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If your marketing is right, but your timing is wrong, watch out.
Even the best-laid plans go awry when the timing is off. Here's
how to prevent that.
Sometimes a company actively markets the right product or service
to the right people in the right media. But the marketing turns
out to be a flop all because of poor timing. In order to get the
most mileage from your marketing, you've got to be keenly attuned
to the right times and the wrong times. To gain a bit of insight,
consider these ten examples:
1. You've created the perfect mailing package, but it arrives too
early in the week, when your prospect is thinking of the week ahead
-- or too late, when your prospect is thinking of the upcoming weekend.
Moral: See to it that your mailing arrives on a Tuesday, Wednesday
or Thursday.
2. You've got a fine product but a limited budget and a lot of
competition. What to do? Do your marketing when your competitors
have eased up and you can gain the largest share of mind with the
smallest marketing investment. Maybe that will be during what are
deemed the slow months. But it's when you can attract the most attention
the fastest.
3. Everybody receives Christmas catalogs in September and October.
If you sent yours during July or August, you'd get people thinking
of your company then and later on as well. It's may sound a bit
crazy, but if you explain why you are mailing at that time, it will
make sense to your prospects. Naturally, this applies to times other
than Christmas.
4. You keep abreast of current events by watching the tube, reading
the paper, accessing online news services, perusing newsweeklies,
and subscribing to publications within your industry and community.
You should be doing this, and if you do, you can tie in your offerings
with what is happening at that moment in history. A recession is
ugly except to companies that realize it is an ideal opportunity
for them to make sales.
5. Be careful not to launch your marketing too soon. One of the
most common errors in marketing is to promote before all the bugs
have been worked out, before the salespeople know all the facts,
and before you are ready to fill the flood of orders and engage
in guerrilla follow-up. Remember that patience is a guerrilla virtue.
6. One of the saddest moments in marketing is the snazzy newspaper
story or bigtime TV report about the products or services that are
not yet available. The business owner is so enthralled at the thought
of free publicity that the news is released before people can buy
what he or she offers. They won't come back another time, and the
media won't give you another splash. Restraint is necessary even
with free news coverage.
7. Savvy retailers wait at least one month before having their
grand openings. If they don't wait, customers will come flocking
in to become acquainted with untrained salespeople, poorly stocked
shelves, slow delivery times, clumsy sales procedures and messy
surroundings. Polish these items to perfection before your grand
opening or it won't be so grand. Guerrillas are rarely in hurry.
8. Telemarketing calls that don't get through or that reach answering
devices are wastes of time and money. Find out when your prospects
are most likely to be at the phone, and then do your telemarketing.
It may be at 11:00 a.m. to businesses and 6:30 p.m. to homeowners.
The first goal of a phone call is to reach the prospect.
9. Use speed in the timing you use to deal with customer requests,
orders, questions and complaints. People revere their time these
days more than ever. Revere it with them and never waste one minute
of theirs.
10. Never be in a rush to create your marketing materials. Keep
in mind that to develop them, you are faced with three variables
-- speed, quality and economy. You may select any two, but not all
three. Guerrillas opt for quality and economy every time. Timing
also refers to tying in with the news of the moment, with what's
on your prospect's minds, and with what your competitors are doing.
Guerrilla timing can make the difference between a campaign fizzling
or flourishing.
(C)2000 Jay Conrad Levinson
www.gmarketingcoach.com
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