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Retailing Tips: Marketing for the Most Return How Tracking, Timing and Discernment Can Help Your Store Promotions
Whichever way you decide works best for you, here are some tips that will help make the most of your marketing efforts: ![]() "We've been working with one manufacturer that has been helping its retailers be more successful in this economy, and that includes doing events. There has been a 12-percent difference in [sales] performance from those retailers who are participating in this program and those who aren't,” he told TDmonthly. 2. Track for the future. Every promotion or marketing event should be tracked to determine its effectiveness. At my retail store, every advertisement, coupon and flyer was tagged with a code number. We tracked how many were coming in from newspaper ads versus return store coupons. Track this against the time of year, too. For example, newspaper ads for your business may catch interest in the winter but not the summer. 3. Allocate enough time. “We advertised a special on some select items but didn't give ourselves enough of a time cushion to get the shipment here in time,” Molly McMullin of Twirl in Taos, N.M., told TDmonthly of a failed promotion. “Sometimes when you rush it doesn't work … a matter of wrong time, wrong place,” seconded Dina Evans, owner of All Things Fun! in Berlin, N.J. ![]() “Originally we were trying to do one pretty sizable kid event each month,” said Sherrie Antes, co-owner of School Crossing & Toy Station in Colorado Springs, Colo. “[We] tried a sport thing in May one year, and then an outdoor event, and neither one of those worked because of its being summer vacation and people had lots of choices.” ![]() When I saw that we only received three coupons back from a particular newspaper advertisement that cost $300 (the average sale in my store was $40), it was easy to see that it still wasn't worth the cost when the newspaper discounted the advertisement to $200. 6. Estimate total time and effort versus rate of return. Know the amount of effort in terms of time and dollars that goes into planning and executing a promotion, and be able to estimate the return. Handing out coupons for a return visit to customers already in the store is little effort. Planning a monthly event is much more. 7. Beware of those that compete for your customers’ attention and time. When you are planning an event, see if there is anything else going on in your area that would be competition and attempt to attract your same customer base. Likewise, there may be opportunities to leverage other's events (such as when the store next door that sells kid's clothing is holding a sale). ![]() |
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