Monday, September 17, 2007

Network Marketing Online

Want To Be An Entrepreneur? Start At Local Library
Alignment In The New Consciousness

The basis of network marketing is building networks of people who buy and sell products. What better place to build a network of people than on the ultimate worldwide network--the internet? According to Internet World Stats, as of 2006, there were more than 1 billion people online worldwide. It's no wonder that the internet is the place to go to build a network marketing business.

The benefits to building your business online are extensive--you can work in shorts and a T-shirt, you only talk with people who are highly interested, your business is working for you 24/7, your maintenance costs are low, and it’s easy to expand internationally. Most important, anyone can do it--you don’t have to be a computer genius to find success.

Your first step is to create an online presence. Before you begin building a site, you need a domain name. You could secure your personal identity site (yourname.com), which is always a good idea. Another approach is to pick a domain that relates to the name of your network marketing group or team, for instance, wealthteam.com or prosperitygroup.com. Or you might want a domain that says something intriguing, such as increaseyourwealth.com or massiveincome.com. Come up with a bunch of ideas, then check your choices on a registry site until you find one that's available.

Once you have a domain, you'll need to buy hosting services and then begin to build your site. If you don't know how to design a site, you can either hire a designer or use a site builder that offers pre-made templates through your host. No matter which method you choose, your site should include the following:

  • Information about your company, product and opportunity
  • A system for ordering your product or registering to operate a business
  • Information about training and your support team
  • A list of the advantages of joining your company and team
  • The offer of a free e-book, document or newsletter if users give you their name and a valid e-mail
  • An autoresponder that sends follow-up e-mails to everyone who provides their contact information. Make sure it can also send out newsletters.

Once you have your site up and running, you need to start marketing it. I recommend using two to five different marketing methods and sticking with them for at least a few months before reevaluating them. Marketing tactics you may want to try out include:

  • Free classifieds
  • Pay-per-click advertising
  • Paid banner advertising
  • Writing articles that include links to your website
  • Starting a blog
  • Participating in forums and newsgroups
  • Starting an e-mail newsletter

All these methods will help create exposure and attract prospects, but my favorite marketing method is "attraction marketing." Any time you can establish yourself as an expert, you'll attract people interested in the topic you know so much about. Be sure to include articles or e-books on your site that establish you as an authority.

As you attract prospects, you’ll need a database to keep track of them. Outlook has a great contact manager, though if you create something on your own, make sure it has enough room to keep track of a prospect's name, e-mail, phone number and address, and has an area where you can write comments.

Once a prospect's in your database, send them a personal e-mail to see if they found the information on your site to be valuable and to determine their level of interest in your business. Use e-mails to create a rapport with the prospect and move them toward a phone call. If you have an effective web presentation and follow-up system and a prospect agrees to speak with you by phone, there's a good chance that person will join your business or purchase your product.

The keys to network marketing online are a solid presence, consistency and persistence, so get out there and build your system, and stick with it until it produces the results you seek.


Rod Nichols is Entrepreneur.com's "Multi-Level Marketing" columnist. He has been involved in the network marketing industry since 1979 as a consultant, trainer and author. His articles, bi-monthly newsletter and books can be found at his website, www.RodNichols.com.

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A Midwinter Night's Dream Marketing Video

10 Marketing Tactics Under $10
Personal Finances - K.I.S.S.ing Your Checking And Credit Card Accounts

visit our website atwww.amnd.org for more detailsfilmed and edited by Christopher Lynch
Author: StopALS
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Gourmet Bucks

Think Brighter
Personal Finances - K.I.S.S.ing Your Checking And Credit Card Accounts

http://www.twosistersgourmet.com/

PrawnsIt's a familiar question to almost everyone: If you could do absolutely anything for a living, what would you do? For Mary Kathryn Dappen, the answer had always been catering. But "it was just a dream," she says. "I really had no intention of ever starting a catering business." And she never did. But she found a different way to combine her love of cooking with her love of entertaining--by becoming a consultant for Two Sisters Gourmet.

