Monday, April 2, 2007

Promotional Umbrellas


Growing up in Indonesia with 2 seasons only, Rainy and Dry, I can tell you first-hand what a great gift a promotional umbrella can be. One of the goals of any marketing promotion campaign is to create customer loyalty and brand recognition. When you provide your customers with useful products you stand a better chance of reaping the benefits of free advertising. Umbrellas tend to be a little bit more expensive than some of the other promotional items, but they pay off the first time your customers use them.

A promotional umbrella makes a great gift for contests and other events. You can hand out these items to people who participate in surveys or volunteer for community events as well. When it comes to promotional items, these umbrellas stand out in a crowd. When they are fully opened they serve as a large advertisement for your business or services.

You can customize these umbrellas with bright colors and a number of different unique patterns. You can have them imprinted with your company logo, slogan or mascot. When people walk around town with them, they help to create brand recognition for your company. You can offset the cost of these umbrellas by spending less on advertising for your products. You can rest assured these items will pay for themselves in just a few uses around town.

A promotional umbrella is a great gift for golf enthusiasts. If you want to make a lasting impression on your corporate clients you can create an entire golf gift basket, complete with promotional apparel like golf shirts and hats. You can even find a promotional company to make you a personalized golf ball. This type of gift is an excellent way to show your long-term business partners that you have appreciated their support over the years. It also serves as advertising for your company.

3 Great Marketing Gifts




In my years as a marketing professional, I have developed a list of my favorite marketing promotional items even though there are a lot of executive gifts to research. These items include: custom key chains, embroidered hats, and coffee mugs. While this list changes, depending on my clients and the type of event being promoted, these three items are always on the top of my list. These promotional products are inexpensive and provide customers merchandise they will keep.

When I shop for embroidered hats price is important. These marketing promotional items tend to be more expensive than things like key chains, bumper stickers and refrigerator magnets. I save them for special promotional events and as gifts for long-term clients. They also make great gifts for the holidays and other company events. I like to encourage companies to use them as sales incentives as well. Another thing to keep in mind is quality. Be sure you are giving away a product that will last.

When it comes to custom coffee mugs the sky is the limit. These mugs are generally inexpensive, but you can find some higher-end stainless steel mugs as well. The great thing about this promotional item is you can guarantee it will be used on a daily basis. These mugs are great gifts for office parties as well. Coffee and Tea drinkers often find their favorite mugs and stick with them for years.



Affordable and Effective Promo Items

We have all received promo items and thought it was nice to receive something for free, but more often than not, we never used these items in our everyday lives. The mistake many companies make when purchasing promotional products is not spending enough time exploring the target market, and not spending the working smart with their marketing monies.

Promo items should be well made and well designed. If you give your clients and customers cheap products it is a reflection on your business policies. It sends a message that you don't do things thoroughly, or you give insincere gifts. Promotional products don't have to be expensive to be useful and fashionable. With the right audience, a simple key chain can be an effective marketing tool.

Why would you want to spend your money on something that is shoved into the back of the closet or thrown out in the trash? Plus, since when one of the all end goals of promotional items, is to show your customers your appreciation, would you want to give the very best? Not taking the time to find promotional gifts with some sort of practical use, you are basically wasting your money. You'd be better off spending your marketing budget on television or newspaper advertising.

There are a number of affordable items you can give your customers to show them you appreciate their continued support of your business. Things like coffee mugs; calendars and desk clocks can be bought in bull, personalized with your logo or other graphics and handed out for a reasonable fee. These items are excellent for reminding your customers about your products and services on a daily basis.

Friday, March 23, 2007

The Most Popular Promotional Items in Y 2004

If you need some ideas for your next promotional marketing campaign or new product launch, the graphs below will give you and idea of what is popular and what types of events people are using promotional products to promote.






