PART 1: HOW TO FRUGALLY MARKET YOUR BUSINESS
Get the most out of business cards
Business cards are your most important publicity items. They tell people how to contact you (don’t rely on email signatures—clients will wipe off your emails without hesitation and will not be able to contact you when a job comes up).
Business cards are your most important publicity items. They tell people how to contact you (don’t rely on email signatures—clients will wipe off your emails without hesitation and will not be able to contact you when a job comes up).
Executives normally keep vendor business cards in a case or card-box. Make sure you’re in it. And make sure your card has ALL your details: mailing address, telephone, cell phone number, email, and website address.
Your business card should be smart, clean, and easy-to-read. Don’t be too flamboyant. I know a designer who had his details printed from left-to-right on one side, and his details printed backwards from right-to-left on the other side. Whilst filing it away, his biggest potential client clipped it onto a backer card inside out. When she called upon it later she couldn’t make sense of it. Consequently she trashed the card and called another designer.
Print plenty of cards. An extra thousand won’t break the bank. Give several cards to new prospective clients at meetings (they may give them to their colleagues), and if you have existing clients or contacts, make sure they are well stocked with your cards so they can recommend you. Add a few cards in with your invoices. Leave a few cards in company reception areas, at sports clubs, and anywhere where your prospective clients are likely to congregate. Get them in people’s hands.
Create an online portfolio
Unless you are a web-designer, creating your own website is not essential, although it does give you some advantages. A website will help you to communicate your portfolio via email without sending attachments (clients will be suspicious of emails with attachments from unknown addresses—a link to a website is preferable). A website is also a good opportunity to sell yourself with some hard-working copy. Good copy can help you to win new clients, so buy yourself a good copywriting manual and learn the basic copywriting tricks of the trade.
Unless you are a web-designer, creating your own website is not essential, although it does give you some advantages. A website will help you to communicate your portfolio via email without sending attachments (clients will be suspicious of emails with attachments from unknown addresses—a link to a website is preferable). A website is also a good opportunity to sell yourself with some hard-working copy. Good copy can help you to win new clients, so buy yourself a good copywriting manual and learn the basic copywriting tricks of the trade.
If you have no experience of designing websites, or you don’t have time to create one, don’t be put off, you can buy inexpensive templates online as a temporary solution.www.templateshome.com is a good place to start, where you can buy smart website templates for around $60. Buying a dot.com address and uploading it onto a website browser should cost around $25.
Market yourself with mailer-postcards
You may want to print some mailer postcards at the same time you print your business cards. Direct mail postcard designs are a great way to show off your creative talents and get noticed. In an age when executives are familiar with receiving emails from scouting freelancers, postcards received through snail-mail are a novel and memorable way to sell your freelance services.
You may want to print some mailer postcards at the same time you print your business cards. Direct mail postcard designs are a great way to show off your creative talents and get noticed. In an age when executives are familiar with receiving emails from scouting freelancers, postcards received through snail-mail are a novel and memorable way to sell your freelance services.
Showcase your best visual/visuals on side one, then write some marketing copy to sell your services on side two (and remember to include your full contact details). Your copy should focus on the benefits your clients will get from using you.
Think about who you are targeting
While you are waiting for your cards to print, you need to research the kind of companies to target for freelance work. Aim high; large corporations with multiple departments make better leads than small or medium-sized businesses. The work you get from a big company is likely to be more lucrative and on-going. You may also get internal recommendations across departments. One company can be a client for life and effectively pay off your mortgage.
While you are waiting for your cards to print, you need to research the kind of companies to target for freelance work. Aim high; large corporations with multiple departments make better leads than small or medium-sized businesses. The work you get from a big company is likely to be more lucrative and on-going. You may also get internal recommendations across departments. One company can be a client for life and effectively pay off your mortgage.
Do a Google search for all the big companies who have offices within a reasonable driving distance, and examine each website for contacts. Build yourself a database of contacts in a spreadsheet including the names, titles, email addresses, mail addresses, and telephone numbers of all key sales and marketing contacts within your target companies.
Follow a rigid marketing strategy
Start by sending out your postcards to all the addresses on your database. A week after drop-date, send each of your contacts a personalized email asking if they use freelancers and requesting a meeting to discuss your offer. Include a link to your website so contacts can view your portfolio. If you don’t have a website, ask your contact to reply for samples of your work, then send a maximum of three pdfs or jpegs that total under 2MB (anything over this will be deleted when inboxes get crammed).
