Archive for the ‘advertising’ Category
Tuesday, June 14th, 2011 by Steven Coleman
When building a business, be it online or brick and mortar, it’s easy to get so focused on attracting sales that you forget to attract customers. Hocking your wares for a profit is nice, but building long lasting relationships with your target market is even better. Happy customers not only return to your store often, cost less than finding new ones and tend to purchase higher tickets items , they are your best sales people.
If a person loves your product or service, simply through word of mouth, they can funnel more traffic to you then 10 full-time, cold-calling sales people. “So, how do I get these happy customers?”, you ask. Easy, you must:
1. Provide a Class A product.
2. Offer Superior Customer Service
3. Rewards.
Numbers 1 and 2 should be the easy ones, and probably something you are already doing if you are still in business after your first year. It’s number 3 that we are going to talk about here.
If you want to convert an average “satisfied” customer to a “evangelist” customer, who will tell everyone they know about you, reward them. Often only new customers are given the freebies and first-order discounts, because so much attention is paid to attracting them. Customer retention can easily be overlooked, or loyalty programs can seem too complicated to manage.
So lets get back to basics. What is the easiest way to reward existing customers? If you have their email address (which you really should at this point), offer them something for nothing. No hoops to jump through, just a free thank you for being awesome. Afraid this might break the bank? Offer a digital gift, you can include the downlink directly into the email you send them. No postage, no manufacturing cost, only the time it take to produce the digital product.
You are an expert in your industry, and your returning customers are interested, so tell them about it. Pass that knowledge along, it has value.
Examples of digital gifts.
- Special report.
- How to
- Short video
- Mobile app.
So there you go. This also give you an excuse to contact with your customers, with an email they will most likely open. “A free gift for being such an excellent customer” makes a great subject line.
Preach to the choir, they will listen.
-Steven Coleman
Tags: customer retention, email marketing, free gifts Posted in SEO, Uncategorized, advertising | No Comments »
Wednesday, April 20th, 2011 by Jim Knake
The best reasons for using an ad agency are TIME and RESULTS! How much time would you save by turning over your monthly budget management, creative development, media buying, website maintenance, and so on. How much time is typically spent each month doing all these things, 10, 50, 100 hours? That is time you could put back into your business. When an ad agency takes care of all of this for you, your people can focus on what is important to your company….selling your goods and services.
At Rooks Advertising, we handle it all! Do you need a direct mail piece to send out to 10,000 customers? We will design it, print it and mail it. How about a television spot? We will write it, shoot it, produce it and deliver it to the appropriate networks. We will even decide what the best times and channels are to run it for you based on product and demographics. How is your website traffic? Is your site shown on the first page of primary search engines as it should be? If not, we can help you with S.E.O. and drive more traffic to your site. Do you need a website built? We can do that too, from a basic website, to a full feature e-commerce website.
The time you save by letting us handle your budget, media buys, print, television & web advertising means more time you have to devote to your company. An ad agency is a group of professionals that have years of experience and the technical knowledge to get these things done for you. In many cases you can have full access to a diverse team of advertising and marketing professionals for less than the cost of an average employee. In addition, because of relationships we’ve developed with various companies, we can get discounts that you on your own could not.
Plus, whenever you get those annoying advertising calls, you can refer them to the agency. We’ll sort them out and bring you only legitimate marketing ideas. Heck….How much is that worth?
It’s really all about time and results. We track and specifically analyze all your marketing efforts to make sure your ad budget has a maximum return on investment. If your goal is to grow your business and free up your time, contact us and let us take the reins of your advertising needs so you can get back to running your business.
Rooks Advertising – Make Your Move
The best reasons for using an ad agency are TIME and RESULTS! How much time would you save by turning over your monthly budget management, creative development, media buying, website maintenance, and so on. How much time is typically spent each month doing all these things, 10, 50, 100 hours? That is time you could put back into your business. When an ad agency takes care of all of this for you, your people can focus on what is important to your company….selling your goods and services.
