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> Get Articles > Business Practice > Street Marketing for Small Businesses
Street Marketing for Small Businesses
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David Frey
DavidMarketingBestPractices.com
Marketing Best Practices
http://www.MarketingBestPractices.com
Street Marketing for Small Businesses
By David Frey
It’s 2:00pm on a Saturday afternoon and you’re watching the
Dallas Cowboys beat up on the San Francisco Forty-Niners.
You faintly hear a knocking at your door but you ignore it
because the Cowboys are in the “red zone” and are about to
score again.
Again, you hear a knocking at your door and you grudgingly
get up to go answer it. Before you open the door you look
through your trusty peep hole that allows you to see who is
bothering you on a relaxing Saturday afternoon. There he is,
an energetic-looking young man with a big smile on his face.
You know what’s coming next…the sales pitch for something
you don’t want. But the young man catches your eye
because he looks so clean cut. He has a nice shirt on with a
tie and looks really happy. Finally, you decide to open the
door.
As you do, the young man promptly extends his hand and
says, “Hello, my name is Alex Gordon. I am trying to raise
money for my college education and to do that I have teamed
up with, Dezingers, the best local restaurant in the area.
Dezingers is offering you over $500 worth of meals for free.
It’s really an incredible offer. Can I take a moment of your
time to explain it to you?
You think to yourself, “I’ve seen Dezingers. They’re giving
away $500 of free meals…wow! This clean cut young guy is
working to raise money for his education…that’s impressive.”
You say to the young lad, “Sure, come on in.”
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Welcome to One-to-One Community-Based Street Marketing
___________________________________________________
You have just witnessed (in your mind’s eye) the power of
one-to-one community-based street marketing. How many
radio or newspaper advertisements can pull a football fanatic
out of his chair, during an exciting football game, to see or
hear your advertisement. The answer is NONE.
One-to-one community-based street marketing is powerful and
effective because it searches and finds your prospect and
delivers your marketing message face-to face. No other
marketing medium has that power. Not even direct mail or the
Internet.
It is said that consumers receive over 3,500 advertisements a
day in one way or another. It is difficult for even the best
marketer to cut through that much advertisement clutter. With
thousands of advertisements being read, heard, or seen, your
prospect can become dazed and confused. Those
businesses that take their customers by the hand and
demonstrate their value proposition will be the winners.
__________________________________________________
Most Any Product is a Good Candidate for Street Marketing
__________________________________________________
Most any common consumable product is a good candidate
for street marketing as long as the offer is right. However,
products and services that work the best are ones that the
consumer already purchases such as oil changes, haircuts, or
pest control.
The following are several popular items that do very well in the
street marketing environment:
- Restaurants
- Golfing
- Auto Services
- Video Rental
- Sport Events
- Dry Cleaning
- Children’s Recreation Centers
- Movie Theatre
- Fast Food Restaurant (especially pizza takeout)
- Car Wash
- Hair or Nail Salon
- Liquid Cleaners
…and many more
Not long ago I purchased a coupon package for a local car
wash. The car wash offered me several free washes, carpet
cleaning, upholstery cleaning, and even an engine cleaning for
only $25. I knew that I needed to get my car cleaned and I
figured I could make my money back in only two visits to the
car wash. I bought it.
__________________________________________________
The Benefits of Community-Based Street Marketing
__________________________________________________
We’ve already mentioned how effective street marketing is
because it cuts through the marketing clutter. But perhaps
the biggest advantage is that it is extremely effective at driving
customers to the local establishment sponsoring the
campaign.
Think about it. Once you purchase a $25 set of coupons for a
service, you’re going to use that service to get a return on your
dollar. So in essence, it’s more effective to sell your coupons
than it is to give them away as free gifts.
Another benefit is that when a new customer carries the
coupon into the establishment and presents it to the service
person, it acts as a flag to the business to give that new
customer(s) the red carpet treatment. When your new
customer has a great experience, they will come back again.
_________________________________________________
Who Walks the Street and Sells Your Offer Door-to-Door?
_________________________________________________
A good college student that needs extra cash is a great
candidate for street marketing. Depending on how you
arrange the deal with your marketers, the person doing the
door knocking can keep up to 100% of the profit! How good is
that?
For instance, let’s assume you were selling a dry cleaner
coupon pack to residents for $20 and your closing ratio was
30% (not unreasonable for street marketers). It takes your
street marketer one hour to hit ten houses in which people are
home. As the street marketer, you close three of the ten
houses and pocket $60. I don’t know of one single college
student that wouldn’t knock doors for $60 an hour.
_________________________________________________
Strategies for Making Community-Based Street Marketing
Work
_________________________________________________
It’s not difficult to make community-based street marketing
pay off big if you follow a few important strategies.