Start by sending out your postcards to all the addresses on your database. A week after drop-date, send each of your contacts a personalized email asking if they use freelancers and requesting a meeting to discuss your offer. Include a link to your website so contacts can view your portfolio. If you don’t have a website, ask your contact to reply for samples of your work, then send a maximum of three pdfs or jpegs that total under 2MB (anything over this will be deleted when inboxes get crammed).
There are three things to consider when you are sending emails to prospective clients on your database. First, always send personalized emails to one contact at a time. Never send a round-robin. Second, keep your first email short and polite, asking for permission to send over some samples. Never attach visuals to your introductory email, your email will be deleted as spam. Third, set up an automatic email signature, so your prospective clients can quickly access your contact details. Although most people use business cards to find vendor addresses, some people use email to look up contacts.
Follow up your email with a phone call the next day to get the contacts’ feedback to your samples. Ask if the department uses freelancers and what creative requirements the department has. If your contact regularly uses freelancers, request a meeting to discuss your full portfolio. If your contact doesn’t use freelancers, ask for another contact within the organization who does. Use your database to keep track of all the people you have contacted and when you contacted them, so you know which people to follow up on and when.
Contact plenty of people, and the law of averages states you’ll get plenty of meetings booked.
Present yourself as client-focused whilst pitching
The key to a successful pitching meeting is to be well-prepared and client-focused. Before you travel to the company office, examine the company’s website so you know what kind of brief your contact is likely to give you. Tailor your portfolio for the company by ordering your most relevant work first (a good reason why you should use retractable sleeves in your portfolio, allocating one project to one sleeve).
The key to a successful pitching meeting is to be well-prepared and client-focused. Before you travel to the company office, examine the company’s website so you know what kind of brief your contact is likely to give you. Tailor your portfolio for the company by ordering your most relevant work first (a good reason why you should use retractable sleeves in your portfolio, allocating one project to one sleeve).
At the meeting, make sure your pitch is relevant. Ask to see the company’s existing publicity, then talk about your most similar graphic design assignments.
Give your prospective client enough information to help them see what you can do for them. With each item of work you present, summarize the original brief, say how you creatively interpreted the brief, and give a sense of how effective the project was. Don’t go into a full project analysis unless asked, and don’t assume your prospective client will want to know the intricacies of your portfolio.
At the end of your meeting, ask if you can meet colleagues in the same department, ask for contacts in other departments, and hand out plenty of business cards. When you get home, send a thank-you email to your contact, reminding them of your availability, and update your activities in your database so you know when next to contact them.
Be persistent
It’s important to remain visible. Promotions controllers are more likely to outsource work to people they meet in person. Pretend that you will be in the area one day and ask to ‘pop in’ for a brief chat—you may have more luck arranging informal ad-hoc meetings than formal put-it-in-your-diary meetings. When you visit a company, remember to take your portfolio and plenty of business cards. You never know who you might meet.
It’s important to remain visible. Promotions controllers are more likely to outsource work to people they meet in person. Pretend that you will be in the area one day and ask to ‘pop in’ for a brief chat—you may have more luck arranging informal ad-hoc meetings than formal put-it-in-your-diary meetings. When you visit a company, remember to take your portfolio and plenty of business cards. You never know who you might meet.
You’ll find that prospective clients often say things like “I have no projects at the moment, but I’ll keep you in mind”. Don’t get frustrated, and certainly don’t beg for work on the phone. Just make a note in your database to keep track of responses, then send reminder emails to contacts every month, just so they really do keep you in mind. Give them a phone call every couple of months; sooner or later they will give you work.
http://freelanceswitch.com/designer/how-to-promote-your-graphic-design-business-–-part-one/Summary: how to frugally market your business
There are three rules of thumb for finding work:
- Target as many contacts as possible by email, phone, and mail. The law of averages suggests you will find work, eventually.
- Be persistent, follow up on all leads and focus on getting meeting time with contacts. Remember people trust faces not names.
- Brush up on your copywriting skills so you can write persuasive mailer postcards and boost your chances of getting meeting time with potential clients.
Creative ways to promote your design business with little or no budget
On the GDB facebook page , I recently asked what sorts of articles you would like to read during the next few months here at the blog. While I plan to write articles for nearly all the responses, one particular response offered by Nina Randone , really caught my attention. Her suggestion?Creative and low budget self-promotion pieces. Thus, this article was born. Today I would like to explore creative ways to promote your design business with little or no budget. Thanks, Nina.
