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"Next to doing the right thing, the most important thing is to let people know you are doing the right thing.” - John D. Rockefeller

 

I've been asked this question more than a few times lately:

 

John Rich

“How can I run a travel program in this economy” It is often followed by…”We are laying people off, how can we take customers on vacation when we are laying people off?” Or…”My customers are doing less business, so how can they qualify for a trip?”


Good questions and taken for face value, a travel promotion seems unlikely. But let’s examine what a travel promotion is, and what it is not, and define the purpose for travel and see whether travel fits your marketing plans.


First of all, travel is not a vacation, and it is never an expense if done correctly. It is a service and designed to drive sales and pay for itself. Example: You have counter service; why? Because without counter service you would miss out on a lot of business. There is a cost to offering a counter staffed by trained personnel, but you expect to gain enough profit through sales at the counter to pay the expense and send profits to the bottom line. If your counter doesn’t make a profit, why do you have a counter?


Another example: you deliver. Delivery costs money, but you have found you’ll be more profitable if you deliver than if you don’t deliver. Services like delivery and a counter and every other service you offer are really investments, not costs, they are investments in sales designed to produce profits. So is travel.


Don’t think of travel as a vacation; ask any manager who’s been on his/her companies travel program and he or she will tell you he needed a vacation after returning from 5 days of entertaining his best customers. It is hard work. Instead think of travel as any other service you offer; a service with the goal of driving sales. You wouldn’t cut out delivery or credit or your counter in tough times, and you shouldn’t cut out travel either as it may be the most powerful sales incentive in your entire marketing arsenal.

Travel done correctly is built around driving sales, and you are in a selling business. If your mindset is: “we need to motivate customers to buy from us and 4 nights in Mexico next January will motivate these specific customers.” Then the only question is how to make it pay for itself?

 

Now think of travel as part of the cost of doing business, or better yet an investment in sales. And then determine what percentage of the sale can be invested to drive more sales. Think of it this way, if a rebate of $2000 would motivate a customer to give you $100,000 in business, and that is a substantial increase over what you would get without the rebate; simply replace rebate with a $2000 trip instead. A travel program will have way more “wow factor” than a rebate, is harder for your competitor to compete with than a rebate, and offers the added benefit of spending several days and nights with your customer under ideal circumstances building a solid relationship.

 

Looked at this way travel is a no brainer. Just think of each individual customer as a profit center, and determine how much of an investment is required to gain a particular amount of business from that customer. Forget about what he bought over the last 10 years, think about this year and how much business you want from that profit center this year, and what are you willing to “rebate” or invest in travel to get that business.

 

When you take the “vacation” aspect out, when you remove the 100 people times $2000 each = $200,000 and just think of each customer as a profit center; and you are going to invest a specific amount of money in each customer to drive a specific amount of business, it is easier to see the benefit and the profits driven from travel.

 

 

 

 

 

John Rich

john@thegragroup.com  440.328.8587

 

Have Marketing Questions?

 

Ask the president of The GRA Group, John Rich, your marketing questions and become more informed. Starting with this newsletter we will pick two or three submitted questions, and post them, with the answer, in an upcoming newsletter. Just click on the link below to submit your question.

 

 

Testimonial For Using The GRA Group

 

The GRA Group is a company that cares. Their employees are genuine people and are professional in every way. As we all know, a company IS the employees. Everyone in every department is caring, efficient and will go the extra mile. I have been their customer for over 5 years, and they have helped me get my message out to my customers in a very creative, professional style.

 

You will not find a company who cares more. I highly recommend The GRA Group.

 

Jodi Saladucha

Vice President, Swift Electrical Supply

 

 

Jodi Saladucha

 

It is our pleasure to announce that

Matt Johnson from Etna Supply Company

in Grand Rapids, MI is the winner for two (2)

roundtrip airline tickets for travel in the

contiguous 48 states. Matt's name was entered

into this drawing for completing our survey this past

summer along with dozens of other participants.

Congratulations Matt, enjoy your trip!

Watch for upcoming opportunities to participate

in our surveys. Your input is greatly appreciated

 

Get Your Customers’ Attention With Direct Mail!

 

During slower economic times, everyone makes cuts in what is deemed non-essential operations.  Companies are cost conscious, and are looking for the most effective way to get their customers’ attention in order to promote their goods and services.

 

In the recent issue of Deliver Magazine Rod DeVar, discusses six ways that direct mail will thrive in the New Year. According to Rod, direct mail has been — and will continue to be — a viable, effective marketing tool.

Here's Why:

 

It’s a strong acquisition tool. Marketers like paying lower prices to search for new customers online, but they’re often disappointed when these folks don’t stick around. That’s because targeting new acquisitions online is much less precise than sending a mail piece to prospects you know will likely be repeat purchasers.

 

Technology continues to improve. Variable data printing is letting marketers acknowledge

customers as individuals. Not only will more marketers take advantage of it, those already using it will get smarter about their applications by using customer data to better track relationships and tailor content as wants and needs change. That’s important because increased personalization makes direct mail more relevant to the end user.

 

Newspapers are suffering. As newspaper circulation dwindles, it will spur a significant migration to the mail by those marketers (particularly retailers) that need to reach a high number of people in a very targeted geographic location.

