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MenuFor small business owners: If you are not investing in marketing, can you explain why? Bad experiences? Lack of faith? I'd like to know your thoughts.
Writing a post for a top-tier site, want some points-of-view from my Clarity family to add another layer to the "marketing cake"... Thanks.
Answers
I used to work in advertising and saw how colleagues would manipulate analytics to give the client what they wanted. I am extremely weary of paying for advertising with Uberpong. Regarding PR, it is very difficult to measure ROI so I prefer to reach out personally and let media outlets know I can be reached directly (this is rare for CEOs). As a result, I have been contacted for opportunities (Austin American-Statesman, Austin Monthly and US Table Tennis Association). Feel free to contact me at http://clarity.fm/davidlowe if you had any further questions I can help answer.
[I'm not a "small biz owner" but I founded isocket / BuyAds.com, which helps small biz owners advertise. Also previously founded a marketing consultancy for SMBs]
The common reasons SMBs don't / aren't investing in marketing:
* Education.
Most people know marketing from being on the receiving end of a message, but not the giving end. Which can even be dangerous, because then a SMB might apply the wrong principles ("I see TV ads, so maybe I should buy TV ads too!")
* Steep learning curve.
Given the lack of education and learning curve of proper marketing, SMBs who approach marketing get overwhelmed. It becomes obvious that doing it right takes time and money, which is something SMBs are short on.
* Lack of measurability.
The more attributable a piece of marketing is, the more likely it's to be seen as successful by an SMB. But most marketing, especially the advanced forms beyond billboards/etc, is hard to properly measure. That, coupled with the fact "50% of marketing dollars are wasted, we just don't know which half" (famous agency quote), results in SMBs feeling like its a black hole of money.
* Difficulty making creative assets.
Good advertising needs good creative (the thing a person sees/hears, like a billboard). Making good creative is hard and thus inaccessible to many SMBs. You don't want your nephew who kinda-knows Photoshop to build your banner ads for you.
* High cost barrier to entry.
A SMB might be able to spend $1,000 on online marketing, which might be a big expense for them, but is a drop in the bucket compared to other markets. Sometimes, smaller SMB budgets can be ineffective at getting enough "share of voice" to make an impact at all.
Because most small business owners do not understand the different between advertising and marketing.
The two though related are not the same thing, a well crafted strategy for both advertising & marketing will bring in results. Depending on how much capital is involved, one can substitute effort and relationship skills for investment.
If you're really small you can't afford to look too big, be honest & attractive. Effectively it's like dating, and well you need to have pretty darned good social skills if you want a quality date. :)
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