Strategy # 1 – Present an Irresistible Offer
The most important element of success for street marketing is
the offer. If you can present an offer that is nearly irresistible
you will have a high probability of success. If you understand
your “total customer value” and your “customer acquisition
cost,” creating a great offer isn’t hard.
If you know these figures you’ll know how much products or
services you can afford to freely offer and still make a
handsome profit on backend sales (repeat visits, larger follow-
on purchases, referrals etc.)
To develop your offer, sit down and write out a list of all your
products and services. Now separate the basic products and
services from the add-ons. Then start bundling your basic
products and services with several add-ons using different
combinations.
Strategy # 2 – Maximize Upsells
Structure the offer for maximum upsells. For example, offering
a free rug shampoo and engine cleaning with a paid car wash
forces the customer to pay for a car wash to get their free rug
shampoo and engine cleaning.
Hint: When developing your offer (coupon sheet) you need to
give away several basic offerings before you start bundling.
For instance, if you are an oil and lube service consider giving
away three oil changes free of charge, then bundle a paid oil
change with other free add-ons. This allows the purchaser to
clearly see that there is value even if they just cash in on a
few coupons.
Strategy # 3 – Make It a Fundraiser
Consider using your offer as a fundraiser for a local high
school. Local fast food restaurants use this tactic often.
They allow the student to keep a portion of the proceeds,
which shows support for the high school and at the same time
giving the fast food restaurant a great reputation in the
community.
But the most powerful part of using it as a fundraiser is that it
gives residents a different, more powerful reason to buy your
services. Who can resist a local high school student
pounding the pavement to raise some money so they can
have a uniform to play softball?
Another spin on this tactic if you don’t want the fuss of setting
up a joint venture with the local high school is to use a young
college student. In their door approach script have them say,
“Hi, my name is David Frey and I’m trying to raise money for
my college education.” Again, you’ve now turned a selling
situation into a cause-related charitable donation, which
dramatically lowers the barrier to purchase.
Strategy # 4 – Team Selling
Form your sales team into small groups of young people that
attack a small neighborhood. Just knowing that your partner
is on the other side of the street also knocking doors, will
motivate your sales force. It’s fun when the two street
marketers get to the end of the street and compare notes (and
sales!)
Strategy # 5 – Set Goals
Setting goals is another excellent way to keep your street
marketers motivated. Because street marketing is a very
results oriented marketing tactic that can be measure on a
daily basis, it’s easy to set, not only monthly or weekly goals,
but also even daily and hourly goals.
For instance, you might set a goal for your marketer to
contact 15 homes every hour. Another goal would be a
“closing goal” that encouraged marketers to close four out of
every five presentations for a 40% closing ratio.
Once you’ve developed a set of simple goals that are easy to
understand and measure, stack rank your marketers and post
results. The low performers will either be motivated to do
better or quit. Both are acceptable results because you don’t
want low performers who aren’t motivated to improve.
Don’t forget to recognize your street marketers who are your
top performers with rewards that they consider valuable
whether it be money, a vacation, picture on the wall, dinner for
two, or even a one week sports car rental.
Strategy # 6 – Have a Great Product and Give Great Service
Getting the coupon in the hands of your prospect is only the
start. Once they redeem the coupon you must demonstrate
high value. If you don’t, you’ve just wasted a lot of money.
You see your coupon is just a lead generator, nothing more.
Don’t be confused; they are not customers just because they
bought your coupon pack. They become customers when
they’ve had a great experience with your product or service so
when they come in to redeem their coupon, give them 110%.
Make it a real “Wow” experience.
________________________________
Make a Big Splash In a Small Pond
________________________________
Many small businesses make the mistake of marketing too
big. By this I mean, they take out ads in papers, on the radio,
even on T.V that reach large areas, even outside of their
market area. Before they know it, their marketing budget is
blown and they have nothing to show for it.
Take a lesson from the real estate industry, choose a
neighborhood and DOMINATE that neighborhood. Then move
to the next neighborhood. Too many small businesses jump
up and down in an ocean and expect to make a wave while
they should be jumping up and down in a small puddle where
they can make a huge splash. Street marketing is
neighborhood and community based. It attacks the small
puddles. But after dominating about five or six puddles, you’ll
start seeing big results.
_____________
Conclusion
_____________
Door-to-door, community based marketing is more effective at
cutting through the marketing clutter than any other marketing
tactic in existence. The offer presented at the door by your
marketer is the biggest determinant of success. Consider
using young adults who are trying to raise funds for college or
a worthy cause. Send your marketers out in groups and set
personal and team goals for them to achieve. Be ready to give
you’re your new customers the red carpet treatment so that
they’ll stay customers for life.
# # #
David Frey has helped hundreds of small businesses double
their revenues in six months or less. David is the senior editor
of the Marketing Best Practices Newsletter, a free weekly
newsletter featuring small business marketing best practices.
http://www.MarketingBestPractices.com
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