Source: promopeddler.com



How to Roll New Business Your Way with Promotional Merchandise

According to Wikipedia, the free internet encyclopedia: "A promotional item is merchandise given away free of charge to the public in an effort to promote a business or increase interest in, or sales of, a product. These items are also referred to by the slang terms schwag and tchotchke. (The latter is derived from a Yiddish word meaning "trinket".) Promotional items are also used in politics to promote candidates and causes. Examples of promotional items include logo-branded t-shirts, caps, key-chains, bumper stickers, pens, mints, etc. Collection of certain types of promotional items is a popular hobby."

Promotional items have the power to be understood universally.

According to the Promotional Products Association International, corporations spend close to $17.5 billion a year on this type of advertising - that's more than one-third of what's spent on TV.

A survey conducted for Promotional Products Association International (PPAI) by LJ Market Research reveals the power of promotional products by measuring how end users respond to organizations that use promotional products as part of their marketing mix. The survey, Promotional Products - Impact, Exposure and Influence: A Survey of Business Travelers at Dallas/Fort Worth Airport , was conducted by interviewing business travelers at DFW Airport. More than 71 percent of travelers indicated they had received at least one promotional product in the last 12 months. The study also showed that respondents' ability to recall the name of an advertiser on a promotional product they had received (76 percent) was much better than their ability to recall the name of an advertiser from a print publication they had read in the past week (53.5 percent).

Recipients of promotional products do remember the advertiser's name.

Business to business gifts are a good way to maintain a positive presence within your client base. They can build brand awareness within the professional community as well as amongst the general public. The next time you launch a new product or service, try introducing it with an imprinted business item. When gifting to clients within your industry, it is particularly important to choose a promotional item that relates to your field. For example, if your new service will save the public time and effort, introduce it with a customized clock or calendar.

By introducing a new product or service to clients with a clever business gift, you maintain a strong industry awareness of your company. It is also important to choose a quality method on the imprinted business items. Stick to laser engraved pens, debossed leather and vinyl items, and embroidered wearables.

Break away from the promotional item pack.

People tend to copy each other and assume that if most people do things a certain way, it’s the way to follow. Don’t follow, be a leader instead. People love pens, but the truth is, everyone of us has at least a dozen promotional pens right now with different company names and logos inscribed on them, and if yours is one of them, the next person most likely couldn't find it to call you if she searched all day and night. But if she had, say, a branded clock or a branded calculator on her desk, with your name and address on it, well, that she could definitely put her eyes and hands on - which means she would be able to call you. Bottom line, don't be afraid to do something different. Do a quick research, see what's trendy, look for novelties. If your budget permits, get something people will not throw away, like a USB flash pen, a promotional MP3 player, an imprinted watch, etc.

Try to deliver your promotional products in different, creative ways.

For instance, instead of mailing 1,000 mouse pads with your company logo on them, have 300 or so hand delivered. Hand delivering promo items will earn you enough business so that you can afford to hand deliver the next 300 and so on.

Let the professionals handle it.

Hire someone specialized to advise you and develop your promotions and promotional ideas for you. Let a design company create your promotion and print it for you. Yes, you'll spend a little more money upfront, but you'll have a promotion where all the pieces and parts work together to get your message and call to action across to your customers - which means your customers will be more likely to call you instead of the other guy.

Remember that there is more to an effective promotion than handing out one item.

There are pieces and parts to it. It takes a consumer an average of six to seven times of seeing and/or hearing your promotional message before they “get” it and take action of any kind - even saying "no thank you". No, it's not because your target audience is dumb, it is because they're constantly being bombarded with marketing promotions from all sorts of businesses. Know your target audience. If your promotion is for teens and young adults, for example, don't give them refrigerator magnets-they don't usually have refrigerators! At least not of their own yet. Give them a cool key chain or CD holder, give them something electronic, something trendy and colorful. If your target audience is leaders of corporate America, don't give them lottery scratchers or highlighter keychains, don't even give them a calculator, since they have accountants dealing with their numbers. Give them instead a nice writing set for their desks, give them some nice executive accessory that you know they will not be ashamed to display on their mahogany desks. And if you are really on a budget, a nice luggage tag, a passport holder with your company name, logo and address, or even a promotional golf ball will do. No matter how wonderful and unique a promotional item is, if it's given to the wrong target audience that has no use for it, they will have no use for you.