Dappen, 39, was attracted to Two Sisters Gourmet in particular because of the unique way the business is run. At her in-home parties, instead of simply talking about the company's gourmet food products and passing around samples, she holds interactive cooking classes in which guests prepare various dishes using Two Sisters Gourmet ingredients. "People go to home parties so they can socialize," she points out, and getting together in the kitchen allows for just that. Home parties have the added benefit of showing the guests exactly how the Two Sisters Gourmet products can be used--and that anyone is capable of using them.

Though she knew she would enjoy it, Dappen did not have big plans for her Two Sisters Gourmet business. As a stay-at-home mom, she was simply looking for a way to make ends meet when she had fewer clients from her telecommunications consulting job, and she thought the parties would be a way to earn an extra $500 a month. She hadn't considered the other side of the business, though: sponsoring new consultants. A year after becoming the company's first consultant in upstate New York, Dappen now has 61 people in her downline, which has boosted her expectations for how much she can earn. Says Dappen, "I have every intention for this to be a six-figure income for me in a year."

Now that she sees her business's great potential, she's found creative ways to attract new customers and new consultants. She wears her Two Sisters Gourmet name tag wherever she goes so people will ask her what it is, and she has helped a variety of organizations with Two Sisters Gourmet fundraisers. After her team met its sales and recruitment goals last November, the corporate office sent celebrity chef Jon Ashton to host a cooking show in Dappen's hometown of Webster, New York. The event attracted attention from TV networks and the local newspaper.

Dappen's direct-selling business has greatly exceeded her original expectations and given her a chance to have a taste of her catering dream, all while allowing her to concentrate on what she feels is most important. "I'm able to work my business around my family, not my family around my business," she says. "That's what I enjoy most."

[Via - Entrepreneur.Com


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Flexible hours, extra cash drive Valley entrepreneurs

Herbalife - Plano de Marketing I
Self Growth And Good Improvements Every Day

Brenda Thiel's daughter loves it when Avon boxes arrive at their Neenah home.

Together, the independent Avon consultant and her children sort out and then deliver the orders.

"My daughter loves to help me put the orders together, stamp the books and bag them," said Thiel, 26, of Neenah, who has been an Avon consultant for a little more than a year.

"She gets excited when we receive boxes at our door and, of course, loves to look through the toy section in the catalog."

Thiel said one of the reasons she became an Avon consultant was to have flexible hours and earn extra income.

"I love the fact that I can do a home-based business instead of getting another job," said Thiel, who is also a part-time support specialist.

"I really have no option right now with a school-aged child and rising day care expenses except to do a home-based business on the side. It is nice to have the option and flexibility to be able to make money a different way because accepting another position with set hours would be impossible for our family."

Home appeal

Working from home, having flexible hours and earning extra income are just some reasons many women get involved in direct-selling businesses they can operate from home such as Avon, Pampered Chef, Creative Memories, Mary Kay and Lia Sophia Jewelry.

"Prior to selling Avon, I had tried other home-based businesses and realized it wasn't a true fit for me, so I was very cautious about investing in another home based business," said Thiel.

But she saw a need for an Avon representative in the Fox Valley.

"Because of the flexibility, I can put my family first," said Thiel.

"Otherwise, I couldn't have seen myself getting involved with another home-based business."

Getting started

Starting the home business usually starts with attending a home show, ordering from a catalogue or having a one-on-one consultation.

Quiana Betchner, 29, of Greenville, has been a Pampered Chef consultant for more than three years. She had no problems joining a friend, who signed up as a consultant and wanted friends to be on her team.

Betchner said she and her husband felt the investment, $90 at the time, was worth it. Also, the stay-at-home mother of two saw the business as an opportunity to get out of the house.

"I started out just as a way to get some adult time," she said.

But she has such a good time doing it that "it didn't feel like a job to me."