At Rooks Advertising, we handle it all! Do you need a direct mail piece to send out to 10,000 customers? We will design it, print it and mail it. How about a television spot? We will write it, shoot it, produce it and deliver it to the appropriate networks. We will even decide what the best times and channels are to run it for you based on product and demographics. How is your website traffic? Is your site shown on the first page of primary search engines as it should be? If not, we can help you with S.E.O. and drive more traffic to your site. Do you need a website built? We can do that too, from a basic website, to a full feature e-commerce website.
The time you save by letting us handle your budget, media buys, print, television & web advertising means more time you have to devote to your company. An ad agency is a group of professionals that have years of experience and the technical knowledge to get these things done for you. In many cases you can have full access to a diverse team of advertising and marketing professionals for less than the cost of an average employee. In addition, because of relationships we’ve developed with various companies, we can get discounts that you on your own could not.
Plus, whenever you get those annoying advertising calls, you can refer them to the agency. We’ll sort them out and bring you only legitimate marketing ideas. Heck….How much is that worth?
It’s really all about time and results. We track and specifically analyze all your marketing efforts to make sure your ad budget has a maximum return on investment. If your goal is to grow your business and free up your time, contact us and let us take the reins of your advertising needs so you can get back to running your business.
Rooks Advertising – Make Your Move
Tags: branding, design, direct mail, Media Buying, Search Engine Optimization, SEO, web Posted in SEO, advertising | No Comments »
Wednesday, February 2nd, 2011 by Jim Knake

These are some tips that I have learned over the years about building effective ads. Unfortunately very few people listen to this advice….. They all are awesome designers because they know their clients and they have Microsoft Publisher and once made a flyer for their mom’s knitting group. Yeah! Not really!
Their are really smart people out there that have researched this over many years and found that these next few things will increase the response rate of your ad. Why? Because they were professional advertising executives with years of experience. Why should they know better than the average person? Because they were asked to build really bad ads for years and found out that they didn’t work, also… they asked the readers. They went out into the general public and asked them why they chose one ad over another. If you look at these 8 sentences, you will see that it is really common sense and you may find yourself thinking of ads that you remember that follow these rules.
1. A good ad stimulates interest by touching on human emotions, desires, and needs, as well as creating desire by offering solutions to emotions or problems.
2. Your headline must PROMISE a BENEFIT. You have about one second of attention before the reader moves on. Your headline is 70% responsible for the success of your ad.
3. You want to show the benefit of your company. “Live the Carefree Lifestyle at The Breckstone Golf & Country Club” This is a benefit headline.
4. You need to bring out strong emotions from your customers, give them benefits of what you have, not features. Touch on the human desire to be comfortable and offer a solution through your company. “Lose 10 pounds in 2 weeks”
5. Twice as many readers will look at the graphics than will read the headline so show them the best photo you can. The prettier or evocative it is, the more it will catch their eye.
6. Call tracking numbers that show how many people called off your ad can be helpful in determining the response your ad is receiving. If you advertise in more than one place, have different numbers for each publication.
7. Make sure that your ad is large enough to accommodated all the information. An ad that is crammed into a little box will be ignored.
8. Make sure your ad is to the outside of the paper. If your ad is on the fold, your readership will be cut in half. Poor placement will cost you clients. Some papers charge 10-15% more for guaranteed placement, but it is usually worth it.
That wasn’t so bad. I think that clients more often than not clutter their ads with things that don’t do anything. This should be the basic ad:
Headline HUNGRY?
Deal-Image 99¢ Cheeseburgers – mouthwatering photo
Logo Bob’s Giant Carabou Burgers
addict. info 1234 Mainstreet – Anytown USA 555-555-5555 we accept MC and Visa
Website www.BGCB.com
Tags: advertising, branding, design, logos, Original Content, Photography, retail marketing Posted in advertising | No Comments »
Monday, January 24th, 2011 by Steven Coleman
How important is getting a good domain name? Since your hope is to be found by search engine, why should they matter at all. No one types them directly in anyway, right? WRONG. Well not you personally wrong but the hypothetical person I am speaking to in this 3rd person narrative. (or is that first person? I am a web guy, not an English major). Anyway, to move this forward and cut to the chase — a domain name is very important to search engines, and your potential customers.
The 3 main criteria I would use when choosing a domain name are as follows:
1. Is it easy to remember.
2. Is it easy to spell.
3. Is it easy to say.
wait, make that 4.
