Dollar Marketing Ideas

The Ultimate, NO B.S, NO Holds Barred, Kick Butt, Take NO Prisoners Blog On Marketing Your Business For A Dollar

Welcome Back from Greg. Glad to see you back. If you haven't grabbed my 7 Free videos on mastering online marketing, Grab Them Now. Thanks for visiting us again!

In tough times you need to be more creative if you want to get your business noticed. Here’s some creative ideas that’ll get you noticed.

Increase visibility in your community.
Join local organizations that provide business networking opportunities, or start your own. Do volunteer work for a large charity. You’d be surprised at the marketing support such activities can bring.

Participate in online marketing groups.
Search Twitter and other social-networking sites for groups meeting to discuss marketing. Other forums in your business niche can be found at www.big-boards.com

Submit information to blogs.
Blog writers are always looking for content for their sites. Target appropriate ones and send them press releases or descriptive e-mails. Visit www.dollarmarketingideas.com for low cost marketing ideas.

Reward existing customers.
Offer an exclusive incentive to your regular customers—only your regular customers. Notify them via e-mail or other contact methods, and direct them to an otherwise inaccessible page on your Web site where the offer appears. Send them a card and or gift. Here’s a company that really delivers www.dollarmarketingtips.com

Get your customers to bring in new customers.
Offer an incentive like a discount to customers who get a new customer to make a transaction with your business.

Spruce up your Web site.
Stale sites don’t attract business. Fresh, frequently updated Web sites show your customers you’re a vibrant and active business. Let users subscribe to get update notices, then update frequently.

Provide free, helpful information to your customers.
Such content should be related to your type of business and can include tips, hints, reviews, and other information that can help drive sales. For example, a business selling paint can provide a guide to selecting the best paint for different uses. Such informative content is often available from suppliers. Use it.

Offer your noncompeting business customers a link exchange.
A link exchange is much like a bulletin board at your business that holds your customers’ business cards. The more links your business has to its Web site, the better your search engine placement, and the greater the number of people who see your business’s links, the more will visit you.

Use downtime for marketing.
When times are slow, keep employees busy contacting customers. Create e-mail marketing documents your employees can send to individual customers. Personal contact with customers gets results. Mass e-mails are less effective and, given today’s e-mail spam filters, may not be seen by many. Go for quality contacts rather than quantity.

Visit your own Web site frequently.
Look for ways it can be improved. Too often, small business Web sites load slowly, are poorly organized, and are difficult to navigate. Fix bottlenecks that impede customers and look for ways to get customers to act. Make sure all links work and lead to up-to-date content. Test campaigns with printable coupons and other incentives.

Get active in the online community.
Encourage employees to do the same. Don’t spam discussion forums or other social sites, but don’t be afraid to use signature lines containing links to your Web site. Establish common-sense rules for yourself and your employees regarding these social-networking and discussion sites, and always strive to be positive and helpful on them.

Check out your suppliers’ Web sites thoroughly.
Add links on your site to informative and helpful content on those sites. Many corporate sites offer instructional videos and other material that can inform your customers and lead them back to you, ready to do business.

Get a toll-free phone number.
It makes you look more professional and encourages business—and the fees aren’t as high as you might think.

Launch a blog on your site and update it daily.
Nothing reads “I don’t care” like a blog whose most recent entry is days old. Assign this task to employees who can write and spell—an illiterate blog is worse than no blog at all. Introduce people to your company and its staff. Highlight products. Run contests and give away company swag. Announce specials and upcoming product-line changes. Establish a “customer-of-the-month” tradition and do regular write-ups. Surely there’s something you can say to your customers daily.

Yes, use Facebook and Twitter.
Having a Facebook page may not earn you any new business, but not having one may cause customers to ask why you don’t. Take some good pictures of your offices and your employees (unless you’d rather leave those details to your customers’ imaginations), or, in some fashion, put a more human face on your company identity. Twitter is a young technology, and everyone’s scrambling to figure out useful applications. In the meantime, let your customers at least follow you, and implement a strategy similar to what you’re using in your blog. In 140 characters, that is.

