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> Get Articles > Bonuses and Freebies > How Free Giveaways Can Boost Your Small Business Revenues
How Free Giveaways Can Boost Your Small Business Revenues
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David Frey
Davidmarketingbestpractices.com
Marketing Best Practices
http://www.marketingbestpractices.com
By David Frey
Offering free giveaways to prospects and customer is a
powerful business building strategy that can result in a
flood of new and repeat customers.
It may seem counterintuitive to give away your products and
services to build your business; however, people can’t resist
the lure of receiving something for free. The word free, as
worn out as it may seem, is still the most powerful word in
marketing and has a hypnotic effect on people.
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Why Free Giveaways Work
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The reason free giveaways work so well is two-fold. First,
prospects that test your product or service risk-free will
hopefully recognize its value and continue purchasing what
you offer. Or even better, your prospect will get “hooked” on
your product or service and won’t be able to live without it.
Second, the fact that your product or service was given to your
prospects as a free gift will compel them to return the favor by
continuing to purchase from you. This principle is called the
“Law of Reciprocity,” which simply states that people naturally
feel an obligation to return favors as a way of expressing their
thanks.
The Law of Reciprocity works! The Hare Krishnas raised
millions of dollars in the late sixties and early seventies using
this principle. In airports the Krishnas would give away small
wooden umbrellas as a free gift and would in turn, ask for a
donation.
After the donor would give their donation, they would toss the
little umbrella into the first trashcan they passed. The Krishna
would then pick the umbrella out of the trashcan and turn right
around and give it to the next person. It worked like a charm.
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Know Your Total Customer Value Before Giving Freebies
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The key to safely offering free giveaways is to know your “total
customer value.” This is the amount of profit you will receive
from your customer over the total length of your relationship.
This figure not only includes business that you will receive
from your customer, but also any referrals you may receive
from them.
For instance, suppose you own a dry cleaning business and
you compute your average “total customer value” to be $1,250.
How much money would you be willing to invest in free
giveaways to acquire a new customer? $50? $100? $200?
The answer is * yes * to all of the above. Why wouldn’t you
invest $100 to gain $1,250 in profits? Coincidentally, this is
why most small business owners are nervous about offering
free giveaways. They don’t understand the principle of “total
customer value.”
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Information – The Ultimate Free Giveaway
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Ideally, it’s best to offer free giveaways that are low cost but
have a high perceived value to the person you are giving it to.
Information is a great example of a free giveaway that has a
low product cost and a high perceived value. This is why it’s
smart for small businesses to use special reports containing
“insider” information as a free giveaway for new customer lead
generation.
Your special report could be a written document, an
audiocassette, or a video containing subject material that your
target market would be interested in. Videos especially have
a high perceived value. A valuable reference guide that I use
often is “Spencer’s Guide To Special Interest Videos” which
has over 13,000 hard-to-find videos.
For instance, the following are videos that you’ll find in this
guide that you can purchase as free giveaways for your
prospects:
Example # 1 – Used Car Dealer
“Buying Your Next Used Car” – 36 minutes
“Don’t Get Stuck with a Lemon: Smart Consumer’s Guide to
Buying a Used Car” – 20 minutes
“Drive Home a Better Deal: Insider Secrets On How to Buy
Your New Car, Truck or Van for Less” – 55 minutes
Example # 2 - Sports Fishing Gear Retailer
“Basics of Better Bass Fishing” – 57 minutes
“Advanced Trolling for Saltwater Fish” – 60 minutes
“Fishing Bloopers” – 60 minutes
“Successful Fly Fishing Strategies” – 102 minutes
Example # 3 – Beauty Salon
“Basic Make-Up Techniques” – 60 minutes
“40 & Over Make-Up Techniques” – 60 minutes
“Hollywood Make-Up Secrets” – 60 minutes
Example # 4 – Chiropractor
“Back in Action” – 40 minutes
“Back Pain Relief” – 60 minutes
“Exercise For a Pain-Free Back” – 48 minutes
Example # 5 – Quilt Shop (My wife is into quilting)
“How to Make Patchwork Quilts” – 160 minutes
“Reversible Quilts” – 55 minutes
“Basic Quilting” – 90 minutes
Giving away free informational videos can turn a mediocre offer
into a valuable and compelling offer.
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Free Giveaway Case Studies
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There are a myriad of ways to offer a free giveaway and many
effective types of giveaways (other than information) that small
businesses can use to attract new and inactive customers.
The following are a series of case studies from different small
businesses demonstrating how each uses free giveaways to
build their businesses:
Case Study # 1 – Mobile Video For Hire Van
The owner of a mobile video for hire service wrote a letter
offering the use of a free rental van for four weeks. Why four
weeks? To get people into a habit of using his service. The
result? 19.6% redemption rate and as many as 65% of the
people who took up the free offer went on to become regular
customers.
