"If you always do, what you've always done, you'll always get, what you've always got".

How to Avoid Advertising Disasters

I’ve been working with small businesses for long enough to know that most standard advertising is fairly ineffective for generating sales pipeline. Sadly I have learnt this the hard way, by wasting money on adverts that have generated a negative return on investment - the negative element being the loss of cash and moral! So why then do I occasionally get caught out by advertising sales reps?

A question I had to ask myself recently when I booked a quarter page ad in a publication in London that turned out to be a bit of a toad. The reason I would hazard a guess is twofold:

1. the skill of the sales rep in presenting a compelling opportunity, and

2. the client’s real need for new leads in these difficult economic conditions made me think twice

Of course when I learnt my advice on this one was a little wayward, I did the only decent thing and offered to cover the cost of the advert should the promised sales leads not appear. Watch this space to see if I have to get my cheque book out.

The other result is that I’ve decided to compile a checklist of questions I must ask and fully understand before I place an order. With the aim of helping everyone to get a better return on their advertising investment, I thought I’d share this here.

  • Is the publication readership the same as my target audience / decision maker? (note it is important to really understand your target audience first!)
  • Do I clearly understand the target audience description provided by the publication?
  • Have I heard of the publication or is it launching?
  • What is the format of the publication - A4, A5, glossy, newspaper, portrait, landscape, colour or black and white etc?
  • Exactly what size will the advert be?
  • Can I secure a guaranteed right hand page? (important as an advert placed on a right hand page generally outperforms those on the left hand page)
  • Are any of my competitors advertising?
  • What is the publication date?
  • What is the publication’s reach - not just the circulation, but total reach?
  • Will they offer any guarantees - cost per enquiry for example? (unlikely but worth asking)
  • Can the publisher help to put together the creative?
  • Have any of my competitors / peers advertised in the publication and if so what results did they achieve? (also, could I have their contact details so I can talk to them and find out about their experiences?)
  • What is the total price?

These questions will help me to better understand whether the opportunity will present a return on investment i.e. a value of sales greater than the cost of the advertising. Ultimately, there are lots of other factors which will impact the success of the advert which are not the responsibility of the publication.

In particular, the quality of the text and images used in the advert and the strength of the call to action. For some guidelines on good advert copywriting, check out this post by freelance advertising copywriter John Kuraoka.

I’d very much like to hear the experiences of other small business advertisers as to how you measure and interpret whether an opportunity will present good value?

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40 Responses to “How to Avoid Advertising Disasters”

  1. New York Cable Guru on September 11th, 2009

    The offline space is getting more and more difficult for advertisers from a cost-benefit standpoint. As you pointed out, it would be rare to find a cost per inquiry payment model. Yet it’s not so rare to find these types of cost per action models online. And you’ve got PPC and SEO as “pull” media that serve ads when consumers are (ideally or hopefully) looking for these products or services. In terms of branding goals such as increasing awareness or modifying attitudes, the offline space is still often a necessity. However, when leads, sales or ROI are of paramount important, online marketing just can’t be beat.

  2. SEO Workgroup on September 12th, 2009

    Thanks for sharing. I’d very much like to hear the experiences of other small business advertisers as to how you measure and interpret whether an opportunity will present good value?

  3. Panda Licorice Comfits on September 13th, 2009

    If we really want to avoid advertising disaster then we will try to give best to do client according his demand and grow up skill about sale.

  4. health problems on September 14th, 2009

    Why is it important to analyze your supply chain capabilities as well as those of your competitors? The most basic reason is to assure that—at the very least—you are managing your supply chain as well as or better than the competition is managing theirs. Beyond that, benchmarking can help you identify ways to improve your supply chain and heighten barriers to competitive inroads. Some key metrics to investigate include order-to-delivery cycle times, vendor response time to rush orders, and accuracy of delivery information. The supply chain analyses can be done independently or they may be conducted as part of a formal continuous improvement program, as required to comply with ISO 9002.

  5. vitamins on September 14th, 2009

    The competitive evaluation process should include looking at the five main types of competitive threats identified by Michael Porter in his book Competitive Strategy. These threats include new entrants, existing rivals, buyers negotiating for a lower price, suppliers negotiating for a higher price, and substitute products with similar or disruptive solution sets.5 Senior sales/marketing executives should take the lead in assessing which competitive threats are the greatest.

  6. wedding favors on September 14th, 2009

    It is a good blog, at least it gives information and warning. Sometimes we can break the rules, try something different. With the aim of helping everyone to get a better return on their advertising investment, one should understand the client’s needs and give it with satisfaction.