Written by: Andrei Smith

Andrei co-owns Bsleek - a company that specializes in web design, hosting, promotional items, printing, tradeshow displays, logos, CD presentations, SEO and more. Andrei has amassed an extensive technical knowledge and experience through his career as the CIO for a major travel management company and through his past careers in military research, data acquisition and airspace engineering. He also consults for Trinity Investigations, a New York based PI firm. --Bsleek - Quality promotional merchandise at affordable prices - Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Andrei_Smith

Picture: Getrecognized.com

Friday, March 16, 2007

PRIVATE LABEL TODAY




GROWTH & SUCCESS

Throughout Europe, private label is winning the loyalty of more and more consumers every day. According to a research study of seven countries conductedfor PLMA by MORI, the well-known public opinion consultancy, private label has achieved unprecedented acceptance with shoppers, who say that they are now more aware of private label and plan to increase their purchases of them.

The largest increases in the percentage of consumers who are more aware of private label were posted in the United Kingdom, Spain and France. Moreover, MORI reports that increased awareness is leading to more purchasing. The biggest gains in the percentage of consumers planning to increase their purchases of private label products were in the Netherlands and Germany.

Private label’s long-term future appears especially strong. Young consumers, those up to age 25, are by far the most ardent supporters of private label. Other key findings on consumer attitudes include:

  • The quality of products are now virtually equal in importance to price as a factor in the selection of private label.
  • Four out of 10 shoppers across Europe would like their supermarkets to carry a wider variety of private label products.
  • About one quater of all shoppers' total market baskets are made up of private label products.
  • More consumers say they are "less likely" to buy manufacturer brands than those who say they are "more likely" to buy them compared to a year earlier.

In actual sales, private label is increasing its market share in Europe's largest and most mature retail markets as well as in markets with historically low private label penetration, reports ACNielsen in PLMA's latest International Private Label Yearbook.

Sales of private label across Europe increased to record levels. For the first time, market share for private label has surpassed 40% in four countries - the United Kingdom, Germany, Belgium and Switzerland. Moreover, market share for retailer brands has reached an all-time high in two more of Europe's important retail markets, France and Spain, where private label now accounts for one of every three products sold.

Both the MORI research and the ACNeilson sales data document how popular private label is today in Europe and indicate that consumers are demostrating that future growth is going to be greater than anyone expected.


WHAT ARE PRIVATE LABEL PRODUCTS?

Private label products encompass all merchandise sold under a retailer's brand. That brand can be the retailer's own name or a name created exclusively by that retailer. In some cases, a retailer may belong to a wholesale group that owns the brands that are available to only the members of the group.

WHAT PRODUCTS ARE SOLD AS PRIVATE LABEL?

Major supermarkets, hypermarkets, drug stores and discounters today offer almost any product under the retailer's brand. Private label cover full lines of fresh, canned, frozen, and dry foods; snacks, ethnic specialties, pet foods, health and beauty, over-the-counter drugs, cosmetics, household and laundry products, DIY, lawn and garden, paints, hardware and auto aftercare.

WHAT ARE THE ADVANTAGES OF PRIVATE LABEL?

For the consumer, private label represents the choice and opportunity to regularly purchase quality food and non-food products at savings compared to manufacturer brands, without waiting for promotional pricing. Private label items consist of the same or better ingredients than the manufacturer brands, and because the retailer's name or symbol is on the package, the consumer is assured that the product meets the reatiler's quality standards and specifications.

WHO MAKES PRIVATE LABEL?

Manufacturers of private label products fall into three general classifications:

  • Large manufacturers who produce both their own brands and private label products.
  • Small and medium size manufacturers that specialise in particular product lines and concentrate on producing private label almost exclusively.
  • Major retailers and wholesalers that operate their own manufacturing plants and provide private label products for their own stores.

Source: www.plmainternational.com