Case Study # 2 – Health Club
A health club gave away six weeks of free memberships has
saved a fortune on conventional advertising costs by having
health food stores and sports shoe retailers give their free
membership away to their customers as a special gift. The
majority of free trials tuned into paying members at over $500
per membership.
Case Study # 3 – Optometrist
An optometrist mailed a postcard to prospects offering free
eye exams including four different types of eye tests (dry eye
test, glaucoma test, visual acuity test, cataract test) to
patients they hadn’t seen in two years. The optometrist
grossed an extra $10,000 in two days and the phone rang off
the hook, non-stop.
Case Study # 4 – Oil and Lube
An oil and lube center offered a free tire rotation, oil change,
and fuel injection service. However, the customer was only
allowed to take advantage of one of these services per visit.
The free service giveaways resulted in significant upsells on
each visit and the opportunity to capture the customer’s
personal and automobile information for future offers.
Case Study # 5 – Hair Styling Salon
A hair styling salon offered a free children’s haircut with every
visit. Most of the customers brought an average of two to
three of their children to get their hair cut resulting in a
doubling of their weekly sales figure.
Case Study # 6 – Chiropractor
A chiropractor offered a free back massage gift certificate for
Valentine’s Day with a free new patient exam including an x-
ray, neurological and orthopedic exam. To make this offer
super successful, he went around to local businesses and
gave several gift certificates to the local owners and managers
to give to their employees as a free gift.
Case Study # 7 – Dentist
A local dentist offered a free teeth whitening with a
comprehensive new patient exam, including x-rays. To make
this particular offer a winner the dentist sent several coupons
to existing customer’s who had already received the teeth
whitening service to give to their friends as a special gift. To
make it even more effective he coded each coupon and offered
three free whitening sessions to the customer that sent in the
most referrals.
Case Study # 8 – Carpet Cleaner
A carpet cleaner offered to steam clean two rooms absolutely
free. No strings attached. Once the cleaner was in the home
he checked for stains on the floor, rugs that needed
stretching, holes or weak spots in the rug, and he even
performed an air duct inspection. The result was an average
of $60 - $80 dollars worth of services sold per free cleaning.
Case Study # 9 – House Cleaning
A house cleaning service offered to do a full house cleaning
free in the month of December. They called it, “Santa’s Gift to
Mommy.” They were immediately deluged with requests.
Once “Mommy” saw what they could do to their home and
how good she felt with a clean house, 38% of them signed up
for the regular service. The biggest problem the house
cleaning business owner had over the next 12 months was
finding people to do a good job of cleaning.
Case Study # 10 – Vacuum Cleaner Retailer
(I included this case study because David Oreck is such a
fantastic direct marketer.) David Oreck, chairman of Oreck
Vacuums gives away a free Cordless Speed Iron just for
taking the “Oreck XL Challenge” and trying out his 8-pound
vacuum cleaner. Even if you don’t buy the Oreck XL vacuum
cleaner you get to keep the Cordless Speed Iron! And if you
end up purchasing the Oreck XL vacuum cleaner, you also get
his Oreck Super Compact hand-held vacuum. Now here’s a
guy who knows what “total customer value” is all about!
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Justify Any Deal That’s “Too Good To Be True”
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If your offer that includes free giveaways appears “too good to
be true” to your prospect, it could decrease it’s believability
and your credibility. To avoid this you should always give the
reason why you can offer such a great deal.
It might be that you goofed and are now overstocked, you got
a great deal from your supplier, or you just want to say thank
you in a meaningful way. Whatever the case may be, give a
reason. It doesn’t even have to be a good reason; it just
needs to be believable.
Remember, your prospect is very skeptical and has good
reason to be. We’ve all been duped at one point in time by a
“too good to be true” scam. Furnishing your prospects with
the reason why you can offer them such a good deal helps
them to logically reconcile your offer in their minds. In turn,
this will give your prospect the comfort level needed to act on
your offer.
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Conclusion
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Using free giveaways is an effective marketing strategy if used
correctly. Think about what you can offer free-of-charge that
your prospects would consider valuable and that you can give
at a low cost to you. Don’t forget to compute your total
customer value so you know how much you are able to invest
in attracting a new customer. Lastly, make sure your justify
any offers that are just too good to be true.
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David Frey has helped hundreds of small businesses
literally double their revenues in six months or less. To
get your lifetime FREE subscription to the web's leading
small business marketing newsletters just send an email to
subscribeMarketingBestPractices.com or visit
<a href="http://www.MarketingBestPractices.com">http://www.MarketingBestPractices.com</a>
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