4. Does it contain the most important keyword you want to use to drive business to your site.
This last one is the most difficult. And in some cases not always possible, or at least not something you want. Example. If you specialize in custom fish shaped lamps, and your business is called Franks Lighting it would be hard to convince you to go with customfishlamps.com if frankslighting.com was available. Neither of these are really prime examples of rules 1-3, and direct traffic is the first traffic you will get until your site is ranking well. Don’t underestimate the power of word of mouth advertising.
So let me put forth my argument for customfishlamps.com, or CustomFishLamps.com as it would appear on your business cards.
Search engines place a very high importance on your domain name and by default URLs in general. Unlike “title”, “description” and “keyword” tags which you can adjust, change and manipulate per page, your domain name is the same for your entire site. And you only get one, well one that search engines will index. It is far more likely that some will search for a generic term related to your business then your actually business name, especially on a national level. If someone is searching custom fish lamps as a keyword, your site as a much higher chance of being number one, then a similar site with a less specific domain name. This of course assumes you are following the other many SEO best practices. No one thing is ever a ranking “Magic Bullet”.
You can always point franklighting.com, if you think it will help with name recognition, but unless you are Target or Walmart people tend not to assume your domain name and business name are exactly the same. There are always exceptions to the rules: a strictly local business would probably be better off with it’s business name, or your market is very competitive or changes often, then something focusing on ‘easy to remember’ would be in order. No one knows your business better then you, just don’t take domain name selection as a trivial matter.
Happy searching,
- Steven Coleman
Tags: aol, Domain Name, Google, meta tags, page rank, search engines, SEO, Yahoo Posted in SEO, Uncategorized, advertising | No Comments »
Wednesday, January 12th, 2011 by Jim Knake
Ever since the first camera was invented, people have used it to take photos of everything from war images to fashion photography to every day snapshots and even bad Facebook photos. Photography is an important part of advertising. Use the right photo and drive business, use the wrong one and it could be a long year! An ad needs to be simple with one message, pick the message you most want to get across, then use a photo to drive the point home… Period! Do you have a special on custom coffee mugs at your store? Great! Show a few custom mugs, give them the price or special discount, jazz up the ad and call it a day! Don’t throw in your entire store list. The ad is about the custom coffee mugs that you want to sell.
The photo you use should be a nice one and if you want quality, pay the extra for a professional photographer, don’t snap a pic with your iphone and use that….. It’s going to look terrible. You want the best representation of your company you can get. Your image says a lot about your company and a bad photo just says that you don’t care enough to look your best. If you need different kids of photos and you can’t pay for a photographer, there are a lot of quality websites that sell royalty-free stock images, most of which are professional photographers. The one downside to that is that it may not be the exact photo you were looking for and you may have to search for quite a while to find something that suits your needs. If you are looking for a boy pulling a wagon with potted plants in it for your landscaping business, you are probably not going to find that. That would be something you need to set up and pay a photographer for. If you want a couple walking on the beach……. yeah! You have a myriad of choices for that one.
A number of years back a real estate agent was trying to sell a condo with a beautiful view. He wanted to showcase the view for his ad and he wanted to save a little money on the advertising budget……. soooo……. he got his little 1.3 megapixel camera and set up a shot on the porch at sunset and emailed it to me to place in his ad. When I looked at the photo I burst out laughing as did my boss and co-workers. He had taken a few lawn chairs…… yes, lawnchairs and placed them on the lanai with a small table between them. On the table was a plate, two bottles of wine and two glasses. The glasses had red wine in them, but the red wine bottle had not been opened, the bottle of white wine was open. The plate had Triskets laid out and American cheese still in the wrapper. Oh the horror! The sunset was so muted out due to the screening in the lanai that it was really unusable. We decided to use another photo all together. He went back and took a shot of the front of the building and sent it to me. To my surprise….. well, maybe not, there was a cat liter box leaning against the garage door that he asked me to Photoshop out! Ahhhhhh yes! The 2 seconds it would have taken him to move that box translated into an hours worth of extra work. Unfortunately this was a newspaper that did not charge to build the ad, so it was time well spent.
