Wassom’s Marketing Wisdom

  • Julie Wassom

  • Twitter Updates

  • Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

    Join 90 other subscribers

Posts Tagged ‘Voice Mail Message’

7 Simple Low-Cost Ways to Market

Posted by juliewassom on June 19, 2012

Are you looking for ways to market that take little time and less money, yet give you the kind of image and exposure that gives you a high return on your efforts? Good marketing messages that reach the right target audiences with the most frequency are going to be the ones that generate the most inquiries. Each qualified inquiry they generate gives you another opportunity to reach your sales goals. If you do not yet have a your business name, and  a unique image and message or tagline, that you are using in each of the following simple ways to market, I have one question for you. What are you waiting for?

Telephone voice mail message – Make sure yours included your business name and tagline, and that it redirects callers to your web address until you can get back to them.

Email signature – Include your name, business name, logo, tagline, and any unique feature or announcement of upcoming events

Vehicle – Does your business vehicle have signage on sides and back that shows your business name, logo, tagline (if it fits) your phone number and your web address? If not, you are missing an opportunity for incredible frequency of message delivery about your business. Your vehicle is a rolling billboard. Use it.

Sign – Call the highway department to find out the number of vehicles that pass your business on a daily basis. Then pull your jaw back up and make sure you have a spectacular business sign positioned so passersby can see it easily.

Website – Though this involves some initial investment, a well-designed website will give you terrific return on that investment in inquiries, visits, and customer satisfaction. Remember, your home page is the most important page on your site.

Local Media – Make the press your marketing partner by initiating contact with local editors and reporters with information about your business and events. Make sure the information is unique, timely, and of interest to their reader/viewer/listener profile. Deliver it to them in their preferred format. The third party endorsement good publicity gives you can be a priceless return for merely a bit of your time.

Your Community – Whomever said there are diamonds in your own backyard had obviously mined some. So should you. Seek out community events that draw your target audiences. Then participate in a way that is visible to attendees and profitable for you.

Your most effective marketing efforts are not always the big ticket items. Adding these simple ways to market to your overall marketing action plan can mean big returns for very little effort.

If you want more techniques on how to market wisely in a challenging economy, attend or host Julie’s seminar, How to Be Bullish on Marketing in a Challenging Economy. To book it, call 800-876-0260, or email julie@juliewassom.com.

Julie Wassom
“The Speaker Whose Message Means Business”
Marketing and Sales Speaker/Consultant/Author
Call me: 303-693-2306
Fax me: 303-617-6422
E-me: julie@juliewassom.com
See me: www.juliewassom.com

Posted in Budget for Marketing, Child Care Marketing, Economy, Marketing Tips, Your Business | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Enrollment Building | Reviewing and Refining Your Marketing Program

Posted by juliewassom on October 18, 2011

As the weather begins to turn colder with Fall now very much in full swing, before you know it winter will settle in and the heaviest enrollment building season is over for another year. You’re probably advertising less to draw new inquiries and concentrating more on program delivery and internal operations. If you’re in a colder climate, the walls of your classroom are lined with little boots and coats, removed and put back on several times daily by rosy-cheeked children in your care. Daily maintenance, staff development, and that postponed project or repair are your priorities now.

The winter months are an ideal time to take a good look at your marketing program, and to work on it a little bit at a time. If marketing is not your greatest strength, the whole idea of effectively drawing prospects to your center and then securing their enrollment can be overwhelming. It’s easy to get a condition I call “marketing paralysis,” and simply not do anything. Or maybe you know you should work on marketing, and you plan to…when you have time. But that time never comes.

There’s an old adage that says, “If you do what you’ve always done, you’ll get what you’ve always got.” If you want to get more enrollment in your center (and retain more of the customers you have), commit to spending a little time each week throughout the winter refining your marketing. Use the following list to help you tackle marketing one piece at a time.

·         Marketing plan – Analyze and make note of the current state of your enrollment. Note the average number of inquiries you receive weekly and tally how many of those you convert to visits and then to enrollments. Determine what it costs you to generate each qualified inquiry. Examine your retention rate, by classroom and by center. Include a brief explanation of any enrollment incentive or referral programs you have in place, and evaluate their effectiveness in generating new customers. Set enrollment goals for the coming year. Assess the competitive situation in your area. Review recent marketing efforts and determine which were most effective. This doesn’t need to be a thick volume, but it will be the foundation from which you can create a more effective marketing action plan.

·         Action plan – This is the “To Do’ list within your overall marketing plan. It is the blueprint of marketing activities that work together to generate inquiries and to give you more opportunities to secure enrollment. Begin with a simple list of each marketing action you will take, the timeline, the person responsible, the budget allocated to this effort, and the method of evaluating its effectiveness.

