| There
was scene in Godfather II, near the end, when Michael Corleone
visits Cuba.
There’s a meeting with all the Cuban dignitaries and American
industrialists to celebrate the partnership and growth plans of
the new alliance. The chairman stops the meeting to thank American
Telephone and Telegraph Company for their gracious gift, a gold-plated
telephone (no doubt embellished with the AT&T logo).
The gift, like the millions
of other business gifts given before and after, is the cornerstone
of the promotional products world;
a creatively chosen, tastefully decorated product that serves as
a reminder and everlasting expression of the benefactor’s
wishes. It’s no wonder that “business gifts” top
the chart of most popular uses of promotional products, according
to recent industry estimates.
But as I will soon reveal,
promotional products are much more than a business gift with
a logo. Promotional products are the
nucleus of an ever-growing industry that’s often misunderstood
and worse yet, underutilized.
While most people concentrate on the promotional products available
and the sale prices attached to them, I think we need to go deeper.
So join me in my mystical quest as we look to uncover the magic
of promotional products.
America Loves Promotional Products
In America, the proliferation
of symbols, tokens and mementos are everywhere. Early Americans
branded their cattle. That was
our currency. Branding was taken so serious, that taking an animal
that carried someone else’s brand was a capital offense.
Championship fights are centered on the transfer of the belt. The
World Series is played every year for the coveted ring. Hollywood
bows to a golden statue called OscarTM. Our military goes into
battle in proudly decorated uniforms that are adorned with badges,
medals and ribbons.
Remember how powerful
and intimidating General Swartzkopf looked in his uniform on
TV briefs during the Gulf War? It’s hard
to imagine him in checkered shorts, a white crew neck T-shirt and
black socks up to his knees. Is it the uniform that makes the man?
Many times yes, but it’s also the badge, button, pin, emblem
and ribbon as well.
What is the first thing
we do after a baby is born? Take footprints. Bronzed baby shoes
and personalized blankets are promotional products
that celebrate life’s most precious gift. Promotional products
are everywhere.
Picture This
Ever think about the phenomenon of pictures? Our obsession with
capturing a moment in time has built billion-dollar industries
in photography, art, film, processing, paper, printing, etc. And
what is a photo, really? A piece of life, captured onto something
we can hold, collect and treasure. And even though the industry
is now all but digital, the phenomena continues even more so. Why
do we get excited about watching a video copy of what we just experienced
in real life? Because we love capturing, saving and showing life.
Polaroid’s dominance during the ’60s and ’70s
has been hugely eclipsed with the digital revolution. Most people
think this is proof of how antiquated processes are naturally replaced
by high-tech methods that are much faster and cheaper. This is
true. But my point goes further. It goes to the real difference,
or better yet, similarities between your Dad’s Polaroid and
your daughter’s digital cell-phone camera.
Polaroid’s success was built on our human need for immediate
gratification, the ability of a consumer to instantly turn a moment
in time into something that could be held, saved, framed and kept
for a lifetime. But it’s most unique virtue was the fact
that it was instant.
We are addicts of life.
All of us. We want memories captured in the highest resolution,
able to reproduce on a key chain as well
as a 40 ft. wide banner, but we want it saved on a disk smaller
than a half dollar. But why do we want it saved? Why do we want
it to be of the highest resolution? To be shown, displayed, printed,
embellished, copied or hot-stamped onto something. And as soon
as we do that … magic happens. This magic can turn a pickle
jar into an ice-tea jar. How? By taking a plain generic pickle
jar and imprinting a drawing of the sun accompanied with two words: “Sun
Tea.”
The Art Of Promotional Products
A promotional product
is a tangible item; an otherwise ordinary product that many times
is a simple consumer commodity. But when
that product is carefully chosen to fit your target audience and
decorated with a powerful message, magic happens. Whether they’re
treated as useless trinkets or the coveted ring is all in the perception
and the usage.
My suggestion is that
you don’t take them lightly. If you
agree that American people are an extremely symbol-crazy lot, then
you’ll begin to see the huge potential in promotional products.
The ability to choose either a common consumer product or a highly
creative new creation, choose your target audience, carefully craft
your message and execute the plan is an art. That art is not only
the basis of the promotional products industry, but is the basis
of any great marketing plan.
Let’s get back to our photo. As it is, this photo is nothing
more than one of billions of pieces of paper or film that capture
a moment in time. It’s something that may be kept or captured,
but more likely to be filed in a photo box or the infamous circular
file. But, surround that same print with a 37-cent custom-imprinted
magnetic photo frame and ta da …you have created a promotional
product.
Yes, it costs less than
a buck, is readily available and not the latest and greatest
thing, but don’t let any of that fool
you. Unlike a picture, it’s rare that a magnet (however plain
or unimportant) ever gets tossed. Imagine this hard working little
magnet surrounding your client’s or employee’s loved
one. If you’re in the consumer business, I must think that
having your targeted message on the homeowner’s refrigerator
every day, wrapping your message warmly around their daughter’s
picture from her first school play, wouldn’t be a bad marketing
play.
Now let’s take that same item, a photo frame, and step it
up a notch to a B-to-B friendly use. Let’s make it a nice
wooden or acrylic frame that costs less than $10, and most business
people would find useful and attractive on their desk or credenza.
