Marketing your business at a conference
Tips for turning leads into sales.
Tony Manci, Nashville
I run a small, two-year-old consulting business and have the opportunity to place a flyer in each participant’s package at a state annual conference for my industry. There will be about 225 attendees – 85% of whom are potential clients. What should I put on the flyer?
By Kathleen Ryan O’Connor, Fortune Small Business contributor
Dear Tony: Unless your firm does analysis on finding lost dogs, you’ll probably need more than just a flyer to sell your business. So think of the one-page insert as an attention getter, and focus on ways to convert eyeballs into requests for more information.
You’ve already achieved the first goal of any marketing campaign – you’ve found your target audience. “The attendees will be self-selecting, and many – or most – are viable prospects,” says Andrea Wojnicki, an assistant professor of marketing at the University of Toronto’s school of management.
Woljnicki advises you to do everything in your power to entice these prospects to read your flyer. “Be creative,” she says. Rather than printing a bland description of your company, consider asking a client to write a testimonial, or publish a short case study of your work and pair it with a photograph. Make sure that the flyer’s basic design elements – the logo, font, and color scheme – are consistent with all of your business’ paraphernalia.
You should also use your (relatively few) words to differentiate yourself from your competitors. “Your firm needs to present a very compelling reason to prospective customers for them to make a switch,” Woljnicki says.
To enable attendees to get in touch with you, make sure that the flyer offers different types of contact information. Print your phone number, e-mail address, Website, and showroom location; include the names of company members that will be at the conference.
Kae Groshong, founder of North Star Marketing in Lancaster, Pa., says you shouldn’t put all of your eggs in one basket. “A flyer is just part of a larger effort,” she says. “You have to open up and think of other ways to touch prospects.” Once you’ve distributed the insert, you should find the attendees who have the strongest potential to become clients and introduce yourself. Then, call them to follow up.
Groshong advises you to think of the conference as a tripartite marketing plan: “visibility, awareness, then action,” she says. Use different marketing methods to make your business’ name memorable to attendees – even after the fliers get tossed into the trash.
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Try to make your flyers look simple, but smart. It must say a lot without writing many words. People like to see resolts, but they have no time to read a lot of info.
My advice to you, is that you must put on your flyer some information about your company, make it look attractive, and stylish. Your flyers must get an attention of your potential buyers. And they have to want
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You will want this flyer to be as professional as possible. You want think of it as the one PowerPoint Slide that will make a difference. You don’t want scattered throught, for example: at Net-Flow Solutions (www.net-flowsolutions.com) we have several items we offer – Managed IT Services, Hosted Exchange, Hosted SharePoint, Online Backup/Disaster Recovery, and IT Consulting. How do I list them all or do I try to hit only one topic.
We go with a basic logo, company contact information, then we have three pictures that represent IT Consulting, Managed Services, and Hosted Services, and above each are those words. Under it is our tag line “Net-Flow Solutions managing your NETwork, while you manage your NET profits.”
Quick, Simple, Efficient…
Good Luck!
Mike Holland
Managing Partner
Net-Flow Solutions