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The 13 Best Marketing Tips for Small Businesses
by Jeffery Dobkin
I've been involved in marketing and direct marketing since...my God!
Am I that old already? Anyhow, over the years I've been asked to
give tips on marketing along with my specific advice. Here's a short
list of some of my best tips:
1. The most valuable tool in marketing at the lowest cost is a letter.
In fact, the most valuable tool in marketing at any cost is a letter.
Write one business-getting letter every day.
2. The best formula for creating headlines in marketing is "New product offers
benefit, benefit, benefit." Use this to create the headline of
your press releases and advertisements, for envelope teaser copy, and for
the beginning lead of your brochure. Example: "New keyboard
offers faster typing, greater accuracy, and is less tiring."
Use Jeff Dobkin's 100 to 1 Rule: Write 100 lines, go back and pick your
best 1.
3. The most valuable single sheet of paper you can create in marketing
is a press release. You should be sending press releases
every month.
4. The most effective trick I've learned in 25 years of copywriting is this:
when you are having a tough time writing, just start writing anything, then
go back and cross out your first sentence.
5. Follow up serious inquiries and sales leads with more than one piece
of mail.
6. The 11 most valuable words to get any press release published
are "Are you the person I should send this press release to?"
Before sending any important press release, call the magazine or
newspaper editor and say these 11 words.
7. Create a letter series - in advance - to get new business.
Mail one letter a month. This is the best campaign I can think
of, and the basis for one of my books,
How to Market a Product For Under $500! Shhh, don't tell
anyone this, they won't buy it.
8. Always acknowledge when someone nice is done for you with a thank you
letter. No, a call is not the same.
9. When you start to write any business communication, always write your
objective first. Figure out and state in writing what you are trying
to accomplish. For example, an ad objective may be to generate
maximum direct orders, or get as many leads as possible, or generate retail
store traffic. This gives your writing more focus.
10. If you'd really like a response from a personal letter, include a
return envelope in it with a live stamp on it. It'll increase
your response or it'll drive them nuts.
11. Anytime you run a successful long-term direct mail campaign, test the
variables in subsequent mailings.
12. Take your time writing. No one will ever know the one-page
letter they received took you three weeks to write. Just make
sure when you send it, it's perfect.
13. In a direct mail solicitation, don't be afraid to ask for the order - several
times. If the recipient doesn't call or send an order, the piece
fails. For best results, be very explicit and tell the reader exactly
what you want him to do - twice in the body copy, and again in the PS.
About the Author...
"Since 1972, Jeffery Dobkin has helped small business owners, entrepreneurs,
and inventors become successful marketing their products." He
has wrote and published two outstanding books on direct marketing:
"How to Market a Product for Under $500!"
"Uncommon Marketing Techniques"
Jeffery Dobkin can be reached at: The Danielle Adams Publishing Co.
Box 100 * Merion Station, PA 19066 610/642-1000 * Fax 610-642-6832
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