·         Center or company identity package – Lay out the pieces of your center or company identity package – letterhead, envelopes, business card, package label, postcard, notepad, etc. – and examine them carefully. Do they have a consistent look? Do they present the image you want prospects and customers to have? Is your package complete? If pieces are missing or outdated, make this the time you update your information and image in your print marketing collateral materials.

·         Center brochure – Design a brochure that communicates your uniqueness as well as your philosophy on providing quality early care and education. Make the look of your brochure consistent with the rest of your print marketing materials. Determine how and where you intend to use your brochure before deciding on size, paper and your print run.

·         Website – Now is an ideal time to update your website. If you have a website, now is an ideal time to update it. Make sure the look of the site communicates a recognizable image. Add new photos. Revise copy so it not only educates visitors, but entices them to contact you to set up a center visit. Create traditional marketing activities that will direct prospects and customers to your website. I’ve posted on this blog several times about website creation and optimization in the past.

·         Photos – Get out your camera or hire a professional photographer and take lots of pictures in your center for use in brochures, fliers, and on your website. Snap a few photos of your staff, your children, and activities in your classrooms and on the playground. Don’t forget to take photos of your teachers helping a child or assisting a parent during a center visit or event. Be sure to secure permission from parents to use select photos in your marketing efforts. Using the best of these real-life pictures will speak a thousand words to your prospects.

·         Advertisements – Advertising can quickly eat up your marketing budget. Take some time now to determine where your ad dollars will be best spent. If you are responsible for your own print and online advertising, determine what publications and websites will be viewed by prospective parents in your area. Consider the best ways to reach the target audience for the specific early care and education services you want to promote. For example, if you want to increase your infant enrollment, include publications and online advertising channels  read primarily by new and expectant mothers in your advertising mix. Don’t forget employer newletters for reasonably-priced ad placement. Always check advertising guidelines and deadlines for placement and artwork. Seek out professionals who can assist you with ad design and copy. It’s well worth the investment when you find a good one.

·         Publicity –Spend some of your marketing time taking the necessary steps to generate good publicity for your center. Invite local reporters to events at your center, especially if they include an activity that benefits a local nonprofit organization. Present them with article and photo opportunities that are unique, timely, and of interest to their readers or viewers. Listen to the CD program, Make Your Good Publicity Work Marketing Magic, from The Julian Group’s Enrollment Building Success Library, to learn ways to cost-effectively use the good publicity you receive to extend the reach and frequency of your other marketing efforts.

·         Voice Mail Message – Advertising can quickly eat up your marketing budget. Take some time now to determine where your ad dollars will be best spent. If you are responsible for your own print and online advertising, determine what publications and websites will be viewed by prospective parents in your area. Consider the best ways to reach the target audience for the specific early care and education services you want to promote. For example, if you want to increase your infant enrollment, include publications and online advertising channels  read primarily by new and expectant mothers in your advertising mix. Don’t forget employer newletters for reasonably-priced ad placement. Always check advertising guidelines and deadlines for placement and artwork. Seek out professionals who can assist you with ad design and copy. It’s well worth the investment when you find a good one.

·         Direct Mail Marketing – This can work for both direct mail and email marketing. Is a direct mail campaign in your marketing action plan? If so, these are the days to put it all together and have it ready to launch on your kickoff date. Because this is not traditionally the heaviest enrollment-building time of the year, many of your competitors will not be mailing to prospect lists. If you do, you will stand out from the crowd. Even if you are currently full, the inquiries you generate now can be nurtured for summer and fall enrollment. To get started with your direct mail marketing plan, creative design, calendar of mailings, etc.; review the recommendations in “Direct Mail Marketing – Way to Make It Worth It,” in the 3/2000, issue of Child Care Information Exchange.Andrew – Delete this sentence. Never refer to an article more than about two years old.

·         Newsletter – The winter months are an ideal time to develop or refine your center newsletter. If you already produce a newsletter, carefully examine it from the prospect’s perspective. Do the graphics and articles communicate the message you want? If not, consider new graphics, add photos, revise classroom news, and include a feature article of special interest. Soon you will have created a fresh newsletter you can send on a monthly to quarterly basis to every active prospect, existing customer, and opinion influencer in your database. If your newsletter presents a good image, is timely, and is filled with information of value to the recipient, it will position you as a helpful expert in the child care industry. And that positioning leads to inquiries!

