Marketing dental supplies

Why Your Marketing Should “Get” Social Media

Are you one of those who still don’t get the whole social-media-for-business thing? Or do you just wade in occasionally at water’s edge with a tweet here or a post there because your marketing director said, “We need to get into social media…!”

Frankly, it’s difficult to argue with all the data when you consider that…

  • Facebook now has around 500 million users!
  • Forrester Research estimates that companies will spend $935,000,000 on social media marketing this year! By 2012 they’ll spend $1,649,000,000. By 2014 they’ll spend $3,113,000,000!
  • Web writer and social media advocate, Rebecca Matter, says, “Social media is now mainstream, and it’s growing fast. It’s where the action is, where the money is flowing, and most definitely where the future lies.”

Convinced or not about it’s value to your marketing approaches, perhaps the following will “tip” you over the edge to take some action…now!

User familiarity is increasing daily.

It’s not uncommon to hear the phrase “Facebook me” when requesting information from a friend or colleague. Just this week I told someone they could “message me on Facebook.” In addition to “call me” or “email me” it’s not uncommon for business to be conducted over a direct message via Twitter or Facebook.

According to Nick Usborne, online copywriter and experienced social media expert, “Many millions of users never leave Facebook. They never visit a traditional website. Besides connecting with friends, they use Facebook to browse, shop, and make purchases directly on a company’s Facebook page.”

It now makes sense that asking a client, patient, or prospect to “Like” your Facebook page is another vote for your services. It’s a much more portable referral source to share a Facebook page link than it is to fumble for a misplaced business card.

Imagine a significant number of “Likes” appearing to a potential client when they land on your website and are directed to your Facebook page. That’s a referral source any way you log it!

It’s how people are engaging.

Enagagement, as it’s often called in social media context, is another form of trust-building. We contact people to discover if they’re legit. We do business with those we come to trust.

Engagement over social media can give you a faster track to trust. Not to make light of the value of time-tested trust development but with the options available in your market niche can you afford not to have your expertise accessible to current and prospective clients?

You appear up to date.

These days, one of the first things many notice (and certainly what they look for) is evidence of social media on your website or marketing collateral. A Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and YouTube link tells them you’re current. And once they click over to your Facebook page or subscribe to your Twitter feed there’s a better chance they’ll keep you front-of-mind when they need your services.

Social-ability challenges traditional advertising.

Do you know where Ford launched its new Explorer? Not at a major car show. The launch was on Facebook!

Comcast doesn’t handle customer service the traditional way (over the phone). They do it through Twitter.

Thinking about printing and distributing flyers door-to-door? Think again and do what countless local retailers are doing through Groupon.

Major brands are taking notice too! Standards like Old Spice are no longer depending on old media for branding. They’re doing it through YouTube.

Nick Usborne confirms, “There are hundreds of social media sites now, and thousands of services created to monitor, analyze, and optimize the use of social media as a means to connect with new customers, engage existing customers, and even make direct sales.”

Social media will give your business-to-business marketing an advantage if you…

  • Embrace it! Don’t ignore it.
  • Learn to engage more than you promote.
  • Use it as your annual marketing benchmark.
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How to give your products & services “blockbuster” status

The summer movie season is almost here. Has me thinking about what most blockbuster movies have in common.

And it’s the same reason excellent marketing and outstanding copywriting draws you in.

I’m talking about the plot or story-line that keeps you riveted as the story unfolds. A well-crafted story-line drifts (ever so slightly) back and forth. Just when you’re feeling carried to another seemingly disconnected place…the plot reappears…drawing you back into the story once again.

Marketing copy compares to the story you’re telling about your business, product, or service. How well you keep your target audience engaged, buying, and doing business with you tells whether they’re riveted as your story unfolds.

Keep ‘em compelled and first-time, front-end clients or customers will become repeat, back-end ones time and again.

This is traceable to a significant element of your marketing-story. Like the plot or story-line of great cinema this is a key within your marketing copy.

It’s your USP…

I’m talking about the Unique Selling Proposition of your business, service, or product.

(Back to the movie analogy) Ever sat through *flick* and thought – this plot seems a lot like… (the movie you saw last year). What’s missing or vague is the UNIQUE story-line that would earn it top box-office.

What I enjoy and am challenged by as a copywriter is exploring deep beneath the surface of my client’s services and discovering their USP. What is it about *Product/Service A* that reeeeeally makes it unique…unlike all the rest in the same or similar industry?

Distinguishing yourself from the crowd sends bigger waves of opportunity flowing your way. Otherwise, you’re merely creating ads, promotions, website content, etc. and all the blah-blah-blah that goes with it. And remember people don’t invest time or money for “blah.”

Here’s how to develop your U-nique story-line – do this and exploit it within your marketing copy.

1>Spotlight your *Feature Presentation*

Sit down to write about your business, product, or service and you’ll naturally and reflexively begin with features. Feature focus is easy because we’re accustomed to spotlighting them.

After all, you see yourself as the newest…biggest…brightest…sexiest…boldest…fastest…and any other *est* that applies. The problem with stopping there (please don’t) and spinning out your promotional copy based mostly on features is that there are others convinced their *est* is better than your *est*.

If you really want to command attention…

2>Promote your edge-of-the-seat *Benefits*

Here’s where the plot thickens. Telling your market about your features – mostly – stops short of the real juicy details that’ll compel them to do business with you, use your services, or buy your products.

Remember you’re unique. So…list all the benefits you can think of. If you’ve developed the fastest this-or-that (feature) get to the core of what you’ll promote (benefits) by asking and answering the question *which means…?* for every feature you spotlight.

Try this. Fill in the following blank with your business, product, or service – “We provide the fastest (or other feature oriented word) ______ which means… (how does providing the *fastest, etc.* lead to a benefit for your client or customer?). Do this for enough listed features and you’ll arrive at your USP (Unique Selling Proposition)…then promote the heck out of it!

And you’ll potentially…

3>Secure *Repeat* status

Not all great movie story-lines have a sequel in them. In fact some excellent box-office films took a nosedive when their sequel was released.

On the other hand, businesses thrive on sequel after sequel. I’m talking about *repeat business or sales*.

Every new or re-purposed product secures its repeat status when its USP is promoted to the hilt. And it’s a process worth repeating – spotlight features…promote benefits (USP)…position yourself for repeat business.

Bottom line: when the credits roll how’s your business story being told?

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The Voice and your copywriting tone

The Voice is an NBC prime time television series that features musical superstars Christina Aguilera, Cee Lo Green, Blake Shelton, and Adam Levine (of Maroon Five) as judges. Each selected their team of vocalists from a parade of vocal talent. The catch – they initially listened to them sing with their backs turned to them, only focusing on the contestant’s voice.

Think about it, we listen to radio, a download, or an album in much the same way. We hear the voice without seeing the singer.

I admit, sometimes when I’m watching American Idol I’ll close my eyes as the competitor sings. Focusing on their voice instead of their presentation reveals something about their talent.

Voice connects. And it’s the starting point for effective copywriting.

Voice is the tone, attitude, or style chosen to communicate the message. It’s how you focus and evaluate your marketing content.

Is your voice clear to your target audience? Can readers hear your voice over the noise of other competitors? Does the presentation/packaging hide your voice?

And such an evaluation begs the deeper question – what IS my voice and how do I choose IT? I’ll make it easy by suggesting one voice that works.

Direct response copywriter, Paul Hollingshead, suggests…

“Imagine the person you’re writing to. Picture him or her as a friend.”

Writing to a friend is entirely different than keeping it strictly business. The error many make in the first sentence is taking on a formal…corporate voice.

Here’s how to use a friend-to-friend copywriting voice:

Be conversational.

Write like you talk. People appreciate and relate best to everyday language.

Keep it casual.

The goal of marketing is the sale. But keep in mind that people don’t like the idea of being sold. Copywriting should engage emotions.

And speaking of emotions…

Connect emotionally.

One of the fundamental rules of selling, according to Michael Masterson, is “people buy for emotional not rational reasons.” As a dental supplier…dental marketer that means people are more interested in the emotional benefits of the latest teeth whitening product than they are the “latest…greatest” features you’re promoting!

Find your voice and your market will listen!

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Is your marketing copy directionally-challenged?

My daughter had missed a turnpike exit. She called me frantic about what to do next. I knew. And I could picture her location from years of driving the same route.

But what I knew and what she was experiencing were two very different things. She: panic…OMG…! Me: “it’s okay…take a deep breath…I’ll get you home…!”

Frustration meets panic when you’re without clear direction. The signs are clear to one who understands them or who has experience with the territory in question.

Trust the signs and you’ll get where you’re going. If the signs are unclear or you’re clueless about where the heck you are – the destination’s an afterthought. Welcome to Lost-ville!

If you want copywriting that compels your dental industry prospects to buy you must have a clear story line.

Michael Masterson calls it “the power of one.” Pick a path. Stay with it. Know where you’re going.

I write best when I follow a thread of thought or a story theme. Imagine the proverbial path of bread crumbs leading to a house where there’s the offer of plenty!

Be clear in your marketing copy.

Just because it’s creative doesn’t guarantee it will bring a prospect home. There are creative ways to get lost and miss the destination completely! The path was fun but now it’s dark and you’re not sure where you are.

This adds clarity to your marketing message:

1) Know where you’re going before you start – you’ll miss what you don’t aim for…everytime!

Remember, it’s vital to identify WHO your prospect is. And then identify WHAT core feelings or emotions you’ll stimulate with the copywriting.

2) Be clear about how to get there – with more than one way to go…pick one path and stick to it!

Rambling content loses the prospect. Sure, creative content might be good eye-candy and win an award or two. But how clear are the benefits to the one reading…seeing it? And benefits lead to sales!

Clarify the big promise of your marketing promotion! A promised benefit that captures understands and captures a prospect’s emotions is worth more to your bottom-line.

3) Picture familiar landmarks along the way – connect with what’s relevant…meaningful…memorable.

Again, this confirms how well you know your prospect and where the copywriting will take them.

Irrelevant content – words that miss the market’s core emotions – hinders connection. It’s like talking and no one’s listening.

If you want to bring your prospect “home,” communicate clearly and compellingly. If they need a GPS to read your dental marketing promotion they’re already lost!

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