"It's a lot more fun," added Betchner.

Sue Broeren, 30, of Appleton had also been to home parties.

"I had been to Lia Sophia Jewelry parties before and often considered getting into it because I didn't want to go back to a regular job someday," said the stay-at-home mother of three children.

"I hosted a party of my own and asked the adviser a lot of questions," she said.

"It was so simple to get started and the potential income and other perks were so great I decided to go for it."

Making albums was a hobby for Christine Cowell, 28, of Neenah.

"I loved doing it so much with the Creative Memories products," she said. "They helped me get things done quickly and easily, which was exactly what I needed with my busy schedule."

Becoming a consultant was the next logical step, even though she has busy family and work schedules.

"I thought it would be fun, but never imagined fitting it in with a full-time job," said Cowell, a mother of two who works full time at Kimberly-Clark Corp.

Many women pursuing home businesses range from stay-at-home mothers to those who balance full, even part-time, careers.

"About 10 percent of the representatives in my district are stay-at-home moms, but there are probably another 20 percent that work part or full time, but their ultimate goal is to be able to quit their job and stay home," said Barb Hoffman, an Avon district sales manager in Oshkosh.

Betchner likes the idea that she may not need to work outside the home again.

"That's my goal; to make it a career," she said of being with Pampered Chef. "I can work as much or as little as I want to."

Costs and training

The start-up cost for home businesses varies with each company. But it often includes supplies, products and training. As the women grow their business, they can earn free products or other incentives, like bonus checks, cruise trips or a car allowance.

Little to no business experience is needed in these kind of home businesses, said Broeren.

"Other people in the business are there to train you and coach you in all parts of the business," she said. "It's your business, but you're not left on your own to figure it out. There is great support and motivation."

Thiel agreed, noting Avon's online training makes it easy to be a sales representative.

"The training will take you through everything from how to have good customer service, how to process orders, how to record your receipts, how to navigate through the Web site, and a lot of information about the products," she said.

"Each session you complete, you will take an assessment test to test your knowledge on the lesson. You can print out a copy of the certificate to show completion of the course. From there you are all trained to become an independent sales representative."

It is also important to keep track of things like mileage and business expenses. And taxes must be filed, although many companies offer user-friendly forms or software to help the business owners out.

The businesswomen also find support and encouragement from family, friends, fellow consultants and others involved in their company.

"The district holds monthly meetings," said Thiel. "This is a very helpful group."

Cowell said the most important support has been from her family.

"My husband is extremely supportive despite how my business complicates our schedule and lives in general," she said. "Most of my family aren't actually customers, but they think it is neat that I am doing something I enjoy."

Finding balance

Running a home business requires a lot of juggling, said Cowell. To maintain a balance, Cowell sets limits, like holding one or two workshops a month and scheduling family activities first.

"As far as balancing with my full-time job, all the work is done in the evening for this business or on the weekends; when I have the time," she said.

Thiel has learned that to maintain a regular schedule, she needs to be disciplined and organized.

"Life is going to pull you in all kinds of directions, but you need to be disciplined on how you strategize your weekly routines and what is important," she said.

While it may take some work in the beginning of the home business, the time and effort are worth it in the end, said Cowell.

"Set goals for yourself, but realize that it will take work to achieve them," she said.

"It is a business, so work is required; although it is a lot of fun."

Broeren agreed.

"It's fun, it's rewarding and it's mine," she said. "It has boosted my self-confidence. I can be here for my kids. I have an excuse to get out. It's a wonderful opportunity any way you look at it."

[via thenorthwestern.com]


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MP3 Tours

How To Become A Productive Enterpreneur
The Force that Controls You!

What could be better than having an insider walk you through his or her favourite spots in a new city or travel destination? How about having access to a whole library of such tours that can be downloaded right to your iPod or MP3 player? That's what Chicago-based AudioSnacks is offering consumers. Users can download audio tours of select destinations and can put up their own tours for purchase.

