Are You Throwing Money Away?
Shopping for trade show giveaways can be an overwhelming
experience. One catalog is jammed with custom
printed pens, another showcases mouse pads. Your
boss mentions that last year, everyone was giving away
really nice tote bags. The sales rep really wants
you to buy keychains that can play MP3’s of your
marketing message set to popular tunes.
But what happens to all this stuff after the show?
Let’s follow one attendee, a buyer from a mid-size
manufacturing firm. Tired after spending three
days at the show, he’s returned to his office.
He’s toting two bags jam-packed with trade show
tschokes, which he upends on his desk.
All those fancy pens? They get jammed in a cup
on his desk. Mouse pads go into a general office
supply cupboard, on the off chance one of his office
staff wears their mouse pad out. That seems unlikely
– two or three are still in there from last year’s
show. His secretary snapped up the tote bag –
it’ll be perfect for her daughter to carry her
ballet clothes in. And the MP3 playing keychain?
He’s giving it to his teenage son.
But what’s this? A booklet slides out of
his tote bag. It’s small – just 3
1⁄2 x 8 1⁄2, somewhere between 16-24 pages.
It fits perfectly in his pocket – or in a purse,
as he discovers when he hands it over to one of his
co-workers. The information contained in the slender
volume – tips, techniques, and strategies all
related to your products and services -- is just too
good to keep to himself.
Of all the trade show giveaways, only the booklet has
done its job. Without being overpowering, it has
educated the buying public about your products and kept
your company name and logo in view. When the buyer
needs to make a purchase, he’ll think back to
what he read in your booklet – and he’ll
know exactly who to call.
Giving out booklets heightens your company’s credibility
as an expert in the industry. When prospects read
your information, they perceive you as knowledgeable.
Booklets also clearly signal that you’re interested
in pursuing a business relationship. Giving away
coffee mugs signals that you hope your prospect enjoys
his morning joe.
Booklets offer a lot of bang for the buck. Anyone
in an industry who is selling or exhibit ing at a trade
show is a candidate for using booklets as a promotional
tool. They are very cost effective. A company
can create their own booklets, have someone else produce
them, or purchase someone else’s booklet on a
topic of interest for their audience and have their
contact information printed on. No matter
what method you choose, booklets simply don’t
cost much to produce. They also don’t have
an ‘expiration’ date. One print run
can easily and effectively carry you through the show
season and be integrated in other sales & marketing
efforts.
To get the most use out of your booklets, be sure to
pack them full of common sense, grass roots, basic,
practical, how-to information. Your customers
won’t turn to a booklet for dry, theoretical information,
so don’t waste time and money printing up journal
articles. Keep it current, relevant, and important.
Address everyday concerns in your industry. Sometimes
the silver bullet answer everyone wants turns out to
be information that is known but simply forgotten.
The booklet serves as a reminder and reinforces your
position as an expert in the field.
Once you have produced your booklet, you can often find
other organizations that can benefit from it.
Selling booklets – to your distributors, for example
– can not only help recoup your production costs,
but actually generate new revenue while continually
marketing your own company.
Other ideas to consider include direct mail campaigns
or licensing the rights to your booklet to another company.
If you license the rights, you grant the client specific,
limited production rights to the booklet manuscript
that your company owns. Successful booklets often
have to be translated into several languages to meet
market demand.
Prospects for your booklets include the vendors, suppliers,
and manufacturers in your own industry. Each is
a marketing niche, with individual, specialized needs.
Approach them in a common sense way. These booklets
provide solutions to many of their problems!
Last and definitely not least, distributing booklets
helps you garner a better ROI on your tradeshow participation
Some industries, such as the pharmaceutical industry,
are now making a concerted effort to pull back on money
spent on excessively expensive and inappropriate giveaways
with educational value. A booklet is perfect in
these situations because is helps you create better-qualified
leads. This in turn leads to larger sales over
a longer period of time with well-educated clients.
When your company makes one more sale because someone
reads the booklet you gave them, the investment of purchasing
or creating the booklet pays off handsomely. Buyers
are far more likely to make a purchase based upon information
they’ve read than upon any number of fancy-printed
pens – even if they write with sparkly gel ink!
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