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February 2008 Edition

When You Change The Way
You SEE tradeshows…
Tradeshows Will Change For You

I hope you had a wonderful holiday season and a prosperous 2007!

It has been a few months since I have had the opportunity to get our Newsletter out to you. I am truly excited about the 2008 year. Exhibit Options has grown leaps and bounds thanks to your support. We are continuously adapting to our client’s needs, and have found a huge demand for our Stand Off System.

We are currently traveling throughout the States and are just about to head overseas to complete the installation in multiple clients’ sales centers. You can see more of what we have done at the Exhibit Options Website. Exhibit Options is still doing Tradeshow Exhibit Sales and Rentals, and we have our online store too www.exhibitwholesale.com.


At Show Customer Appreciation Day

Keep in mind that your fellow exhibitors at shows may also be customers.

Before every show identify exhibitors who are also current customers.
Create a list that includes the company name and booth number, contact name, and the amount of money they have spent in the last year. Booth staffers should then be dispatched to personally thank these exhibiting customers for their business. Typically this should be done on one of the last days of the show when traffic is slower. Customers appreciate the gesture. And it is a proactive strategy for retaining customers.

THE CELEBRITY EXPERIENCE:
Insider Secrets to Delivering
Red-Carpet Customer Service

Years ago I read “The Nordstrom Way: The Inside Story of America’s #1 Customer Service Company” by Robert Spector and Patrick D. McCarthy, and if you haven’t you should. I still keep a copy at my desk for inspiration.

And right next to it is "The Celebrity Experience" by Donna Cutting. “The Celebrity Experience” can be best described as 'customer service on steroids'. It's a fresh and novel way of looking at how to treat customers, no matter what business you're in. The author shows the power of treating all customers as though they were "celebrities" and gives concrete (and amazingly creative) examples of businesses that are already doing so. She shows the reader how they, too, can easily implement "The Celebrity Experience" in their business, really without much cost, but with simply a new way of looking at how to view their customers.

This book is destined to set a new standard in the way businesses look at their customers!

The Advertising Research Foundation has developed a working definition
of engagement: Engagement is turning on a prospect
to a brand idea enhanced by the surrounding context.


Lessons From Warren Buffett:
Getting the CEO to (Willingly)
Write Checks for Marketing

I loved this article by Paul A. Barsch that I discovered on www.marketingprofs.com.

You can go there for the full article, but here is an excerpt…

Love them or hate them, the GEICO cavemen, along with the GEICO gecko advertisements, and the silly celebrity commercials featuring actor Verne Troyer and singer Little Richard, are here to stay. These commercials have staying power not only because they're creating awareness, driving sales, and generating internet buzz but also because Warren Buffett, CEO of Berkshire-Hathaway, loves them! (GEICO is a subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway).

In a Wall Street Journal article titled "How a Gecko Shook Up Insurance Programs", Buffett is quoted as saying, "I love the advertising. (The ad growth is) sustainable as long as I am willing to write the checks. And I love writing them."

You might want to reread that last sentence. It's profound for many reasons.
CEOs around the globe lament that marketers simply don't understand their most pressing and strategic issues. Nirmalya Kumar, in his book Marketing as Strategy, writes, "Today, many CEO's of major companies are disappointed by marketing's inability to produce measurable results. Increasingly they view their marketing department as an expense, rather than an investment." In addition, Kumar notes a study of 545 UK companies which revealed that just 18% of them rated marketing's effectiveness as better than good, whereas 36% rated it as fair to poor.
Let's argue that many CEOs see marketing as an expense, not an investment, and that the overall CEO perception of marketing isn't compelling.

Enter Warren Buffett, regarded by his peers as one of the brightest and most savvy minds in investment, business strategy, and CEO leadership. Buffett is known for the autonomy he gives to his managers, the ability to think "long term," and unparalleled skill in evaluating talent. He's also a CEO who spends a lot of money on marketing.

Realizing that advertising is just one of many ways to spend marketing dollars, GEICO fills the promotional mix with direct marketing, tele-sales, community events, internet marketing, PR, and events. Even the Gecko has his own blog! It's probably a fair assumption that Buffett likes the entire marketing mix, yet it is the memorable and impactful advertising and messaging that helps keep Buffett's checkbook open.
Want to get your CEO to open his or her checkbook more often for marketing? Here are three lessons learned from GEICO and Buffett:

1. Marketing must have a visible financial impact.
The most obvious impact for marketing should be revenue growth. In two years, GEICO has gone from 6 million to 7 million subscribers, putting it right behind industry giants like Allstate and State Farm. GEICO, as part of Berkshire-Hathaway, doesn't disclose sales numbers, but financial analysts consider it wildly profitable.

Is GEICO's subscriber growth solely due to marketing? To assume so would be silly. In addition to a great product, competitive pricing, and nationwide coverage, GEICO pays higher wages for customer service agents. But there's no denying, based on Buffet's statements, that he ties marketing to sales growth.

2. Marketing must have a visible impact on the CEO.
Does Buffett approve of cavemen in commercials, or minor celebrities dancing on tables pitching his product? It's hard to say; but the one thing we can be sure of is that Buffett has seen the commercials, probably laughed out loud, and seen the revenue impact. Buffett, if surveyed, would not be one of the CEO's concerned with the lack of marketing effectiveness at his company.

3. Marketing must be memorable.
Dan and Chip Heath talk about how some ideas are more "sticky" than others in their book Made to Stick. They say for an idea to stick it must be simple, unexpected, clear, credible, and emotional and must also tell a story.

Though GEICO marketing doesn't share all these attributes, it would be hard to argue with the simple and clear message of a "15-minute phone call could save you 15% or more on car insurance"—just as it would be tough to argue that the concept of a caveman insulted by GEICO advertising isn't pretty unexpected and doesn't break through the clutter. Moreover, the buzz from cavemen, geckos and minor celebrities pitching car insurance has reached every corner of the Internet, including the blogosphere.

PRESS RELEASES

How do you get the press to sit up and take notice of you instead of your competitors? What grabs editors and their readers?

Your release should contain actual "news" about you. Such as:

• The launch of a new product or service
• Opening of a new business, location, etc.
• Awards you or your company have won
• First to offer a particular service or product in your area
• First product to solve a common, but previously unsolvable problem
• Free seminars or booklets you are offering
• Results or a survey your company has conducted
• How you or your company helped solve a community problem
• New, unusual uses of an old product
• Donations you've made to a nonprofit group

Here are some places I highly recommend for those on a budge to increase your visibility!

1888PressRelease.com - Free distribution, paid services gives you better placement and permanent archiving.

Pr Depot- Press Release Services - For the amount of sends-outs/coverage they are still the most reasonable out here as far as prices are concerned and do a pretty good job writing a release too. (They DO submit to editors, journalists, freelance writers, magazines, TV/radio producers not just post your release online)- http://pressreleasedepot.weebly.com

24-7PressRelease.com - Free release distribution with ad-support

Free-Press-Release.com - Easy press release distribution for free, more features for paid accounts.

Free-Press-Release-Center.info - Distributes your release, offers a web page with one keyword link to your site. Pro upgrade will give you three links, and more.

Express-Press-Release.com
I-Newswire.com
PR-Inside.com
PRBuzz.com
PRCompass.com
Press-Base.com
PressAbout.com
PressMethod.com
PRLeap.com
PRLog.org
TheOpenPress.com

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