I think what I’ll do is offer up a variety of suggestions I have and a few tricks that have worked for me. Then I’ll just open up the discussion to you guys. You bring so many great experiences to the table, I’d love to hear what suggestions you have on creative ways to promote your design business with little or no budget. Here’s my two cents:
Try some Guerilla Marketing
One idea I have always toyed around with is using some non-traditional or guerilla marketing tactics. Obviously, guerilla marketing works perfectly for a low-budget scenario because the idea of guerilla marketing is not to rely on huge marketing budgets, but creativity, spontaneity, and the element of surprise.
I have often thought, as I have walked in and out of local shops, how terrible the flyers, banners, and even junkie slips of paper look in the store window. What if you printed up just a few really nice-looking 8×10 ads for your design business and said something like “Stand out from the crowd” on them. In contrast to the black and white flyers printed on yellowing white paper with little tabs ripped off the bottom, yours could be a high-gloss matted piece of 100lb weight paper that doesn’t fade in the sun.
When potential clients see the difference between what other amateur designers and marketers and doing versus what you can produce, you’re bound to turn a few heads. The great thing about this particular approach is you only have to spend money on the nice prints (which are usually fairly cheap) and the other “junk” surrounding your ad is already provided by those who have come to place their flyers before you. What do you think?
Give something of value away for free
Don’t forget, here at GDB, we have already discussed the fact that discounts could devalue your design. We have also explored three reasons to think twice before offering free design services. I am not suggesting here that you give away your design services for free, but that you giveaway other things for free.
If you are on an extremely tight or non-existent budget, for example, try giving away a free e-book to local business owners that explains the basics of good web or graphic design. I did this by emailing an ebook titled “10 elements of a successful business web site” to a few potential clients in my city. When they read about web site essentials and realized their sites didn’t have all the necessary elements, guess who they called up to ask for help.
Yep, me.
If your budget allows for a little more spending, you can similarly print a book like the one mentioned above, go around to local businesses, meet them in person, and give them the free book.
You could also giveaway free seminars or consultations. But be careful not to make these too much of a sales pitch. If you go to a free consultation with a potential client, try not to be too much of a salesman. Be kind, considerate, and really focus on what the person needs from you. More than likely, they will result in a new client.
Try Blogging
While it can be daunting getting into the world of blogging about design, I have to admit, one of the most common ways I have found clients during the last 6-9 months is due the my blog’s visibility. One of my clients put it this way (I’m paraphrasing), “We found your blog and were impressed by the fact that you help other designers understand the importance of good client relationships. We figured, you probably practice what you preach, and we were right. Thanks for the good experience and excellent designs.”
You can have the same impact on a potential client. Perhaps you specialize in wordpress design, blog about it. Maybe you’re all about logo design, start a logo design blog. A lot of people out there complain that there are too many design blogs and you shouldn’t start your own. I say, GO FOR IT! A design blog isn’t always about making money from banner ads or eBooks. It could simply be a great way to reach out to your clients without spending a huge amount of money.
If you’re serious being a successful design-blogger, try reading a few of my favorite GDB articles on blogging about design:
- The Beginner’s Guide to Blogging about Design
- How to get people talking about your design blog
- Top Designers discuss why they blog
- Finding your voice in the Design Community
- Is your design blog hurting your design business?
- How to write blog posts that designers actually want to read
Hit the Streets
Or pick up the phone, or write an email. However you choose to cold-call your potential clients, just get up and get active. Although this method has not proven as successful for me as some tactics mentioned above, getting out and knocking on business-owner’s doors, calling potential clients, or emailing company owners, is a great way to start out (especially if your budget is low or non-existent).
Doing something is better than not doing anything, so if you find your design business slowing or not picking up the speed you would like, get up and do something about it. Even if knocking business doors all day only lands you one new client, that’s one more than you had before.
Take time to brainstorm (then share)
While foot-power can be a great tool and getting up and doing something is a good way to move your design business forward, it always pays off to take a little time to brainstorm some good, solid, effective ideas for promoting your design business. Sit down with a pen and paper and jot down all the ideas you can think of, even if they sound ridiculous.
http://www.graphicdesignblender.com/creative-ways-to-promote-your-design-business-with-little-or-no-budget
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