Visit online marketing sites.
Dollar Marketing Ideas is an excellent site, with plenty of useful tips. The suggestions here cost little or nothing to implement, and will likely lead you to resources you might never have thought of on your own.

Never surrender.
Getting new and potential customers to notice you is an ongoing—and sometimes uphill—battle, and one you can’t ever stop fighting. Pick a new idea every week or two and implement it, no matter how small it is. Call a meeting of employees, order a pizza for lunch, and brainstorm; offer an incentive for ideas you implement. Before long, your marketing might just pay off in new sales—and happier, more involved customers.

But if you really want to get more customers in less time for under $1, there’s only 1 system I’ve found that truly works. Click here.



Hasn’t the year flown! It feels like yesterday that we were sitting down with family and friends for Xmas dinner and now it’s just 69 days before we’ll be doing it all again.

So now’s the time to start preparing your Xmas card list. Who’s been good, who’s off the list and what new friends, business associates,business prospects and customers need to be added.

Now that your list is coming together how are you going to let these people know you care about them at Christmas.

Are you going to send an email,e-card or a real card?

The first two are quick and easy but very impersonal. You’re definately sending a message of “you don’t mean much to me” as well as displaying your cheapskate nature.

Physical Christmas cards are better but they take effort. You’ve got to go to the card supplier or newsagent, look through hundreds of cards, read each message, select some and then fork out a kings ransom to buy them. You are going to buy something decent, aren’t you? I mean you’re not thinking of going to some trash n carry store and buying a $2 card for your best friends and business customers, are you?

Surely not for those customers who put thousands and possibly hundreds of thousands of dollars into your company’s profit barrel each year, which in turn pays you some hefty commissions.

Tell me you’re not thinking of doing that, are you?

Good. Now once you’ve got your cards home, it’s time to pull out your list and start writing. Now it doesn’t have to be much because the card company has filled most of the card with a heart felt message like “Merry Christmas and Happy New Year”. Wouldn’t it be nice to have your own personal message? Reserved for the rich and famous you think? Not really. But more on that later.

Once you’ve taken a full day of your weekend (when will you ever get a break?) writing and addressing these cards (and isn’t it a pain to find everybody’s address. Wouldn’t it be nice to have them all in one place?), you have to go to the post office to get the stamps and post the cards.

And isn’t it amazing how the que at the post office is always extremely long and more so around Christmas.

Sending Christmas cards is a very painful experience BUT it can be very worthwhile especially for your business customer relations. (as well as telling your friends you really care)

Here’s the 7 Etiquette Rules Of Sending Greeting Cards:

1) Send the real thing! e-Cards are entirely too common, and rarely show the attention to detail that sending a real card demonstrates.

2) Personalize it! Never limit yourself to the message that came in the card. Always add your own personal touch or flair. And stay away from your company card. Sounds like you are plugging something.

3) Never use address labels for the recipient, or metered postage. Use a stamp and handwrite or type the envelope.

4) When complimenting someone in your card, be specific with them about what it is you like about them. Don’t just say you’re a good person, be more specific (example: ‘I like having you as a friend because you take a sincere interest in the things that matter to me!’).

5) Make sending cards a habit instead of an occasional afterthought. You’ll find your relationships will grow as you express yourself to the people that matter to you.

6) Don’t wait for special occasions to send a card. Holidays and birthdays are great, but an unexpected card for no particular reason can have a great impact too!

7) Don’t print it, stuff and send it yourself. Let us do that for you!

Did you like that last point?

What if you could select a high quality card, personalise it and send it to all your friends and customers WITHOUT leaving your office desk.

You merely login to the software on your computer, select a card, write your own heart felt message, select your customer/friend and hit send.

Our company then physically prints your card, places it in an envelope including your return address, puts on the stamp and posts it!

