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Why Offline Marketing Still Matters

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April 8, 2011

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Offline marketing used to be the only kind of marketing. Billboards, flyers, brochures, sales letters, direct mail, cold calls, marketing events, seminars, sponsorships, newspaper ads, magazine ads, giveaways, signs—those were all the old-fashioned methods of building a brand, building relationships, building awareness, communicating with your customers and potential customers, and getting buzz on the street.

 

They were all common marketing techniques for small and large businesses, and they often cost a lot of money. Small businesses have, for the most part, embraced online marketing with a sigh of relief. For a smaller investment, they can reach a more targeted market and, often, have a better chance at tracking their ROI, which means they can make better choices about whether or not to keep investing those marketing dollars in the same places.

 

Does offline marketing even matter anymore?

 

Here's a scenario. You're looking for a new employee. You've got an expansive online network, lots of contacts in social media, a huge e-mail address list and an active LinkedIn account. You get social networking. You've put the word out that you're looking for a new hire.

 

You go out to eat with your family, and while you're there you run into an old friend. You shake hands, chat, and it turns out your friend has the precise skills you're looking for and is looking to make a job change. He promises to send you his resume.

 

The next morning you check your inbox to find a flood of responses from your online network: personal recommendations, LinkedIn messages and e-mailed resumes. Oh, and there's the resume from your old friend, halfway down the e-mail list. Which one do you click on first? Which one gets the most consideration? Which one has a draw, a personal connection that makes it easier to imagine hiring this person who sent you this resume?

 

Most people will be drawn toward the face-to-face connection. As great as social media networking is, as powerful as online connections can be, as many new doors as the Internet can open, the tangible reality of seeing a person in the physical context of your real, offline life makes more of an impression than a virtual hello ever could.

 

 

Does this mean your small business is wasting time and money with online marketing?

 

No.

 

The world of marketing is not diminishing and should not be divided into online vs. offline. Rather, marketing has expanded into a two-ring circus.

 

Online marketing provides many immediate ways to connect with a target market. It gives you a voice into new circles of conversation. It gives you the ability to meet people who otherwise would have remained unknown to your business. It provides instant connections, unlimited availability, and many ways to gather and track and respond to data. There is much to love about online marketing.

 

And online marketing, all by its virtual self, can garner a good response if done properly and consistently.

 

But if you're tired of seeing incremental number changes in your online marketing, you need to step back into the second ring. You need to make a tangible connection, and that's done via offline methods: a paper letter, a hand-written card, a physical product, a face-to-face meeting, something to be touched and felt and experienced, or someone to be met and talked with and remembered.

 

However advanced our technology might be, we still rely on direct methods of assessing value and trustworthiness. But online interaction removes many of those gauges we use to establish value and trustworthiness. A person's relationship with a business depends on how the person perceives the value and trustworthiness of the business.

 

If you limit the gauges by which people can establish your business credibility, you slow the relationship down. In some cases, you'll stop it altogether, because your business will simply get lost in the online roar. But when you couple online marketing with the tangible, offline interaction that we still need and crave, you boost relationship development.

 

When a couple who has met through an online dating service starts "getting serious," what is the normal next step? They meet in person, in the real world, in a place where they don't have to make judgments based on virtual clues which none of us are instinctively good at reading. It's the real-life meeting that determines whether the relationship will go forward or not.

 

Don't make the mistake of keeping your business relationships and your marketing virtual when a little offline work could move them forward, from connections to loyal customers.

 

It doesn't take as much effort in offline marketing–in terms of time or dollars–to make an impression. If you've already established some common ground via online marketing, then the offline efforts will have a foundation on which to rest. You can follow up with more online marketing, but you'll be following up with the strength you didn't have before: the strength of a tangible, personal connection; the same strength your old friend has behind his e-mailed resume merely because you shook his hand the night before.

 

Annie Mueller is a freelance writer based in St. Louis. She covers small business topics with a focus on lean/zero budget start-ups, business blogging, and simple (sane) ways business can use social media without selling their souls to Facebook. Her work can be seen online at Investopedia's Financial Edge blog, Young Entrepreneur, Wise Bread, Organic Authority, Modern Mom, and her own site, AnnieMueller.com. Find her on Twitter: @AnnieMueller. 

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Join the conversation ( 4 )

  • Chris Hoffman 1 year 1 months and 19 days ago

    Chris Hoffman

    This is a fantastic article. I am part of an integrated female marketing company and there is simply no replacement for that personal touch point when you are trying to engage a customer. Whether it's sampling a new product or explaining what your business does, the face to face is still more powerful than just an email in your inbox. I am huge proponent to the integration of both. The ROI is of course what you are looking for, but your ROI will go up with integration and not just cyber marketing or cyber-relationship building. The online dating comparison is right on target. American express always puts out these great articles. Keep it up :)

  • Pat McGraw 1 year 1 months and 21 days ago

    Pat McGraw

    Great article - it's important to remember that our job as marketing communications experts is to select the right channel to deliver the right message to the right people at the right time in order to get the right response. Unfortunately, too many of us get focused on the low up-front cost of email/online and forget about the important metric of cost per sale - and with everyone focused on burying the buyer's Inbox with low cost email, offline channels are producing some very nice ROI. Of course, there are a lot of marketers that lack offline experience...

  • Allison Canty 1 year 1 months and 22 days ago

    Allison Canty

    You make some great points in this article Annie. At Grasshopper, we use online tools (like Twitter) to establish relationships that we may not be able to make offline due to geography or other restrictions. Online is still important, but I absolutely agree with you when you say “don’t make the mistakes of keeping your business relationships and your marketing virtual.” We take our virtual relationships and then try to take our conversations with them offline. Whether it is a phone call or meeting up with our connections when we are traveling, we do our best to make sure we connect with the people we meet online, offline.

  • Roger Ach 1 year 1 months and 22 days ago

    Roger Ach

    Good post, Annie. You're absolutely right....and however effective Online Marketing gets, advertisers still need a balanced, multi-pronged effort......and that includes the effective use of old-fahioned Direct Marketing, upgraded to make use of modern technology and Video.Social Marketing, Transactional Ads, Location-based Coupons are all exciting, but all businesses must build and use their customer lists and phone numbers to push offers and information.Today we use eMail rather than U.S. Mail and Cell numbers not home numbers. We need to reach our customers where they are and when they need our goods and services. Mobile is a must.For example, take a look at the Social/Video App at vADz.com. With #vADz, you can easily create #VideoCoupons & #VideoAds, edit, enhance, store and mix UGC with vendor-provided media. One click adds integrated eCommerce, Trackable Coupons, Maps, Menus and other content.Every vADz is also automatically publshed to the web and SEO-tagged.Every vADz also generates a vADzLink, a shortened Link to the ad to be used in eMails, SMS/Text Messages to Mobile devices, Tweets, on Facebook pages and other social media. Please see www.vADz.com. All coments welcome.

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