Jassen Bowman EA
Jassen Bowman EA

941 Marketing Challenge Day 23

Today’s post is short, but the challenge task important.

You’ve spent time over the last two days gearing up for this.

Now, rubber meets road. Hammer hits nail. Probe hits Mars atmosphere.

Task: Take the information you gathered yesterday, and send email AND place a phone call to the appropriate contact at the organization, media outlet, or website (or two) that you identified as good candidates for your online advertising dollars.

In that conversation, you want to specifically inquire about two things: Remnant space and agency discounts.

“Remnant space” is an advertising term for unsold inventory. There’s actually an entire sub-industry built around buying and selling remnant ad space. Why? Because once airtime has gone unused…once a trade journal has gone to print…once a day goes by without a banner ad occupying a piece of screen real estate… It’s gone. Opportunity lost. Thus, huge discounts can be had on remnant space, including digital ad space.

“Agency discounts” are exactly that: Discounts that publishers give to ad agencies. This is incredibly common practice, and it exists to incentivize ad agencies for buying media. The ad agency pockets the discount for themselves as profit in a lot of traditional advertising situations. For companies that aren’t using an ad agency, like you and me, we are serving as our own ad agency. And that’s exactly what you tell the publisher or organization you’re dealing with: “We operate as our own in-house ad agency. What is your ad agency discount?” Boom, just saved yourself some dough.

A very typical agency discount is around 15%.

The whole point of today is for you to have one or two serious conversations with a publisher, organization, or web site to get discounted ad space in their publications, event sponsorships, or web site/email advertising. Never, ever pay “rate card” rates for advertising — hardly anybody actually does, and you shouldn’t either.… Continue reading

941 Marketing Challenge Day 22

In yesterday’s challenge task, you conducted research into the available online media that report on and support your chosen B2B target market.

Today, I want you to delve a bit deeper into two or three of them.

That’s it, just two or three. Rumor has it that today is a national holiday, so this is something that you can spend ten minutes on at literally any point in the day.

From your Google searching yesterday, select two or three of the trade journals, industry associations, online discussion forums, or other websites that you found. Running with one of the two examples I laid out yesterday, here are three options that service the healthcare industry that I found:

  • American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP)
  • Physicians Practice (media outlet)
  • Association of Independent Doctors (started by two CPAs, btw)

As I mentioned yesterday, this is not an endorsement of this particular niche or these particular sites. I’m just using it as an example for purposes of illustrating the principle.

Looking at the websites for these two trade organizations and one media conglomerate sub-site, I want to look for a few things. These are the same questions you should ponder as you look through the websites that YOU found:

  1. Is there obvious on-site advertising?
  2. Is there a print magazine that they produce for members?
  3. Is there an email list that people can subscribe to?
  4. Is there a member directory listing?
  5. Is there a vendor directory?
  6. Can I download a media kit that includes advertising rates?
  7. Are there local chapters?
  8. Do they host events of any sort, either online or off?
  9. Is there a designated contact person for media, advertising, or sponsorship inquiries?

Based on just clicking through all the links on a website, including the stuff nobody ever looks at in the footer of the homepage, I’m able to make some pretty quick determinations about the potential value of advertising or sponsoring something in relation to that website. For example, the Association of Independent Doctors doesn’t really provide any opportunities for creating backlinks or generating access to their membership, as far as I can tell, so I can eliminate that one pretty quickly.

PhysiciansPractice.com, on the other hand, provides a gateway to something bigger, called the “Modern Medicine Network”. Spending just 5 minutes on their website tells me they allow article submissions from other businesses (that’s you!), they have print publications to advertise in, a full advertising … Continue reading

941 Marketing Challenge Day 21

It’s the day before Thanksgiving. You can’t possibly think we’re going to do anything today. Or tomorrow.

Oh, yes. Yes, indeed, I do certainly think that.

The next few days will be linked, as some past tasks have been. And they’ll be short. Nice and simple. Today is a research task.

One of the most cost effective paid advertising modalities in existence is to advertise on niche industry websites. I’m talking banner ads, paid text links, maybe even co-registration lead generation opportunities on the websites for media outlets that service your target vertical, big companies in that industry, online discussion forums, and trade organizations.

So that’s what I want you to do today. Spend some time searching on Google, thumbing through trade journals, and perusing sites of companies in your target market looking for popular websites in your B2B tax resolution niche.

For example, let’s say you’ve identified small medical practices and local homebuilders as your two target markets for your 941 marketing efforts. (Please note that these are just examples for the sake of illustration, do not email me asking if these are good/bad niches).

So, you’re going to hop online and start looking for:

  • Industry media sites
  • Trade organizations
  • Publication websites

On Google, I’m going to do the following searches that encompass the two example niches:

  • medical practice management
  • medical practice trade journal
  • medical practice association
  • independent physician association
  • medical practice discussion forum
  • [county] homebuilders association
  • [state] contractors association
  • construction trade groups
  • construction industry media site
  • new homebuilder websites

Hopefully you get the idea, and that starts your search in the right direction.

Tomorrow, we’ll discuss how to approach these websites about advertising opportunities, and Friday we’ll actually make some calls.… Continue reading