiting for this one, your marketing budget. This is especially hard at the beginning because you may literally have no idea. But it is generally true that you have to spend some money to make money. If you can’t get enough people to know about you, you’ll have a hard time getting the paying customers you need to survive and flourish. In the beginning, it is probably what you can afford. But you need to establish some guidelines now for the expectation of your marketing budget. The best way I know of is to base your marketing budget on projections of your overall revenues for the first year. A general guideline to start with could be 5%, but you may determine it should be 2%, 7% or more than 10%. It’s up to you and your knowledge of the market and your estimations of how much you can afford to invest in the first year. In the first few months of your new business, you can expect to alter this number based on how things go. You can also expect to change it from year to year based on overall revenue growth and profits. But you have to start somewhere and have an idea of what your limits will be. Creating an Advertising Plan Now that you have a marketing plan to serve as your general roadmap, you’ll also want to create a brief advertising plan as well. The advertising plan is a natural extension of the marketing plan, but serves as a more specific guide for you advertising campaign and the messages you wish to get across. You should create a new advertising plan for each campaign or even for each advertising method you use. Every advertising method is unique and the way you get your messages across may vary. I typically use Five Points when I sit down to determine what to do in any particular advertising situation. Point One – The reason or purpose for the advertising. You will determine this much like Point One in your marketing plan, but make it more specific based on the particular time and place of the ad. Point Two – Explain the number one USP/benefit you will offer in the advertising message in order to meet what you wrote in Point One. For example, if your purpose is to attract new paying customers, you may tout one hour service on their tires. Or you may offer guaranteed satisfaction with a no-hassle exchange or refund policy to help people feel better about trying your product or service for the first time. Remember, you know your business is special, but they don’t know it yet! Point Three – What are additional USPs/benefits that you offer, but are not the main USP/benefit? If they are interested in your number one USP/benefit, any additional ones may help “close the deal.” For example, if you offer one hour service on tires, you may also offer a clean comfortable waiting room with free coffee and snacks. If you offer guaranteed satisfaction, you may also wish to point out your wide selection of trusted brands and free consultations to help the customer determine what brand is best for them. Point Four – Define your target audience for this advertising campaign. Depending on the actual time and place of the ad, it may be your broad target as explained in Point Three of your marketing plan or it may be a more specific subset of the target. For example, your overall target may be all women over 18, but your specific message for a particular ad campaign may be more effective if it only addresses college educated women older than 45. Or your tire shop may target all car owners within a 15 mile radius, but your windshield leaflet will be for car owners within 1 mile. Point Five – Here you’ll explain just what it is you want your customer to do. You may simply wish for them to call you or visit your website for more information. Or possibly you want them to come into your office for a consultation. Maybe you just want them to make a purchase immediately. Whatever you want them to Do Correct Investment in Business Opportunities ng plan for each campaign or even for each advertising method you use. Every advertising method is unique and the way you get your messages across may vary. I typically use Five Points when I sit down to determine what to do in any particular advertising situation.Business opportunities are only good when you know what you want and what you are doing. All to often people let a good business opportunity pass them by or they will jump into something when they really don’t know what they are getting themselves into. The business opportunities are only as good as the person who is investing in them. If you do things correctly then your business will grow and expand.There some things that you should keep in mind when you are looking to get involved in some business opportunities. You should never believe claims that you can make money with little no effort. Any business opportunity that you come across will require that you put in the time and effort in order to make this business opportunity work. If you are not willing to put in the effort then there is not guarantee that you business opportunities will flourish.If you are interested in certain business opportunities than you should get all needed information in writing before you commit to anything. If you are in contact that with someone who is selling a franchise or business opportunities then you should be able to get all needed information from them. This information should include any past financial information, employers and contact people as well as some predictions for the future. Seeing all of this information written down can help you to get a clear picture of what you could possibly be getting yourself into.Business opportunities are not without their risks and this is something that you should always keep in mind. All to often people invest thousands of dollars into a company or business opportunity and then are amazed when the company fail Point One – The reason or purpose for the advertising. You will determine this much like Point One in your marketing plan, but make it more specific based on the particular time and place of the ad. Point Two – Explain the number one USP/benefit you will offer in the advertising message in order to meet what you wrote in Point One. For example, if your purpose is to attract new paying customers, you may tout one hour service on their tires. Or you may offer guaranteed satisfaction with a no-hassle exchange or refund policy to help people feel better about trying your product or service for the first time. Remember, you know your business is special, but they don’t know it yet! Point Three – What are additional USPs/benefits that you offer, but are not the main USP/benefit? If they are interested in your number one USP/benefit, any additional ones may help “close the deal.” For example, if you offer one hour service on tires, you may also offer a clean comfortable waiting room with free coffee and snacks. If you offer guaranteed satisfaction, you may also wish to point out your wide selection of trusted brands and free consultations to help the customer determine what brand is best for them. Point Four – Define your target audience for this advertising campaign. Depending on the actual time and place of the ad, it may be your broad target as explained in Point Three of your marketing plan or it may be a more specific subset of the target. For example, your overall target may be all women over 18, but your specific message for a particular ad campaign may be more effective if it only addresses college educated women older than 45. Or your tire shop may target all car owners within a 15 mile radius, but your windshield leaflet will be for car owners within 1 mile. Point Five – Here you’ll explain just what it is you want your customer to do. You may simply wish for them to call you or visit your website for more information. Or possibly you want them to come into your office for a consultation. Maybe you just want them to make a purchase immediately. Whatever you want them to do, you need to explain it first so you can develop a campaign based on the desired outcome. In come cases, you just have to tell the customer what you want them to do. A Few Pointers I cannot stress how important it is to write your marketing plan down and consult it (and update it) often. You should also develop and write down a separate advertising plan for each new campaign. This helps you create a more effective message and get the desired results for less money. I’ve said it about your efforts in general and I’ll say it for marketing, you have to work harder than your competition each and every day. Be focused in your efforts and be consistent and you will set the standard for your particular business category. Finally, your work should be fun. Your job wasn’t really fun, that is why you started your own business. By making your daily life at your own business fun, you will succeed.
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