9 Tips to Great Design for Your Marketing Materials

Written by Neroli Lacey


9 TIPS FOR GREAT DESIGN 1) Don’t just hire a good designer. Hire someone who has had plenty of experience designing business collateral. Your designer needs to ask yourepparttar right questions aboutrepparttar 120522 project. And he/ she needs to be able to turnrepparttar 120523 design round reasonably fast too.

2) Writerepparttar 120524 copy first. I believerepparttar 120525 copy drivesrepparttar 120526 project. (Unless this is a print ad, in which caserepparttar 120527 visual and headline will often dominate).

3) Read your copy word for word to your designer. You’d be amazed how often designers don’t understandrepparttar 120528 project because they haven’t been properly briefed. Your designer is going to be expressing in designrepparttar 120529 same persuasive arguments that you / your writer will be articulating in words.

4) Ensure that your designer communicates your branding i.e.repparttar 120530 values you are trying to communicate.

5) Check thatrepparttar 120531 copy is easy to read once it has been laid out by your designer. Ifrepparttar 120532 design takes too much attention to itself, then your readers won’t be following your arguments.

Common Exhibit Marketing Mistakes: Ten Tips on How to Avoid Them

Written by Susan Friedmann


The key to great exhibiting is marketing. But marketing is a very inexact science that leaves room for a multitude of errors to occur. The following are 10 ofrepparttar most common marketing mistakes that exhibitors often make. Learn to avoid them and you will increase your chances for a successful tradeshow. 1. Have A Proper Exhibit Marketing Plan

Having both a strategic exhibit marketing and tactical plan of action is a critical starting point. In order to make tradeshows a powerful dimension your company’s overall marketing operation, there must be total alignment betweenrepparttar 120521 strategic marketing and your exhibit marketing plan. Tradeshows should not be a stand-alone venture. Know and understand exactly what you wish to achieve - increasing market share with existing users; introducing new products/services into existing markets or into new markets; or introducing new products/services into new markets. This isrepparttar 120522 nucleus on which to build. 2. Have A Well-Defined Promotional Plan

A significant part of your marketing includes promotion – pre-show, at-show and post-show. Most exhibitors fail to have a plan that encompasses all three areas. Budget is naturally going to play a major role in deciding what and how much promotional activity is possible. Developing a meaningful theme or message that ties into your strategic marketing plan will then help to guide promotional decisions. Know whom you want to target and then consider having different promotional programs aimed atrepparttar 120523 different groups you are interested in attracting. Include direct mail, broadcast faxes, advertising, PR, sponsorship, andrepparttar 120524 Internet as possible ways to reach your target audience. 3. Use Direct Mail Effectively

Direct mail is still one ofrepparttar 120525 most popular promotional vehicles exhibitors use. From postcards to multi-piece mailings, attendees are deluged with invitations to visit booths. Many ofrepparttar 120526 mailings come from show management’s lists and as a result, everyone gets everything. To targetrepparttar 120527 people you want visit your booth, use your own list of customers and prospects--it’srepparttar 120528 best one available. Design a piece that is totally benefit-oriented and makes an impact. Mail three pieces at regular intervals prior torepparttar 120529 show, starting about four weeks out, to help ensure your invitation is seen. Wherever possible, use first-class mail. There’s nothing worse than a mailing that arrives afterrepparttar 120530 show is over. 4. Give Visitors An Incentive To Visit Your Booth

Whatever promotional vehicles you use, make sure that you give visitors a reason to come and visit you. With a hall overflowing with fascinating products/services, combined with time constraints, people need an incentive to come and visit your booth. First and foremost their primary interest is in “what’s new!” They are eager to learn aboutrepparttar 120531 latest technologies, new applications, or anything that will help save them time and/or money. Even if you don’t have a new product/service to introduce, think about a new angle to promote your offerings. 5. Have Giveaways That Work

Tied into giving visitors an incentive to visit your booth isrepparttar 120532 opportunity to offer a premium item that will entice them. Your giveaway items should be designed to increase your memorability, communicate, motivate, promote or increase recognition of your company. Developing a dynamite giveaway takes thought and creativity. Consider what your target audience wants, what will help them do their job better, what they can’t get elsewhere, what is product/service related and educational. Think about having different gifts for different types of visitors. Use your website to make an offer for visitors to collect important information, such as an executive report, when they visit your booth. Giveaways should be used as a reward or token of appreciation for visitors participating in a demonstration, presentation or contest, or as a thank-you for qualifying information about specific needs etc. 6. Use Press Relations Effectively

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