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Issue 6 > Does your marketing match your image?

Does your marketing match your image?

Patricia Fripp explains how to convince people.

If you deliver a quality product or service, your marketing materials should reflect this.

Your image, reflected by your advertising, should do two things:

  • Convince people you're worth doing business with.
  • Position you in the market.

Whether you're at the top, middle, or bottom of the price scale, your image needs to communicate that. If your image isn't consistent and compatible with your pricing and your level of service, you're going to confuse and alienate your customers.

Bill McCurry, co-author of 'Guerrilla Marketing for the Imaging Industry', told my colleague Garfinkel about the experiences of a client. This retailer visited a trade show and was attracted to a distinctive and obviously costly booth for a design firm. He asked them to send him some information. When the letter came, it was on shoddy looking stationery, sloppily typed.

The retailer decided not to do business with this firm. Although everything else had looked great, the sharp contrast between the classy booth and the shabby letter did not inspire trust that the firm would and could deliver. The design firm had spent at least $50,000 on their trade show exhibit, but didn't have the common sense to maintain a consistent image by investing in good letterhead and a competent secretary. It cost them a $100,000 contract.

If your marketing impresses your prospects and customers, is that good enough? No—besides impressing them, you must convince them. People don't buy just because they're dazzled or blown away by what they see. They buy because they're convinced that you can do the job, you can deliver the quality and value they expect, and your track record is solid.

Here are five ways to convince people with your marketing.

1 Clear information. How easily can people understand what you're saying? People don't buy when they're confused.

2 Quality information. A lot of marketers these days will send out 'free information', 'valuable information', even 'money-making information', at no charge as a small sample of what you'll get when you actually pay money.

3 Quality design and printed materials. What we call production values. In my case, that's particularly important because I'm selling 'Fripp the speaker'—a very high-quality, well-orchestrated, valuable performance. The production values in what you do and deliver must match the quality of the marketing materials you send out.

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