
FIVE BROCHURE
ALTERNATIVES
by Marcia Yudkin
The
following article comes from Marcia Yudkin's
syndicated Marketing Matters column, distributed
by Paradigm, The Syndicating Agency. Copyright
1999 Marcia Yudkin. All rights reserved.
Horse and ...
carriage. Love and ... marriage. Thick and ...
thin. For many business owners, the connection
between "start a business" and
"create a brochure" is almost as strong
and automatic. Often, however, something besides
a traditional folded envelope stuffer does a
better job of galvanizing prospective clients or
customers. Consider these alternatives:
- A
one-sheet faxable flyer. If your leads
typically come in by telephone from
business customers, a one-sheet may be
the best response to the request,
"Send me your stuff." Near-
universal now in the speaking and
conventions industry, it typically
includes in a nicely designed layout a
specially screened photo, a list of
offerings, a client list and brief
testimonial quotes. If you have separate
phone and fax lines, you can send this
one-sheet through on your fax while on
the phone with a prospective customer.
- The
portfolio approach. Common among
high-priced consultants, this allows you
to assemble a customized collection of
ingredients for each prospective customer
in a colorful pocket folder. For a
hardware-store owner who is thinking of
doing business with you, you include one
set of price lists, company profile,
press clippings and customer quotes, and
another set for a stockbroker. A
portfolio yields a high-class impression
with a next-to-zero upfront investment.
- Substantive
sales letter. Try conveying your whole
marketing message in a two- or three-page
sales letter. Begin by making it clear
why the recipient should bother to read
the letter, end by explaining the action
you wish the reader to take, and in
between lay out step by step your best
arguments why your prospect should do
business with you. I've seen this
technique succeed for photographic
services, mortgages, lawn care, vacation
trips, and many other items.
- Audiotape.
If you can convince someone to pop a tape
in their car or kitchen cassette player,
you may get their attention for a longer
period of time than they'd normally spend
reading. A pleasant, conversational human
voice can go far in explaining a
complicated product or service and
persuading the listener that he or she is
trustworthy. Your main hurdle here is the
psychological distance from the mailing
envelope to the tape machine. The
cassette needs a cover letter or
self-stick note persuading the recipient
that a listen will be worth their time.
- Computer
disk/CD-Rom. Don't bother with this
marketing method unless you have
overwhelming evidence that recipients
have the proper equipment to place the
disk or CD in. And as with audiotapes,
you need a cover letter explaining what
it is and why it's worth their time. With
those two bases covered, though, this can
get through wonderfully to high- tech
customers who love anything electronic
and wouldn't have the patience for the
same content printed out on paper.
Marcia Yudkin <marcia@yudkin.com>
is a syndicated columnist, radio commentator and
author who teaches small business owners how to
get out the word about their business effectively
and inexpensively. You can read more of her
articles at http://www.yudkin.com/marketing.htm.
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