 

Content marketing is on the rise. Transpromotion and custom publishing are delivering marketing messages in more personal and relevant ways, with information woven right in the content — a plus for both marketers and recipients. Custom publishing continues strong growth because consumers like the quality, and with transpromotion the senders of statements and bills can include marketing messages that connect with how the customer is using their services.

 

Clean lists are eco-friendly. As marketers continue to address list hygiene, they’ll be mailing more efficiently. Not only will that deliver a better return, it also is good for the planet because the number of wasteful pieces will decline.

 

Mail will be even easier to track. More marketers will begin using the Intelligent Mail® barcode, a new Postal Service™ barcode used to sort and track letters and flats.  With it, they’ll be receiving more detailed information than ever on how and when their direct mail is being delivered, as well as how customers are responding.

 

You have a story to tell, now is the time to tell it. Your story may be about your Technical

Support Team, your Delivery Service, your 24-hour emergency hotline, your Customer Service

Reps, your Credit Options, your extensive inventory, years of service, branch locations, a new product launch, collective knowledge and expertise to name a few. Your story is what brings your customers and prospects to you, as opposed to the competition.

 

The bottom line is, tell your story in a manner that will not only be heard but understood in a more effective manner than your competition. The GRA Group is ready to help you get your story to the people that need to hear it.

 

Tim Merriman

Solutions Provider

tim@thegragroup.com  440.328.8595

 

 
 
 

Thoughts for living a good life – A Handbook for 2010

 

Health:

 

1. Drink plenty of water.

2. Eat breakfast like a king, lunch like a prince and dinner like a beggar.

3. Eat more foods that grow on trees and plants and eat less food that is manufactured in plants.

4. Live with the 3 E’s — Energy, Enthusiasm, and Empathy.

5. Make time to practice meditation, yoga, and prayer.

6. Play more games.

7. Read more books than you did in 2009.

8. Sit in silence for at least 10 minutes each day.

9. Sleep for 7 hours.

10. Take a 10-30 minute walk every day. And while you walk, smile.

 

Personality:

 

11. Don’t compare your life to others’. You have no idea what their journey is all about.

12. Don’t have negative thoughts or things you cannot control. Instead, invest your energy in the    positive present moment.

13. Don’t overdo. Keep your limits.

14. Don’t take yourself so seriously. No one else does.

15. Don’t waste your precious energy on gossip.

16. Dream more while you are awake.

17. Envy is a waste of time. You already have all you need.

18. Forget issues of the past. Don’t remind your partner of his/her mistakes of the past. That will ruin  your present happiness.

19. Life is too short to waste time hating anyone. Don’t hate others. Negative emotions drain you of energy.

20. Make peace with your past, so it won’t spoil the present.

21. No one is in charge of your happiness except you.

22. Realize that life is a school, and you are here to learn. Problems are simply part of the curriculum that appear and fade away like algebra class but the lessons you learn will last a lifetime.

23. Smile and laugh more.

24. You don’t have to win every argument. Agree to disagree.

 

Society:

 

25. Call your family often.

26. Each day give something good to others.

27. Forgive and you will feel healed.

28. Spend time with people over the age of 70 & under the age of 6.

29. Try to make at least three people smile each day.

30. What other people think of you is none of your business.

31. Your job won’t take care of you when you are sick. Your friends will. Stay in touch.

 

Life:

 

32. Do the right thing!

33. Get rid of anything that isn’t useful, beautiful or joyful.

34. GOD heals everything.

35. However good or bad a situation is, it WILL change.

36. No matter how you feel, get up, dress up and show up.

37. The best is yet to come.

38. When you awake alive in the morning, thank GOD for it.

39. Your Inner most is always happy. So, be happy.

40. Spend time each day with God in His word.

 

Originally posted from Andrews Mortuary http://andrewsmortuary.com/blog/?p=41

 

April 2, 2009

 

 

 

 

 

 

Turn Your Business Card into a powerful selling tool.

 

Whether you keep yours in one of those shiny

flip-top cases, in the custom pocket of your

go-to-meeting folder (with built-in calculator) or

curled at the edges in your wallet, your business

card is the one selling tool that you need the most

to make an impression at the start of a business

relationship.

 

It’s a compact advertising billboard for your business and it’s inexpensive to produce. But, are you taking full advantage of it to maximize its selling potential?

 

Here’s a simple test. Take five business cards from your file and place them face down on your desk next to yours. What do you see? Nothing? Or does one of these cards fill the empty space with helpful information about product lines, services, branch office phone numbers or even a tagline. (E.g. “Electrical wiring experts since electrical wiring was invented.”)

 

If you have already done this, then you are way ahead of the game. If not, then it’s time to make use of that blank space with some useful information that can help customers learn more about who you are

and what you provide so they can choose you over the competition.

 

The next time you are reprinting those business cards, think about taking advantage of the other side. With today’s printing technologies, printing on two sides is still an economical way to add an extra promotional punch to your selling.

 

– "Denny the Brand Guy"

From Denny Pavan, President & CEO

BFL Marketing Communications, Inc.

 

Denny Pavan

dpavan@bflcom.com  216.539.2720

 

 

 

Please visit us at our website:  www.thegragroup.com