Can your business sell its products to other businesses using a mail-order
catalog? Probably. And make a profit? Maybe, as long as you follow some proven
guidelines. Here are a few of them.
Niche and grow rich
Your catalog needs to fill a specific void in the market. All of the
successful business-to-business (B2B) catalogs target a narrow slice of a larger
market. In the home workshop marketplace, U.S. General Supply sells tools, nuts
and bolts. In the business products marketplace, Chiswick sells packaging
supplies. If you try to produce a catalog that sells everything to everyone, you
will sell nothing to anyone. You need a niche.
One way to niche
If your current catalog sells many products to many audiences, consider
producing a mini-catalog that sells just one line of products (laptops, for
example) or that sells multiple products to just one audience (laptops, desktops
and servers to banks, for example.
Target the decision makers
In B2B catalog sales, you are often selling to more than one person. Often,
someone influences the buying decision, another person authorizes the purchase
and yet another person places the order. Make sure your copy meets the unique
needs of each audience that your catalog must reach.
Use even prices to suggest premium quality
Murray Raphel, in the book 2,239 Tested Secrets for Direct Marketing
Success, says even prices suggest higher quality. I agree. You don