  7. dave on September 14th, 2009

    Great insight! I never think of half of those perameters before palcing an ad. Thanks alot/

  8. Toronto Storefronts on September 14th, 2009

    ROI from the advertising is the biggest factor which many companies face issue.

  9. Las Vegas Homes on September 15th, 2009

    This post is a must read article for those who waste money on pay per clicks ads and other paid services. They are actually a good source for ROI, but should be used wisely and without mastering it wasting bucks is not advisable. I am thankful especially for the checklist. Its a good practice to have a checklist to ensure things are done its own right. By the time you finishing checking the list you end up successful and with minimal mistakes. I am sure having a cutting edge watch list and report sheet like the above makes any campaign a hit and will fetch you the best ROI. Thanks a bunch for sharing this vital information for novice people especially in the internet marketing arena.

    Regards,
    Mack McMillan

  10. Industrial Hoses on September 16th, 2009

    This is very true, properly assessing your advertising opportunities and making sure you carry them out effectively with positive ROI is absolutely essential. I have seen very many people jump into PPC without a solid grasp of how to control their costs. And of course they all ended up with negative ROI. Additionally, the strength of the call to action is key.

  11. how can i get pregnant on September 16th, 2009

    This is very true, properly assessing your advertising opportunities and making sure you carry them out effectively with positive ROI is absolutely essential. I have seen very many people jump into PPC without a solid grasp of how to control their costs. And of course they all ended up with negative ROI. Additionally, the strength of the call to action is key.

  12. Camisetas on September 16th, 2009

    Thanks for those tips. I’d very much like to hear the experiences of other small business advertisers and will definitely keep these facts in mind to feed my thoughts.

  13. Annuity on September 19th, 2009

    Thanks for sharing. I’m one of the victim who has fell pray for an online ad disaster.

    Thanks,
    Steve

  14. Timothy on September 21st, 2009

    Useful list, thanks for sharing Andy.

    We have also been involved with infomercial and thought there might be some good questions to add on that topic: does the publication provide infomercial? What is the supplementary cost? Do they have numbers/results to share from previous infomercial advertisers? Will the infomercial and the ad located next to each other or at least only distant from a couple of pages?

  15. Apartments Bohinj on September 21st, 2009

    In search engine marketing a lot of these worries are unnecessary since the principle itself guarantees you target only your real target group.

  16. Symptoms on September 21st, 2009

    These questions will help me to better understand whether the opportunity will present a return on investment i.e. a value of sales greater than the cost of the advertising. Ultimately, there are lots of other factors which will impact the success of the advert which are not the responsibility of the publication.

  17. Diamond Jewellery on September 28th, 2009

    It is a good post ,focus of good points! ROI from the advertising is the biggest factor,one should understand the client’s needs and give it with satisfactory results. Thanks for this information it provide good help to small business owners like me….
    Thanks again for sharing your ideas………………

  18. casino slots on September 28th, 2009

    Thanks for the tips on how to avoid business disasters. I am looking forward to your future posts.

  19. perfect home on September 30th, 2009

    I need help if u have any knowledge of this examine the way popular advertising in any medium demonstrates the truth of Lao Tzu’s contention that “there is no disaster greater than not being content.” show how advertising makes it impossible for anyone who is its victim to be content.

  20. adt on September 30th, 2009

    Spot-on! I think many marketers have learnt these lessons. So many newbies don’t understand the importance of “research”. Thanks for the post.

  21. MySpace Application Developer on October 1st, 2009

    Search engine marketing is very effective now. Nice info. Thanks

  22. Damien Clarke on October 3rd, 2009

    Great post!

    I think the reason we are drawn into the print advertising is the old, Fear of Mssing Out. The fear of missing out on all those sales that would be generated by the advertisement.

    I gave up on print advertising some years ago, as the ROI could not be truly tracked, however, the questions to pose are excellent and I have printed them out, just in case I do return to some print ads.

    Regards
    Damien

  23. Consumer court forum on October 4th, 2009

    There been many problems going around with many people about advertising and i am sure that your post will be of great help in solving the disasters.

  24. Point Loma Real Estate on October 13th, 2009

    The biggest problem with paying for leads is that you can end up with some really poor leads and it takes a lot of time weeding through them. The best approach in the San Diego real estate business is to work on building referrals from satisfied clients.

