What *Queer Eye* Can Teach You about the MediaWritten by Susan Harrow
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4. Show tangible visible results. Visible transformations make audiences swoon. Can you do a before and after? In one show *boys* helped a balding man who was married to his toupee give it up. His wife and his kids hadn't seen his head without fake hair for many years. His willingness to finally be *seen* was dramatic. His transformation was both inner and outer. These kinds of transformations keep audiences spellbound. Think about how you can devise one for a show you want to be on. 5. Have fun. What makes Queer Eye so great is that everyone has such a grand time. What good is all publicity in world if you dread it? M. Scott Peck says *The truth is that our finest moments are most likely to occur when we are feeling deeply uncomfortable, unhappy, or unfulfilled. For it is only in such moments, propelled by our discomfort, that we are likely to step out of our ruts and start searching for different ways or truer answers.* If you can let go of outcome (no matter how important--because those are hardest ones to let go of), you will free yourself to have a good time, anytime, anywhere, with anyone. What could be better? Join millionaires, moguls and best-sellers who speak and grow rich. Find out how to sell your knowledge, products and services to Adult Learning Centers nationwide in this special report- Secrets to Skyrocketing Your Career http://www.prsecretstore.com/sectoskyryou.html Copyright (c) 2002 - 2005 Susan Harrow, All Rights Reserved.

Susan Harrow, media coach, marketing strategist and author of *Sell Yourself Without Selling Your Soul* (HarperCollins), *The Ultimate Guide to Getting Booked on Oprah*, and *How You Can Get a 6-Figure Book Advance.* Clients include Fortune 500 CEOs, bestselling authors and entrepreneurs who have appeared on Oprah, 60 Minutes, NPR, and in TIME, USA Today, Parade, People, O, NY Times, WSJ, and Inc.
| | Starting Small Business Promotional CampaignsWritten by Joy Gendusa
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Here is a story that could save you thousands of marketing and promotional dollars, as well as months or years of experience. “I was working as Communications & Promotional Director in a medium size business. We were fortunate enough to have our own commercial printing press, that put out lots of very fancy letters, catalogs, brochures and other promotional items, and oh yes, envelopes to put them in. My full time pressman and his helpers, spent several days each week getting everything printed, cut, folded and sent over to mailing house. There, they had machines that automated all stuffing, sorting, addressing and stamping. All in all everything was going very well. We were sending out about 40,000 pieces per week at a cost of about $10,800.00, and getting around 120 to 140 good leads per week. This generated an average of 2 new sales per week for a product that cost around $12,000, and re-sign income of around $45,000 more. We weren’t growing very fast, but we were making money. THEN…911 hit. Suddenly, nobody wanted to open envelopes. Our leads were dropping to nothing. We were heading toward our own disaster like so many other companies did. I knew I needed to promote, but what good did it do if nobody read it! I was talking to owner of mailing house and he suggested use of POSTCARDS instead of letters. So we decided to give it a try. Unfortunately, I had much less money to allocate towards promotion, so I started by sending about 20,000 postcards weekly. The total cost-per-piece, needing only one day on presses, half labor at mail house and a substantial decrease in postage, was reduced by about 60%.” What was result? Try 120 to 140 leads per week! Why? •You don't have to open a post card! •You see it right away, bright picture is not hidden from view by an envelope. •The message leaps right out and you can't ignore it or throw it in trash unopened (the fate of many bulk mail pieces). Postcards are best medium to reach new customers when starting a small business promotional campaign.

Joy Gendusa founded PostcardMania in 1998; her only assets a computer and a phone. In 2004 the company did close to $9 million in sales and employs over 60 persons. She attributes her explosive growth to her ability to choose incredible staff and her innate marketing savvy. Now she’s sharing her marketing secrets with others. For more free marketing advice, visit her website at www.postcardmania.com.
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