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Social Marketing Principles

Social Marketing Principles

Fundamental principles of social marketing:

1. Know Your Audience: Know exactly who your audience is and look at everything from that group’s point of view.  Social marketing is a consumer-oriented and audience-focused approach to program planning. Marketers recognize that they are probably very different from the population they are seeking to recruit, and they seek to understand the world from their audience’s point of view. Understanding the specific internal and external factors of the target audience  is the  key to success.

2. Clear Objectives: Be clear about the actions you want your audience to take. Marketing plans are designed with the end goal—behavior change—in mind. Often this end goal involves a series of steps, decisions, or actions. Commercial purchase decisions, for example, involve the following stages:

• awareness,

• evaluation and assessment of  elements

Promotion—activities should include:

• Community networking

• Radio and newspaper advertising

• Media placements in magazines or direct mail

• Public relations efforts, such as making community presentations

Conclusion

Social marketing principles can help  meet marketing goals, thereby helping to ensure success of the business

Adapted from : Using a Social Marketing

Framework to Improve Alzheimer’s

Disease Clinical Trial Recruitment,

Schechter, C., et. al., Academy for

Education Development (in press).

Small Business Marketing Basics

Small Business Marketing Basics – provided by the SBA

To succeed, entrepreneurs must attract and retain a growing base of satisfied customers. Marketing programs, though widely varied, are all aimed at convincing people to try out or keep using particular products or services. Business owners should carefully plan their marketing strategies and performance to keep their market presence strong.

What is Marketing?

Marketing is based on the importance of customers to a business and has two important principles:

  • All company policies and activities should be directed toward satisfying customer needs.
  • Profitable sales volume is more important than maximum sales volume

To best use these principles, a small business should:

  • Determine the needs of their customers through market research
  • Analyze their competitive advantages to develop a market strategy
  • Select specific markets to serve by target marketing
  • Determine how to satisfy customer needs by identifying a market mix

Market Research

Successful marketing requires timely and relevant market information. An inexpensive research program, based on questionnaires given to current or prospective customers, can often uncover dissatisfaction or possible new products or services.

Market research will also identify trends that affect sales and profitability. Population shifts, legal developments, and the local economic situation should be monitored to quickly identify problems and opportunities. It is also important to keep up with competitors’ market strategies.

Marketing Strategy

A marketing strategy identifies customer groups which a particular business can better serve than its target competitors, and tailors product offerings, prices, distribution,

promotional efforts, and services toward those segments. Ideally, the strategy should address unmet customer needs that offer adequate potential profitability. A good strategy helps a business focus on the target markets it can serve best.

Target Marketing

Owners of small businesses usually have limited resources to spend on marketing. Concentrating their efforts on one or a few key market segments – target marketing – gets the most return from small investments. There are two methods used to segment a market:

Geographical segmentation: Specializing in serving the needs of customers in a particular geographical area. For example, a neighborhood convenience store may send advertisements only to people living within one-half mile of the store.

Customer segmentation: Identifying those people most likely to buy the product or service and targeting those groups.

Managing the Market Mix

Every marketing program contains four key components:

  • Products and Services
  • Promotion
  • Distribution
  • Pricing

Products and Services: Product strategies may include concentrating on a narrow product line, developing a highly specialized product or service, or providing a product-service package containing unusually high-quality service.

Promotion: Promotion strategies include advertising and direct customer interaction. Good salesmanship is essential for small businesses because of their limited ability to spend on advertising. Good telephone book advertising is also important. Direct mail is an effective, low-cost medium available to small business.

Price: The right price is crucial for maximizing total revenue. Generally, higher prices mean lower volume and vice-versa; however, small businesses can often command higher prices because of their personalized service.
Distribution: The manufacturer and wholesaler must decide how to distribute their products. Working through established distributors or manufacturers’ agents is generally easiest for small manufacturers. Small retailers should consider cost and traffic flow in site selection, especially since advertising and rent can be reciprocal: a low-cost, low-

traffic location means spending more on advertising to build traffic.

These all combine into an overall marketing program.

The nature of the product or service is also important in citing decisions. If purchases are based largely on impulse, then high-traffic and visibility are critical. On the other hand, location is less of a concern for products or services that customers are willing to go out of their way to find. The recent availability of highly segmented mailing lists, purchased from list brokers, magazines, or other companies, has enabled certain small businesses to operate from any location, yet serve national or international markets.
Marketing Performance

After implementing a marketing program, entrepreneurs must evaluate its performance. Every program should have performance standards to compare with actual results. Researching industry norms and past performances will help to develop appropriate standards.