“AudioSnack is a place to find, purchase, download, listen to and appreciate audio tours that people just like you have created to share, and a place where you can do the same for others.” Tours are modestly priced—some are even free. Many feature downloadable maps to accompany the audio footage, and customers can listen to a sample snippet of a tour before deciding to purchase.

Already there are tours available for destinations in the United States, Canada, Europe, Australia, South Africa and more. Customers get a unique perspective and insights: they can take an audio tour through Chicago with a Jewish hip-hop poet, for instance, or see the sights in Seattle with a hot DJ. Since members are encouraged to create and upload their own tours, the library is likely to grow quickly. The company is also building a new section, offering campus tours for (upcoming) freshmen "who look lost no matter how many times they've looked at their maps."

[Via Springwise]


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How Do Serial Entrepreneurs Do It?

Better Profits Through Buyers Perceptions
What Is Advaita Or Oneness

Five years ago, Tom Scott and Tom First realized they would never have to work again. Friends from college, the pair had launched a juice brand called Nantucket Nectars from the back of their island boat and catapulted themselves -- the self-dubbed "juice guys" -- into the stuff of entrepreneurial legend as their beverage took off nationwide.

They sold a majority of their company to Ocean Spray Cranberries Inc., and when Cadbury Schweppes PLC later bought the entire business for an estimated $100 million in March of 2002, both men were set for retirement -- and they were only in their mid-30s.

But there was no retiring in their futures. Today Messrs. Scott and First are both deep into new ventures that, for now at least, appear headed for success. Mr. Scott leads Plum TV, a New York-based company that operates local television channels in historic, affluent markets such as Aspen, Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard, and has had notable investors including Starwood Capital Group CEO Barry Sternlicht, singer Jimmy Buffett and former Viacom CEO Tom Freston.

Mr. First is in the midst of a new start-up: O Beverages LLC, in Cambridge, Mass., which markets a line of naturally flavored waters already sold in nearly 20 states through Safeway, Balducci's and Bristol Farms, among other stores. In between Nantucket Nectars and their current ventures, the two men started a beverage-distribution-software company that was sold to a publicly traded technology company.

"I'm a crazy competitive person, so there's no way I'm stopping," Mr. First says. "I like being in the trenches."

Call them serial-preneurs. While some entrepreneurs struggle their whole lives to bring one idea or product to market, there's another breed: those who do it once, twice or three times more, disproving the notion of beginner's luck. In some cases, the brands and people are household names, such as Steve Jobs with Apple, Pixar and NeXT. But the ranks also are populated with lesser-known entrepreneurs who fly under the radar, hitting one start-up home run after the other.

"I really believe that some people are kind of entrepreneurial adrenaline freaks," says Wayne Stewart, a management professor at Clemson University in Clemson, S.C. "They really get their kicks by starting businesses."

In 2000, Mr. Stewart published a study with two other researchers looking for common traits among serial entrepreneurs -- which he defined as those who had owned and operated three or more businesses. Of the 664 entrepreneurs studied, only 12% fit the bill. But those who did scored higher in all three categories examined: They had a higher propensity for risk, innovation and achievement. They were less scared of failure. And they were more able to recover when they did fail.

Beyond that, many serial-preneurs bring tactical advantages from their first venture to apply the second and third time around. For instance, they recruit top talent from their original companies to subsequent ventures. They double-dip financially, getting money -- and connections -- from people who backed their earlier brainstorms. Several lean heavily on a trusted partner for financial, professional and emotional support in whatever endeavor they undertake.

More than anything, however, the greatest, and more crucial, challenge among repeat entrepreneurs is figuring out how to rekindle for future ventures the innocence, love and hunger that fueled their first enterprise. Despite hitting it big early with Nantucket Nectars, Messrs. First and Scott both struggled after the sale to find a business that inspired them as much as being the juice guys.