Now, imagine this frame containing a picture of a resort in the
Bahamas, the location of your next sales contest vacation. What
do you think the effect would be on a participating sales person
who stares at this unique reminder every day when entering and
leaving her office? I think you get the picture … literally.
It’s not the product or the price attached to that product.
That gets way too much attention in our industry. It is your recipient
and the behavior you desire from them, that should drive a successful
promotion. Once you have clearly defined these factors to your
professional consultant you’re on track for success. Does
budget count for something? Of course. But as I have briefly shown,
many ideas can be translated into very affordable products that
can produce noteworthy results.
Promotional Products Vs. Other Advertising
I can’t think of any other advertising medium that is victim
to as much misunderstanding, misuse and miseducation than promotional
products. Notwithstanding, it’s one of the fastest growing,
most effective forms of advertising being utilized today. It’s
no secret that during 2001 and 2002, the U.S. economy suffered
huge set-backs. The promotional products industry saw declines
as well. However, while many conjecture that an industry abounding
in “giveaway” products would be devastated in the wake
of corporate belt tightening, the opposite is true.
While common forms of mass advertising suffered 20% to 40% decreases,
the promotional products industry (now nearing $17 billion in annual
sales) shrunk by single digit numbers and has already returned
to positive growth.
Why has this industry faired so well even in the most uncertain
economic times? One main reason is that promotional products work.
Yes, in the arena of advertising, promotional products successfully
compete with radio, television, newspaper and outdoor media as
an extremely cost-effective way to reach a target audience. But
this is a very important differentiator: Where radio, television
and other mass media leave off as purely advertising, promotional
products are just getting started. What if I told you promotional
products can save lives?
Using promotional products to their highest potential starts with
cost-effective, highly targeted advertising, but can result in:
- Motivating prospects to try your products and services;
- Thanking new customers and loyal clients;
- Attracting, hiring and retaining the best staff;
- Doubling the results of your next mailing or attendance at
a trade show booth;
- Rewarding and motivating a sales staff to peak performance;
- Saving lives! It’s a proven fact that a carefully chosen
promotional product that serves as a safety achievement award and/or
continues to remind high-risk workers to work safely can reduce
accidents, injuries, and yes, even save lives.
When you think
of promotional products in those contexts, it’s amazing
that some business people still consider them useless trinkets. As a matter of fact,
when you look at all promotional products can do for your firm,
you begin to see them as an important part
of a comprehensive business plan. For those who have the imagination,
vision and desire to get outside their marketing vs. sales vs.
production “box,” you’ll open yourself up to
a powerful new advertising medium.
Outlast And Outperform
Let’s start with marketing. If marketing can be defined
as your overall brand strategy, you’re way to transform suspects
into motivated prospects, think of the ways you can raise your
brand awareness and tempt prospects to come into your client fold
with a branded product bearing your targeted message.
The way you recruit and train your employees, quite frankly, is
a contest. A contest between you and every other company on the
planet to find, acquire and motivate the smartest, hardest working
employees. The way you build a team of dedicated, loyal employees
is to reward and thank your people. With promotional products this
can range from an item as informal as T-shirts for the company
picnic to esteemed awards recognizing years of loyal service.
In sales, the never-ending
questions are: “How do I encourage
top performance?” “How do I turn salespeople who ‘reach
their quota’ into superstars who outsell and outperform all
of their competitors?”
As with all employees,
recognition plays a vital role, but salespeople typically need
more. Usually, they’re competitive and driven
to succeed by many stimuli. The promotional products world abounds
with highly creative, compelling items that can drive a salesperson
to succeed and exceed previous goals.
Client retention: How
do you transform fickle customers who are always looking for
the best price into loyal clients who rely on
you as their business partner? By differentiating yourself from
your competitors. Not by saying you care, but by showing it. A
promotional product’s flexibility to accommodate any budget
makes them great solutions to positively amplify every step of
prospect, customer and client contact.
If you’re ready to look at all aspects of your business
and examine real ways you can reach your goals, you’re ready
for promotional products. America’s smartest companies, after
all, use promotional products to propel and keep their companies
at the top.
Why Does The Magic Remain A Secret?
Using promotional products can be difficult without a plan. Work
with your promotional consultant to plan an effective campaign
that employs creative imprinted products designed to elicit a phenomenal
response.
If you sell machinery,
you visit the manufacturing department. If you sell copiers,
you go to the office manager. But try to figure
out who should use promotional products. Well, show me someone
who is growing, hiring, celebrating, changing, moving, building,
opening or launching nearly anything and I’ll show you great
potential for hard-working promotional products.
Even if you’re
not in a highly competitive field, promotional products give
you the ability to quickly raise your products and
service awareness at many levels.
You hold in your hands a publication that can continually help
you build your business. Through a detailed analysis of usage and
products available, you have been blessed with a plethora of business-building
strategies. While relatively low in circulation compared to a Fortune
or Business 2.0, this publication can be your secret weapon in
fighting the ever-growing war for new customers, dedicated employees,
motivated sales people and loyal clients.
Use it wisely and thank the person who gave it to you. What a
magical gift it is.
J.R. Roren
owns Synergy, a promotional products firm in Tempe, AZ and
is the founder of
the Business Building Institute, an organization
dedicated to helping business people “Stop Running Their
Business and Start Building It™.”
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