How to roll new business your way with promotional merchandise
According to Wikipedia, the free internet encyclopedia: "A
promotional item is merchandise given away free of charge to the
public in an effort to promote a business or increase interest
in, or sales of, a product. These items are also referred to by
the slang terms schwag and tchotchke. (The latter is derived
from a Yiddish word meaning "trinket".) Promotional items are
also used in politics to promote candidates and causes. Examples
of promotional items include logo-branded t-shirts, caps,
keychains, bumper stickers , pens, mints, etc. Collection of
certain types of promotional items is a popular hobby."
Promotional items have the power to be understood universally.
According to the Promotional Products Association International,
corporations spend close to $17.5 billion a year on this type of
advertising - that's more than one-third of what's spent on TV.
A survey conducted for Promotional Products Association
International (PPAI) by LJ Market Research reveals the power of
promotional products by measuring how end users respond to
organizations that use promotional products as part of their
marketing mix. The survey, Promotional Products - Impact,
Exposure and Influence: A Survey of Business Travelers at
Dallas/Fort Worth Airport , was conducted by interviewing
business travelers at DFW Airport. More than 71 percent of
travelers indicated they had received at least one promotional
product in the last 12 months. The study also showed that
respondents' ability to recall the name of an advertiser on a
promotional product they had received (76 percent) was much
better than their ability to recall the name of an advertiser
from a print publication they had read in the past week (53.5
percent).
Recipients of promotional products do remember the advertiser's
name.
Business to business gifts are a good way to maintain a
positive presence within your client base. They can build brand
awareness within the professional community as well as amongst
the general public. The next time you launch a new product or
service, try introducing it with an imprinted business item.
When gifting to clients within your industry, it is particularly
important to choose a promotional item that relates to your
field. For example, if your new service will save the public
time and effort, introduce it with a customized clock or
calendar.
By introducing a new product or service to clients with a clever
business gift, you maintain a strong industry awareness of your
company. It is also important to choose a quality method on the
imprinted business items. Stick to laser engraved pens, debossed
leather and vinyl items, and embroidered wearables.
Break away from the promotional item pack.
People tend to copy each other and assume that if most people do
things a certain way, it's the way to follow. Don't follow, be a
leader instead. People love pens, but the truth is, everyone of
us has at least a dozen promotional pens right now with
different company names and logos inscribed on them, and if
yours is one of them, the next person most likely couldn't find
it to call you if she searched all day and night. But if she
had, say, a branded clock or a branded calculator on her desk,
with your name and address on it, well, that she could
definitely put her eyes and hands on - which means she would be
able to call you. Bottom line, don't be afraid to do something
different. Do a quick research, see what's trendy, look for
novelties. If your budget permits, get something people will not
throw away, like a USB flash pen, a promotional MP3 player, an
imprinted watch, etc.
Try to deliver your promotional products in different, creative
ways.
For instance, instead of mailing 1,000 mouse pads with your
company logo on them, have 300 or so hand delivered. Hand
delivering promo items will earn you enough business so that you
can afford to hand deliver the next 300 and so on.
Let the professionals handle it.
Hire someone specialized to advise you and develop your
promotions and promotional ideas for you. Let a design company
create your promotion and print it for you. Yes, you'll spend a
little more money upfront, but you'll have a promotion where all
the pieces and parts work together to get your message and call
to action across to your customers - which means your customers
will be more likely to call you instead of the other guy.
Remember that there is more to an effective promotion than
handing out one item.
There are pieces and parts to it. It takes a consumer an average
of six to seven times of seeing and/or hearing your promotional
message before they "get" it and take action of any kind - even
saying "no thank you". No, it's not because your target audience
is dumb, it is because they're constantly being bombarded with
marketing promotions from all sorts of businesses. Know your
target audience. If your promotion is for teens and young
adults, for example, don't give them refrigerator magnets-they
don't usually have refrigerators! At least not of their own yet.
Give them a cool key chain or CD holder, give them something
electronic, something trendy and colorful. If your target
audience is leaders of corporate America, don't give them
lottery scratchers or highlighter keychains, don't even give
them a calculator, since they have accountants dealing with
their numbers. Give them instead a nice writing set for their
desks, give them some nice executive accessory that you know
they will not be ashamed to display on their mahogany desks. And
if you are really on a budget, a nice luggage tag, a passport
holder with your company name, logo and address, or even a
promotional golf ball will do. No matter how wonderful and
unique a promotional item is, if it's given to the wrong target
audience that has no use for it, they will have no use for you.