  25. Miriam Sky on October 14th, 2009

    Very good article and very nice tips. This would be very useful. If you don’t have a good advertisement, no one would ever give a damn about your product or what your capacities and capabilities are. Avoiding advertising disaster can measure your potential to be successful or not

  26. Billboard Advertising on October 15th, 2009

    The best way to avoid disasters is through communication. If our clients do not communicate exactly what they expect, what they feel their weaknesses are, we have a very hard time developing a marketing strategy that fits their needs. No one wants to pay for any research when the research will show you what will work the best. They rather just throw some money aroung and see what sticks and blame you for what didn’t. A lot of marketing companies like ours really do care and want you to succeed and be happy with our services so you use us again… but if your not willing to develop the communication we need to do our job… It is going to be a disaster… when we have the ability to conduct research for a client, the advertising works every time… Smart businesses know this and they always have a great ROI.

  27. Short sale agent in Las Vegas on October 23rd, 2009

    This is a must read for anybody involved in advertising. You just don’t want to spend any amount of money over something that hasn’t been helpful in the business. It is essential to be able to analyze the flow in the market, including your competition.

  28. sticker printing on November 2nd, 2009

    Once i tried PPC but no luck found, rather just wasted my time and money to dealt with PPC, but i cannot advice not take a chance with it because i read all other comments above and found some few people got lucky towards PPC experience.

  29. All Free on November 3rd, 2009

    Thanks for sharing. The most problems for small business is about advertising just like you said mostly it become disaster when feedback unequal with profit and I think marketers learn alot from this articles to push themself find unique niche ways of ads for gaining big profit with smart and smallest cost.
    Nice sharing

  30. Justin Bachelor on November 17th, 2009

    I totally agree with you. These two points are very important in order to be successful in the advertising campaign. Companies must be careful on these steps because it’s very important to every company success.

  31. Short sales in Las Vegas on December 2nd, 2009

    Just like any transactions made, anyone should study first the actions taken. Companies are well aware of what they wanted in order to gain, however they should also amount the money to be spent in the ads they are going to generate. This could help in any company or business involved. Thanks for sharing.

  32. Earring on December 4th, 2009

    You took a risk i must admit. Reading through that list you made geave me a few ideas of my own. You should have made a SWOT analysis in my opinion, weighing all the cons and pros of your actions. Interesting read, thanks.

  33. Short sales in Las Vegas on December 7th, 2009

    It takes responsibility to avoid any disaster. It also needs to have good communication with the people directly and indirectly involved in the transaction. The tips you’ve given are of good help in avoiding any ad disasters. It happens once in a while but it helps when you know what you’re doing.

  34. Ecrire pour le web en 2010 — [Naro] Minded on December 23rd, 2009

    […] How to Avoid Advertising Disasters (marketingblagger.com) […]

  35. Available Domain Names on January 9th, 2010

    Let’s be profesionals. In order to have a good and profitable advertisign campain, and before you do a ‘waste of money campaign’, you have to see the right target audience. If you fail in reaching the right audience, the advertising is completely failed. No body will buy and you are exactle like before starting campain

  36. Harrison Stuart on January 16th, 2010

    Advertisement is the most crucial part in the marketing department of every company. As far as I know, it has the most biggest budget among the company operation every year.

    In order to be successful and avoid advertising disaster, you really need to have a reliable plan that can give you positive result in the future. Feasible plan including extensive research for your target market and reasonable budget are few factors that you must consider.

  37. يوتيوب on January 28th, 2010

    I totally agree with you. These two points are very important in order to be successful in the advertising campaign. Companies must be careful on these steps because it’s very important to every company success

  38. network cabling and phone programming on February 9th, 2010

    yeah advertising have now become disaster ,If we really want to avoid advertising disaster then we will try to give best to do client according his demand and grow up skill about sale.

  39. Logistics Management on March 22nd, 2010

    An advertising campaign is a sequence of advertisement messages that share a single idea and theme which make up an integrated marketing communication (IMC). Advertising campaigns appear in different media across a specific time frame.

    The critical part of making an advertising campaign is determining a relevant theme as it sets the tone for the individual advertisements and other forms of marketing communications that will be used.

  40. Jez Hunt on March 22nd, 2010

    You make a very good point…

    When it comes to advertising for a business, it is very easy to get swept up in the possibilities of it all working how the Rep says.

    The Rep is there to bring in advertising revenue for the publication, and often have a large part (if not all) of their salary made up by commission of sales made.

    Your checklist is great, because it does what anyone who advertises should be doing… asking the right questions.

    If your target market don’t read the publication, it doesn’t matter how good or compelling your advert is… and I’ve seen this soooooo many times.

    Great reminder and a great checklist to consider BEFORE agreeing to the Rep’s smooth salespitch!

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