So, I have covered some of the dos and don’ts in photography and hopefully you will see a pattern here. I’m not going to do surgery on myself to save a few bucks. I leave the blood and guts to the professionals. So leave that iphone for bad Facebook photos and hire a photographer to make your business look good. CHEESE!
There are always two people in every picture: the photographer and the viewer. – Ansel Adams
Ever since the first camera was invented, people have used it to take photos of everything from war images to fashion photography to every day snapshots and even bad Facebook photos. Photography is an important part of advertising. Use the right photo and drive business, use the wrong one and it could be a long year! An ad needs to be simple with one message, pick the message you most want to get across, then use a photo to drive the point home… Period! Do you have a special on custom coffee mugs at your store? Great! Show a few custom mugs, give them the price or special discount, jazz up the ad and call it a day! Don’t throw in your entire store list. The ad is about the custom coffee mugs that you want to sell.
The photo you use should be a nice one and if you want quality, pay the extra for a professional photographer, don’t snap a pic with your iphone and use that….. It’s going to look terrible. You want the best representation of your company you can get. Your image says a lot about your company and a bad photo just says that you don’t care enough to look your best. If you need different kinds of photos and you can’t pay for a photographer, there are a lot of quality websites that sell royalty-free stock images, most of which are professional photographers. The one downside to that is that it may not be the exact photo you were looking for and you may have to search for quite a while to find something that suits your needs. If you are looking for a boy pulling a wagon with potted plants in it for your landscaping business, you are probably not going to find that. That would be something you need to set up and pay a photographer for. If you want a couple walking on the beach……. yeah! You have a myriad of choices for that one.
A number of years back a real estate agent was trying to sell a condo with a beautiful view. He wanted to showcase the view for his ad and he wanted to save a little money on the advertising budget……. soooo……. he got his little 1.3 megapixel camera and set up a shot on the porch at sunset and emailed it to me to place in his ad. When I looked at the photo I burst out laughing as did my boss and co-workers. He had taken a few lawn chairs…… yes, lawnchairs and placed them on the lanai with a small table between them. On the table was a plate, two bottles of wine and two glasses. The glasses had red wine in them, but the red wine bottle had not been opened, the bottle of white wine was open. The plate had Triskets laid out and American cheese still in the wrapper. Oh the horror! The sunset was so muted out due to the screening in the lanai that it was really unusable. We decided to use another photo all together. He went back and took a shot of the front of the building and sent it to me. To my surprise….. well, maybe not, there was a cat liter box leaning against the garage door that he asked me to Photoshop out! Ahhhhhh yes! The 2 seconds it would have taken him to move that box translated into an hours worth of extra work. Unfortunately this was a newspaper that did not charge to build the ad, so it was time well spent.
So, I have covered some of the dos and don’ts in photography and hopefully you will see a pattern here. I’m not going to do surgery on myself to save a few bucks. I leave the blood and guts to the professionals. So leave that iphone for bad Facebook photos and hire a photographer to make your business look good. CHEESE!
There are always two people in every picture: the photographer and the viewer. – Ansel Adams
Tags: advertising, Facebook, iphone, Photography, Photoshop Posted in advertising | No Comments »
Friday, October 15th, 2010 by Steven Coleman
Rags and Apparel, an SEO fable.
Once upon a time (in olden times of course) there where two men who open identical shops on the same day in the same village. Lets call them Ronnie’s Rags and Ernie’s Apparel. In an effort to get more customers Ronnie paid every child in the town a copper coin to tell their parents about his store. Ernie on the other hand made a deal with the 10 most respected business owners in the land. He would put up a sign for their store in his, if, in exchange, they put up a sign for his shop in theirs.
Now even though Ronnie had 10 times the number of people spreading his message, they where children, who lacked knowledge and credibility on the subject of adult clothing. They also had a limited audience. Ronnie did not do well.
Ernie on the other hand did very well, very well indeed. Due to the credibility, and traffic of his messages’ source his business grew. Not a day went by that a new customer wasn’t gained from seeing his sign at one of the other 10 respected businesses where his target clientele already frequented.
Ernie is now one of the richest men in the village, and Ronnie is his janitor.
