Marketing Over the Long Haul: How Do You Stay Consistent?

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One of the hardest parts about marketing a small business is doing it consistently.  There are always slow periods, busy periods, growth periods, and times when you probably just don’t feel like marketing.

Being consistent, though, is pretty important. There’s a certain amount of consistency you need to build up relationships and convince people to be interested in your company. Not to mention, when you stop marketing you won’t get nearly as much business.

So how do you keep yourself consistent? Read more for a few consistency tricks that work well for me.

Passive Marketing

It’s important to note that not all marketing is constant work—some types will help you market your small business and barely require you do do anything after they are started. I call this type of marketing “passive marketing”, which basically means that once you get it going it can run on its own for a while.

Some examples of passive marketing include yellow page ads, some print ads, pay-per-click campaigns, search engine optimization, etc… A lot of these methods still require work and usually periodic reviews, but it’s generally a lot less than an active method like cold calling.

At SmallFuel, we’ve set up our marketing so that about half of it is passive. Things like the website (not counting the blog) and pay-per-click campaigns can really save time and complement the more active marketing we do. At your company, you’ll want to experiment with your own ratio of active to passive marketing so you can determine what works best in your position.

Scheduling

One of the things I recommend most to small businesses is that they create a marketing schedule. Actually having the specific activities written down on a calendar can really make a difference in keeping track of what needs to be done when.

Also, a lot of marketing is repetitive—and having a schedule for certain activities makes habit-forming easier. Once you’ve got the habit, it’s a lot easier to be consistent.

Discipline

At the end of the day, in a small business at least, everything seems to come back to discipline. There are no amount of articles or gurus who can help you take care of business; that rests surely in your hands.

As a small business owner myself, I know how difficult it can be to maintain your freedom while still being productive and getting everything completed. With marketing, though, sometimes all it takes to make a campaign successful is a little bit of old-fashioned elbow grease.

Anyhow, those are some of the things that help me market consistently—but the question is: what works for you?

Reader Comments

sir jorge
Feb. 27. 2008 10:38 PM
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great intro to marketing, I liked it.


Eric Davis
Feb. 28. 2008 4:03 AM
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Consistently marketing has been the biggest problem I have.  What I’m starting to do is to have “levels” for my marketing.  Level 1 is the most important, biggest return stuff I can.  Level 2 is less, Level 3 is even less.

Now each week I work on my Level 1 items, even if I have client deadlines coming up.  If I have spare time, I work through the levels until I run out of time.

I’ll let you know how it’s working for me in a month.


Barbara Bix
Feb. 28. 2008 7:22 AM
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As a business to business marketing consultant, I’ve found that the most important thing is narrowing your target audience so you can concentrate your firepower.  As you point out, consistency is key and that means getting in front of the same people over and over again—which you can only do if you focus.  Else you end up spreading your resources thin and wide rather than deep.  You also need a combination of marketing programs.  Personal relationships make the strongest impressions but no impression is lasting.  You need to stay high on people’s radar so that they remember you when it comes time to make a buying decision.


Mason Hipp
Feb. 29. 2008 8:47 AM
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@Eric — That’s an interesting way to arrange things. I think there’s got to be some benefit from ensuring certain tasks get accomplished, just make sure the level 2’s and 3’s get done some time too :)

@Barbera — Focus and narrowing the target audience are definitely essential. Consistency is hard enough without trying to market to everyone.

Thanks for commenting!


mandi
Mar. 10. 2008 3:54 AM
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Hello - just came across the site - good post.  I think consistency is a big key ... so often small businesses want to change their marketing, look, and direction too often.  Change is good, but not at the sake of making your customers confused!


Janet
Mar. 29. 2008 8:23 AM
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Thanks for posting your notes - very interesting and thought-provoking.


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