·         Educate Yourself – Almost nothing is cozier on a chilly night than sitting under a warm blanket and reading a good book or closing your eyes and listening to an CD series.  Once a week, make that a marketing book or CD. Peruse Jay Conrad Levinson’s book, Guerilla Marketing, for ideas you can adapt to help you make big profits from your small business. For child care-specific marketing techniques, listen to Basic Techniques for Securing Enrollment or one of the other programs from The Enrollment Building Success Library. Check out the marketing resources in the catalog of Exchange publications at www.ChildCareExchange.com. Or check your email for “Wassom’s Child Care Marketing Wisdom”, my free monthly online newsletter on how to become a better marketer. (To subscribe to this opt-in service, visit http://www.juliewassom.com/Childcare%20marketing.htm .)

Julie Wassom
“The Speaker Whose Message Means Business”
Marketing and Sales Speaker/Consultant/Author
Call me: 303-693-2306
Fax me: 303-617-6422
E-me: julie@juliewassom.com
See me: www.juliewassom.com

Posted in Child Care Marketing, Marketing Tips, Your Business | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Is Your Voice Mail Message Marketing For You?

Posted by juliewassom on August 30, 2011

This week’s tip is an easy marketing action that can make an impressive difference in the spaced repetition of your message (the key to retention) to your prospects, customers, and opinion influencers. What is that? Your voice mail message.

What message do your callers hear when they call for you, but get your voice mail instead? You can use this message as one more way to communicate your center, your unique image, and your positioning as a helpful expert in the early care and education industry.

On your voice mail message, be sure to include:
·         a pleasant greeting
·         the name of your center or school
·         your name
·         an image message (such as your tagline) if you have one
·         statement of your unavailability and
·         request to leave a message with phone number for you to return the call and best time to call
·         approximate time when you will be returning or available
·         statement to check your website
·         pleasant closing – good is you repeat your center name

Does this sound like a lot? It might to you, but to the caller who did not get to talk to you personally, it sounds professional, courteous, and welcoming.

Here’s a fictitious example that you can adapt:

“Hello. You’ve reached Sue at Best Ever Child Care. We’re not available right now, but your call is very important to us. Please leave your name and number, and the best time for us to return your call. We expect to be available shortly. In the meantime, do check our website at http://www.besteverchildcare.org. Thank you for calling Best Ever Child Care, Where We Really Care.”

If you are not using your voice mail message to market your center, you are missing an opportunity for cost-effective marketing.

Have a great week, and happy enrollment building!

Julie Wassom
“The Speaker Whose Message Means Business”
Marketing and Sales Speaker/Consultant/Author
Call me: 303-693-2306
Fax me: 303-617-6422
E-me: julie@juliewassom.com
See me: www.juliewassom.com

Posted in Child Care Marketing, Marketing Tips, Your Business | Tagged: , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Seven Simple Low-Cost Ways to Market

Posted by juliewassom on April 20, 2010

Are you looking for ways to market that take little time and less money, yet give you the kind of image and exposure that gives you a high return on your efforts? Good marketing messages that reach the right target audiences with the most frequency are going to be the ones that generate the most inquiries. Each qualified inquiry they generate gives you another opportunity to reach your sales goals. If you do not yet have a your business name, and  a unique image and message or tagline, that you are using in each of the following simple ways to market, I have one question for you. What are you waiting for?

Telephone voice mail message – Make sure yours included your business name and tagline, and that it redirects callers to your web address until you can get back to them.

Email signature – Include your name, business name, logo, tagline, and any unique feature or announcement of upcoming events

Vehicle – Does your business vehicle have signage on sides and back that shows your business name, logo, tagline (if it fits) your phone number and your web address? If not, you are missing an opportunity for incredible frequency of message delivery about your business. Your vehicle is a rolling billboard. Use it.

Sign – Call the highway department to find out the number of vehicles that pass your business on a daily basis. Then pull your jaw back up and make sure you have a spectacular business sign positioned so passersby can see it easily.

Website – Though this involves some initial investment, a well-designed website will give you terrific return on that investment in inquiries, visits, and customer satisfaction. Remember, your home page is the most important page on your site.

Local Media – Make the press your marketing partner by initiating contact with local editors and reporters with information about your business and events. Make sure the information is unique, timely, and of interest to their reader/viewer/listener profile. Deliver it to them in their preferred format. The third party endorsement good publicity gives you can be a priceless return for merely a bit of your time.

Your Community – Whomever said there are diamonds in your own backyard had obviously mined some. So should you. Seek out community events that draw your target audiences. Then participate in a way that is visible to attendees and profitable for you.

Your most effective marketing efforts are not always the big ticket items. Adding these simple ways to market to your overall marketing action plan can mean big returns for very little effort.

If you want more techniques on how to market wisely in a challenging economy, attend or host Julie’s seminar, How to Be Bullish on Marketing in a Challenging Economy. To book it, call 800-876-0260, or email julie@juliewassom.com.

Julie Wassom
http://JulieWassom.com

Posted in Economy, Marketing Tips, Your Business | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »