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Advertising
vs. PR in Your Small Business Marketing
Strategy |
by:
J
D Moore |
Copyright
2005 J D Moore
A great small business marketing strategy
includes a mix of tactics. Advertising and
PR are two very important tools that all
small business owners need to be using regularly.
Many small businesses I talk to do one of
the other, but don't commit to doing both.
Each has its strengths and weaknesses and
are complimentary to each other.
Small Business Advertising Strengths:
-The biggest advantage with small business
advertising is your complete control over
the message. You get to focus on whatever
you want, write the text, and choose the
visuals. You ensure that your marketing
message is delivered.
-You control placement. You choose the exact
timing and media in which your advertising
is placed. This is a huge advantage because
naturally you are going to choose to place
your ads where your target market is most
likely to see them.
-You can repeat your messages over and over
again. Effective small business marketing
incorporates a high degree of repetition
and consistency. Advertising can and should
be run on regular schedules.
-With advertising, you (and your budget)
control your marketing saturation. You can
run the same ad across different publications
serving the same market, run matching Internet
advertising, put an ad on the radio, do
cable TV, do outdoor advertising, etc. Ideally
you need to be reaching your target market
at least 4 different ways for them to respond.
Advertising Weaknesses
-Advertising generally costs money. Most
small businesses don't have a huge budget
for marketing. Sometimes being creative
can help defray costs. Sometimes you can
trade for advertising space. You may be
able to do co-op advertising.
-Small business advertising needs to be
very targeted to be effective. Sometimes
the only choices you have in your community
are mass-market like newspapers. You still
need to advertise, but some of your marketing
dollars will be spent to advertise to people
who don't want or need what you're selling.
-Most small business advertising stinks.
I hate to say it, but it's true. Many do-it-yourself
advertisers don't understand that there
are advertising fundamentals that work.
A good ad will always out-pull a bad one.
Here's my plug: If you can't invest the
time and money to learn how advertising
REALLY works, get yourself a small business
marketing coach to help you build more effective
campaigns. It will be money well invested.
PR Strengths:
-It's FREE! OK, you might incur a very small
charge if you hire someone to write and
distribute a press release for you, but
this is minimal. I think the reason why
most small businesses don't do PR is that
they don't know how it's done. Again, get
some coaching, or pay someone to do it for
you.
-Press is trusted more than advertising.
If you read a review that says that a new
restaurant is the best thing in town, there's
some credibility there. We tend to assume
that a person who is writing an article
is an expert, and that they are an uninterested
third party.
-You can distribute PR globally. As long
as what you are doing is actually interesting
globally, you can distribute your press
releases globally. This isn't necessarily
as targeted as your advertising needs to
be, but you're not paying for editorial.
By the way, never pay for editorial, and
don't advertise with media that promises
to give you editorial as long as you advertise.
This is unethical and transparent - and
the credibility of the media will always
be in question.
PR Weaknesses:
-You have no control over what the press
is actually going to write or say about
you. They may spell your name wrong, they
may get some details wrong, they may choose
to focus on something you don't want to
highlight. In general this isn't a big issue,
as long as they are saying good things about
you.
-PR tends to be single exposure. Unless
circumstances are really unusual, the press
is not going to run the same story over
and over again. I have been involved with
an exception to that. I was doing something
that corresponded with a current event and
the press came to me again and again over
4 weeks for TV interviews. This was pure
timing. It's difficult to engineer press
like that without seeming mercenary.
-There is no guarantee that you're even
going to get coverage. I was called to do
a TV interview once and rushed into the
city to meet the reporter and photographer.
On my way in ,the reporter called me on
my cell phone to tell me they were pulling
the story because there was breaking news
that they had to go cover. Depending on
what's going on you may get tons of press
or none at all.
You see that small business advertising
and PR are different things. You need them
both, and you need to work at both of them
consistently. They are two important tools
in your small business marketing toolbox.
About the author:
J D Moore - Marketing Comet Does your small
business marketing stink? Let's fix it!
http://marketingcomet.typepad.com
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