Moral: In backlinking, Quality trumps Quantity, or A Credible source in hand is better than scrubbing toilets.
Still reading? Good for you. We get into a little more detail below.
What are backlinks.
A backlink is a link from another site “back” to your site, aka : incoming links, inbound links, inlinks, and inward links. Search engines use this to determine link popularity (how many people are linking to you). This helps with your page rank and overall where you show up in search results.
Why do I need them.
When other sites link to your site, it is like them saying “Hey, this site has important information”. The more relevant to your industry the site giving you a link is, the more important it makes your information appear to search engines. It’s the difference between a five year old saying you’re a genius and Einstein saying you’re smart. It’s not just what is implied, but who is implying it that matters. This helps you get one step closer to the first page of search results for that keyword.
Not all backlinks are created equal.
Having incoming links to your site from sites that are related to your business is helpful. If both sites have content geared toward the keyword topic, the backlink is considered relevant and this can be very helpful. Having backlinks on sites that have nothing to do with you or the keyword of the link is not helpful. Just like having lots of original content is good, so is having relevant targeted incoming links.
-steven coleman
Tags: Aesop, Back Linking, Backlinking, Google, inbound Links, SEO Posted in SEO, advertising | No Comments »
Friday, October 8th, 2010 by Steven Coleman
So your web site just launched. After a multitude of design meetings, content meetings, reviews, and re-reviews, you now have the pristine, beautiful web site of your dreams.
Whether you are launching a new site or have been on the web for years, few things are more frustrating than not finding your site on the first page of Google (Yahoo, Bing, etc.) results. And as we all know, the difference between being on the first page and all pages thereafter is like a store on Main Street v.s. 20 miles from everywhere.
Where is my website you ask? Why doesn’t it come up? It’s beautifully designed and user-friendly. All my friends love it. I love it!!
SEO 101
In retail and real estate the 3 most important things to know are:
Location, Location, Location.
The 3 most important things to know in SEO (search engine optimization) are:
Content, Content, Content.
No matter what trick, buzz words, and tags (both meta and title) you optimize nothing will help you more then having a lot of content pertaining to the topic you want people searching for, to be finding you.
Think of how many times you have searched for something in Google and the first result was a News article, Wikipedia page, or blog. Google served this result first because it is the most valid content on the subject. At the end of the day this is the most important thing you can do. This is what Search Engines want. You know and understand your market. You are an expert on your business, let the searching public know by putting it on your web site and updating it often.
Unfortunately, copying content from other sites does not help. Original content is key. On the internet innovators rule and imitators flounder. Your business is unique tell people why and they will find it.
To quote Google:
“Unique content is a main reason users would choose to visit your site instead of other sites. Unique, relevant content is considered one key to a good website. The more high-quality, unique content a website can provide, the better the user experience will be (and the longer a user may stay on your site to browse and, possibly, purchase).”
Tune in again for more SEO action and adventure. Same bat time. Same bat channel.
-Steven Coleman
Tags: Bing, Google, Original Content, Search Engine Optimization, SEO, Yahoo Posted in SEO, advertising | No Comments »
Tuesday, August 31st, 2010 by Jim Knake
Hey… It’s Here! Our 2010 Telly Award for Automotive Advertising. I would like to thank the Academy and Steve Jobs and Dave Rooks and the many, many people involved in the production of this commercial. It was a labor of love…… we’ll it was really fun to do and hey, if you’re not having fun with your job, maybe you shouldn’t be doing it! We all have fun here and we get work done… BONUS!
Stand by as these things are going to start piling up in our front hallway. Maybe we will need to build a room for these, because that would be awesome! We could get theme music as you entered the room and you would have to put on special glasses to cut down the glare. Oooh yeah! We could have Morgan Freeman narrate it with an audio animatronic likeness of him……. Well we can dream can’t we?
All kidding aside, Rooks Advertising is a full service advertising agency and we have a Telly to prove it! It’s nice to be recognized by your peers as an agency that does quality work. We always knew we did……
Posted in advertising | 2 Comments »
Thursday, April 8th, 2010 by Scott Pechnick
Many years ago, I experienced something that taught me a valuable lesson in spending a client’s budget.