And all for less than the cost of a cup of coffee. In fact most of our customers can do it for under $1.

Want to find out more, please visit Custom Christmas Cards 

But hurry there’s just 69 days to Christmas. Make this Christmas memorable for those you care about.

69 Days To Christmas – Don’t Forget Your Customers

You may think that you just need to have a network of people who know who you are and what you do. True to a point, but more importantly you need to have a network of people who like you and trust you! The deeper the relationship you build with your past, present, and prospective clients, as well as other personal and business contacts, the more referrals you will get! In a nutshell; the amount of referrals you get is directly proportional to the level of trust and affection people feel for you.

Many of the greatest referral marketers of all time urge business people to start a habit of sending out sincere greeting and thank you cards.

Car Salesman Joe Girard

Joe was named by the Guinness Book of World Records as the Greatest Salesman in the World, because for twelve consecutive years he sold more cars than anyone in the world! He simply sent heart-felt, hand-written thank you cards to everyone in his network of customers and contacts. ALL of Joe’s business came from referrals! Many of the greatest referral marketers of all time urge business people to start a habit of sending out sincere cards.

Harvey Mackay says;

Harvey Mackay says; “Short handwritten cards yield long results. In sales, never underestimate the importance of the personal gesture, and right at the top of the list of effective personal gestures sits the handwritten card. Always send memorable cards and personal notes when you are reminded of a person.” . . . Harvey is the author of two New York Times #1 bestsellers. According to the New York Times his books are among the top 15 inspirational business books of all time.

Tom Hopkins writes;

“Because I understood that building relationships is what selling is all about, I began early in my career to send thank you cards to people. I set a goal to send ten thank you cards every day. Guess what happened? By the end of my third year in sales, my business was 98% referrals!” Tom Hopkins is a sales legend and is recognized world-wide as a master sales trainer.

Author and Networking Guru Bob Burg teaches;

“Thank you cards are one of the most powerful tools in building a huge network, both professionally and socially. People with the most impressive networks are typically avid card writers. It’s one of the best techniques for long-term winning without intimidation. I suggest getting into the habit of immediately sending out cards”. Mr. Burg (Endless Referrals: Network Your Everyday Contacts Into Sales) has long been the authority on connecting with clients and building win-win relationships.

Realtor Danielle Kennedy now lectures;

“Write customers personal, handwritten cards frequently. If you run into an old customer anywhere, follow up with a handwritten card. In this electronic communication age of email, the handwritten card with a postage stamp gets more immediate attention than ever”. Danielle Kennedy proved herself a master seller in the field of real estate and has written several books on how to sell real estate successfully. She has since moved to the lecture circuit, where she conducts motivational and sales seminars.

Former GE’s Jack Welch

Much has been said in business books and magazine articles about Jack Welch’s habit of sending handwritten cards to his GE subordinates. Jack Welch sent handwritten cards to anyone in the company who he felt deserved personal communication, whether to motivate, correct, or congratulate, from top management to laborers. Jack is the celebrated leader who, between 1981 and 2001, turned GE into one of the largest and most admired companies in the world.

Dr Maya Angelou says:

“People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel”. Maya Angelou: Poet, educator, historian, best-selling author, actress, playwright, civil-rights activist, producer and director.

If you learn how to make your customers and clients fall in love with YOU, you will never be stuck scratching your head wondering how to attract more customers to grow your business. Sending personalized, handwritten, meaningful cards through the mail is a simple enough idea, but until NOW it has not been an easy thing to do in an ongoing and organized manner. For you to develop a relationship of trust with a large network of people you will need a system for sending out your hand written and personalized cards and managing those relationships over time.

Now this process has been automated AND the costs involved have been reduced. You can now utilize an online greeting card system that prints (with your own handwriting and signature) and mails your cards worldwide.

Let me walk you through this system at http://www.dollarmarketingtips.com  or go to the Partner With Me page on this blog and leave me your details.


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