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Translate Into YOUR Dialect Today's Feature Article
How To Trade For Advertising
What do you do when you don't have enough cash to advertise?
You trade!
Trading products and services for advertising is one of the
hottest marketing topics in business discussions. And for good
reason.
Bartering for ads can give the small business person excellent
opportunity and value.
One radio station owner, who never forgot his penny-pinching
beginnings, is always on the lookout for businesses wanting
to trade. When he needed extra storage sheds behind the studios,
he got a carpenter to build them in exchange for free commercials
on his stations.
When the station promotional vehicles required regular detailing,
he traded commercials for custom car washes.
After a big snow fall, the owner rented a private snow plow
and paid for it entirely with on-air mentions
The station owner figures he has a few commercials that his
sales reps won't sell. Why not trade them to other business
people who have extra products and services they can't sell?
It's a classic WIN-WIN arrangement. And lots of media managers
welcome the situation.
Joan, who owns a very successful donut shop, bases her
advertising entirely on trade. She gives boxes of her high-
quality donuts to select radio stations for daily giveaways.
In return, they speak highly of her donuts on the air. It's
not unusual to hear a morning DJ go on and on about how
wonderful her product is. She has a rock solid reputation
in the community as a result. The cost? A few boxes of donuts
that might be surplused anyway.
A newspaper editor reminds us that radio isn't the only
fertile ground for trade. Newspapers frequently need traded
items and services to give away as prizes to readers,
advertisers, and employees. He advises to check with the
circulation department. They often need prizes to give
to paper boys and girls.
Be creative. Got a book store? It's trendy now days for TV
weathermen to publish their own books on local weather stats.
Call the manager at your favorite TV station and offer to do
a cooperative promotion with the station. They can place
the books in your store, AND have their weatherman do in-store
appearances, in exchange for mentioning your store's locations.
Offer to help them write and publish the book.
"But I'm a Realtor," one man told me. "How would I trade real
estate services to a media outlet?" There is a Realtor in my
town who solved the problem. He does his own real estate show
on talk radio. Enlisted sponsors pay his on-air fees. For the
Realtor who doesn't have that show biz zeal, appearing regularly
as a real estate expert on someone else's show can be just as
effective.
Not all media outlets do trade. Some welcome trade some times
of the year and not others. Many will do a part trade, part
cash arrangement. A great many will bonus a certain number
of free commercials or mentions when you buy ads.
No matter what you do or sell, there is probably a newspaper,
newsletter, magazine, TV station, cable system, radio station,
or on-line provider that needs you.
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