I was on my way to a client meeting. I had with me an arsenal of information that was meant to address the meeting agenda of the day. The topics were to include everything from this month’s mass media strategy to next month’s proposed creative – and everything in-between. I had anything and everything. I was confident that I would be able to successfully guide him and his considerable budget through the treacherous waters we call the “retail marketing landscape”.
Approaching the dealership, I could see there was a small incline on the sidewalk that I would have to ascend to reach the front door. As I approached, my foot caught a crack in the concrete. I stumbled and quickly regained my balance.
I arose to my feet unharmed (but slightly embarrassed). I paused and proceeded to look at the path I was on. I began to notice cracks and uneven seams in the walkway. As I opened the door, a salesperson had seen what had happened and said that that they’ve been meaning to fix that.
I then looked around throughout the showroom and noticed some other items of interest. Two of the many bulbs in the ceiling were out. The brochure rack on the wall was sparse of any product materials and what was there was not very organized. Although there was not a drop of coffee in the pot, the coffee maker was still on in a waiting room full of customers. The large banner on the wall promoting December’s sales event was up… even thought it was now March.
I finally entered the owner’s office to begin the meeting. He began to ask a litany of questions about his marketing strategy and how we would be spending his money. I replied, “We won’t be spending a dime”.
This client who spent thousands and thousands of dollars promoting his store and brand each month looked confused. He said “excuse me?” I replied “we won’t be spending any money – we’re not ready to yet”. I asked him to come with me and he would understand. I certainly did not want to upset him, but then some things in life need to be heard.
We began a short 5 minute tour of the things I had seen. We took a look at the bulbs that were out … the signage that was out of date … the coffee-less pot … and the cracked and uneven concrete leading to the front door.
I asked him, “If we are not creating an environment that promotes a return experience or a potential customer referral to your store, how efficient really is your marketing budget?” He agreed.
We spent our remaining time discussing the importance of the customer experience and what I call “the little things”.
Let’s face the fact that in today’s fast paced world a business owner can become blind to these “little things”. It’s understandable. The phones don’t stop ringing, emails are relentlessly sent and the list of the day’s meetings never seems to end.
The problem is that when you don’t see these “little things”, a big thing can happen. You can be negatively affecting the customer’s propensity to do business with you again – no matter how much you spend in the market. The importance of ensuring a seamless customer experience in every way shape and form is critical – even the littlest of things.
Take some time and a step back. Make it simple. Ask non-employees what they see and what their experience is. Take pictures of the showroom and building. Review them, thus taking your eye out of your everyday reality. Assign internal maintenance schedules and watches. This is critical information to have. This will ultimately save you money and increase your advertising ROI.
Remember, before we spend money on the big things, let’s make sure we first look at the little things.
Tags: dealership, retail marketing Posted in advertising | No Comments »
Friday, February 12th, 2010 by Jim Knake
By Jim Knake
What is good for one person may not be good for another. Design is an art and like all art is subjective. The question that should be asked for advertising purposes is, what will catch the viewers eye? Mostly, it is a call to action as the main point. Why should someone choose your business over someone elses? Are your prices lower? Do you have what others don’t? Are you open later or have longer hours? These are main points that can catch a readers eye. When designing an ad, less is more. The more complicated an ad is, the less likely that the reader will actually look at it. People have short attention spans, therefore, get them in quick. Hook them with a great opening line or clever graphic, then build on that with what you can offer them, that the competition can’t.
When building an ad, the more you cram into the space and the more cluttered the ad is, the more likely a viewer will pass over the ad. Don’t put in all the deals you have, select the best ones or the ones you think people will want. Clean, Clear and Confident. That is what you want to portray to potential clients.
Many people run one or two ads and ask "why am I not getting any calls?" Unless you have an "Unbelievable Deal" You may not see a quick return on an ad. Frequency in newspapers or magazines is what builds a client base and brand. They may not see your ad the first or second time, maybe they saw it but it wasn’t something they needed. The more they see your ad, the more likely they are to remember your name, By the fifth time seeing your ad, they may now relate your company to the service. Once they know you for that, the more likely they will be to call you once they need your services.
(more…)
Tags: advertising, design Posted in advertising | No Comments »
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