Entrepreneurs should audit their company’s performance at least quarterly. The key questions are:

  • Is the company doing all it can to be customer-oriented?
  • Do employees ensure the customers are satisfied and leave wanting to come back?

Is it easy for the customer to find what he or she wants at a competitive price?

Downtown San Diego marina real estate image

downtown san diego marina real estate image

downtown san diego marina real estate image

I took this image after the Real Estate convention last year in San Diego. It’s one of my most popular stock images, it really gives an urban Southern California feel with the water, boats, and skyscrapers in the background.

Downtown Culver City Stock Photo

downtown culver

Downtown Culver City looking east from sidewalk

Web Retool Announces Partnership with Dynamic Page Solutions for Smart IDX

Most Realtors report that their websites don’t generate search engine traffic!

Although most IDX solutions are advertised as “search-engine friendly,” they are optimized to bring visitors to their website, not yours. Unless you want to spend thousands of dollars to optimize your site by meticulously restructuring the content, headings, links, meta tags, etc., the main traffic to your site is not going to be generated by Google property searches, even for your MLS listings. No matter how much time and energy you put into it, your website will remain dumb because traditional IDX solutions are designed for that.

Learn More About this Cutting Edge Technology

So How Do I Get a “Smart” Website?

Web Retool has partnered with Dynamic Page Solutions to bring you smart technology, which will populate your website or blog with thousands of MLS listings that are customized and visible to search engines as part of your page. It does all the optimization work for you, selecting keywords, and driving traffic to your site through property searches. Adaptation of this technology can boost your bottom line by increasing your chances of making contact with homebuyers with intent to buy a specific property.

To take your real estate business into the future, you need you have the best website available. Only Dynamic Page Solutions and Web Retool can give you the optimized IDX solution to drive property search traffic to your site and boost your sales.

Smart IDX now available for CLAW and CARETS MLS serving Los Angeles, Ventura, Orange County, San Diego, Inland Empire, and Southern California.

SEE AN EXAMPLE

Downtown Los Angeles Apartment Building Stock Photo

I like the fire escape and strong color contrast on this photo.

Downtown LA Apartments

Downtown LA Apartments

Adding a Domain Name to a Third Party Template Website (Subdomain)

What is a ‘CNAME Record’?

(Canonical NAME Record) a record in a DNS database used to direct a URL, such as www.agentspring.com to a single web address such as davidberg.yourkwagent.com

The domain name you purchase through the Web Retool or GoDaddy (e.g. www.agentspring.com) is the alias that we would use to represent your Third Party Template Website ;(e.g davidberg.yourkwagent.com).

The c-name redirect tool will allow your purchased domain name to represent your business, appear in search engine results and be used for analytics and marketing tools.

Set Up Instructions

Step 1: Purchase your Domain Name

Step 2: Setup a CNAME for Your Domain Name

Step 3: Add Your Domain in the Agent Website Administration Tool

Adding Contacts to Outlook from another program

Import Contacts from Excel or a CSV File into Outlook

To import contacts from a CSV file or from Excel into Outlook:

  • Select File | Import and Export… from the menu in Outlook.
  • Make sure Import from another program or file is highlighted.
  • Click Next >.
  • Now make sure Comma Separated Values (Windows) is selected.
  • Click Next >.
  • Use the Browse … button the select the desired file.
  • Typically, choose Do not import duplicate items.
  • Click Next >.
  • Select the Outlook folder you want to import the contacts to. This will usually be your Contacts folder.
  • Click Next >.
  • Click Map Custom Fields ….
  • Make sure all columns from the CSV file are mapped to the desired Outlook address book fields.
    • You can create new mappings by dragging the column title to the desired field.
    • Any previous mapping of the same column will be replaced with the new.
  • Click OK.
  • Now click Finish.

If you receive a Translation Error, when you try to add the .csv file do this:

  • Create a new contact (if you already have some contacts in Outlook, then you do not need to add a new one) in Outlook
  • Export the contacts to a .csv or excel  file
  • Compare your exported file from your other program with the one Outlook created.
  • Try to manually match the fields of the two files. Copy the header fields (usually row 1)  from contacts exported from Outlook and replace the header fields on the contacts exported from your other program.
  • Save your changes and try to import the contacts into Outlook following the original steps above.