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 Ronelle Ingram

Holiday Marketing

‘Sales have more to do with person to person relationships than price or product,’ is an oft-repeated marketing mantra. As the holiday season approaches, take a few minutes to actually calculate the cost vs. potential value of your company’s holiday practices.

I believe sending a holiday greeting card that is opened and displayed by the receptionist, who normally has no decision-making or purchasing authority, represents wasted marketing expenditures. A holiday card sent from one business to another has little to do with a person to person greeting. Have your company take the time to actually figure out:

• Why you send holiday cards

• What are the desired results of sending holiday cards

• Who you should send them to

• How much does this tradition costs your company

Start with who pays the bill for the holiday greetings. Which department is responsible for the cost of the card, postage and labor? Is it general overhead, charged to the sales department or divided up among the revenue generating departments?

Also consider the time spent by your managers when calculating the cost of a holiday business mailing: deciding if you want your company’s name engraved on each card, if the company address and logo should be printed on return envelope, delegating the ordering process, and following up on the receipt of the cards. Who is creating this list of customers? Will you send them to your complete customer list, or just companies you have done business with in the last 2 years, 6 months, etc.? Do you send cards to potential customers, vendors, neighboring companies, personal friends?

By the time you buy, stamp and send the card, your company is investing between $2 to $5 per mailing. Take the appropriate direct cost and multiply it by the number of cards sent. Depending on the size of your mailing and percentage of overall company profitability, your company will have to generate thousands of dollars of additional revenue to cover the cost of your December holiday cards.

Also, do you have a structure to deal with cards that are returned by the post office? Who is responsible to research the validity of the returned mail? Who will update your data base to reflect a change of address, change of company name, or no longer being in business?

When I think of the holiday season, what first comes to mind are fond memories of Santa Claus, Christmas cookies, the Nativity and presents under a decorated tree. According to a 2010 Card Catalog I received in the mail recently, offering Premium Quality Cards for Lasting Impressions, all of these things are inappropriate for a business holiday card. Today’s catalog does not even mention Christmas until page 16. The most prevalent messages are Season’s Greetings, Global Peace and Best Wishes represented by corporate landscapes, the earth and snowflakes. I understand the need to be politically correct and inclusive, but what happened to the goal for establishing personal relationships with our customers?

You may want to reconsider the value of just sending out sanitized greetings to your corporate mailing list. Maybe 2010 is the time to approach the sending of holiday cards in a more business-like manner. I believe if you are sending out a card that isn’t specifically addressed to a person at the company, with a personal, hand written message on it, you are wasting your company’s money.

I do believe in the value of mailing personalized cards that represent more than an anonymous yearly ritual. I require every member of my sales staff to send out at least one handwritten card per week to a client with a note that is specific to that customer. I also add in a business card with a colored paper clip, which creates a bit of bulk in the envelope and stands out once opened.

Furthermore, when your staff is sending person-specific addressed cards or follow-up notes, consider using real stamps. The American flag stamp or an appropriate commemorative stamp enables your mail to stand out from other metered business correspondence. The most expensive marketing your company will ever use is unopened mailings that are thrown away.

There is great value in being creative and timely when corresponding with clients, and I firmly believe in sending holiday cards. But I choose to send holiday cards that commemorate more than just Christmas. A more effective use of seasonal greeting cards can include:

• Halloween -“We’ll treat you to the best deal of the season”

• Thanksgiving - “We appreciate your trust and business”

• New Year - “Start the year off with a new . . .”

• Valentines - “We love doing business with you.”

• St Patrick’s Day - “Save some green $$ this month”

• Memorial Day - “In honor of . . .”

• 4th of July - “Red White and Blue special . . .”

• Labor Day - “Let us lessen the toil of your work day . . .”

Other ideas are: Anniversary Special, Back to School, Spring Break, Snow fever…And don’t underestimate the power of a short, personalized Thank You card. Any of these greeting cards will create a higher level of specific company recognition, while your business makes a statement about its originality and genuine thoughtfulness.

Avoid doing the same old thing, in the same old way. There is no need to be part of the nameless flocks with the same old behavior and consider the appropriateness of your company’s holiday cards. There is more to the Christmas tradition than meets the eye. Take the time to consider the goal, cost and effectiveness of your company’s holiday greetings. Having your greeting card stand apart, be seen and talked about can bring positive attention to your company and add profit to your own bottom line. A big THANK YOU to all my ENX readers. I wish you happiness and profitability throughout the year.

Ronelle Ingram, author of Service With A Smile, also teaches service seminars. She can be reached at ronellei@msn.com

 
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