"A lot of the drive early on was the drive to not have to leave Nantucket, or write the resume, or go do anything else. We were hustlers," says Mr. First. Adds Mr. Scott: "What happened was that while approaching the things we love -- boats, water, weather -- we stumbled on juice. I've learned from this that it doesn't matter what I'm good at. It matters what I like."

What's the Motivation?

So why do some entrepreneurs who strike gold once continue to start over? A general contractor might launch a business because he has certain skills, and then stick with it until retirement. Or a banker will work her way up the corporate ladder, happy with the security of a paycheck and benefits, and retire once she has saved enough. By contrast, serial entrepreneurs' main job is the act of creation -- and thus they keep creating new businesses, often after they no longer need the paycheck.

"Most people can't understand why someone who made $10 million would do it again," says Seth Godin, who founded Yoyodyne, an interactive direct-marketing company bought by Yahoo in late 1998. He's now running a new online venture called Squidoo, a free tool that lets users build Web pages about any topic within a searchable community. "That's because most people don't like working, and they think it's irrational to keep working," he says. "But most entrepreneurs don't care about money; it's a tool."

For instance, Scott Jones was a multimillionaire by age 30, having co-founded the company Boston Technology, maker of a voice-mail system now used by many telephone companies world-wide. He retired, and learned how to fly planes and perform aerobatics, but was quickly bored. So he went back to work and has since co-founded Gracenote Inc., an Internet-accessible music database used by iTunes, as well as a robotic-lawn-mower company and a search engine that uses human guides in real time. Those years not creating, he says, were "the most unhappy years of my life."

Moreover, serial entrepreneurs harbor an unusual appetite for risk -- something they can inherit from their parents. Dan Bricklin, 56, has started four companies in his lifetime; his first Software Arts, was sold to Lotus Development Corp. in the mid-1980s. Mr. Bricklin's father was a small-business owner who ran a printing business, as did his grandfather.

Mr. Bricklin, who now runs Software Garden Inc. in Newton Highlands, Mass., says he feeds on the thrill of starting something new and untested. "It's like that sense of walking across a stream on the rocks -- sort of knowing where you're going, but sort of not." As for risk? "If you actually seen the ups and downs of a business, and your family isn't terrified, that makes it a lot easier to do yourself."

Likewise, Tim Miller caught the entrepreneurial bug at age 18 when he received about $500,000 after his father sold a company. Mr. Miller stashed that money away, planning to invest in his own company one day. Fifteen years later, he dipped into the fund to start a software firm called Avitek Inc. based on an idea his then-employer didn't want to explore. Mr. Miller recalls how family members fretted about the danger of going it alone, with his brother specifically questioning his judgment after he hired his fourth employee: How could he possibly put other people's livelihoods on the line?

"But it never truly occurred to me that I would potentially need to let any of them go at any point," Mr. Miller says, adding that he believes successful entrepreneurs "see opportunities where other see risk." He sold Avitek in 1999 for about $13.5 million, without layoffs, and is now running a venture called Rally Software Development Corp., based in Boulder, Colo.

The Value of Teamwork

Mr. Miller didn't succeed alone; he had a partner, Ryan Martens, who now works with him at Rally Software. Their compatibility is an asset whose value Mr. Miller finds hard to quantify. While Mr. Martens as the chief technology officer is deeply invested in software development, Mr. Miller is the business guy. "I think great leaders build teams," Mr. Miller says, "and those teams have some glue and they tend to stick together."

Whether by design or not, on second and third ventures, serials often surround themselves with familiar faces. Partly it's about familiarity and trust. Messrs. Scott and First both tapped ex-Nantucket Nectar employees for their newest ventures. They typically talk to each other several times a week, and Mr. Scott is an investor in O Beverages. "We've never doubted the other's total respect and having the other person's good interest at heart," Mr. First says.

Repeat relationships are also about expediency. Elizabeth Cogswell Baskin has run four companies, including two advertising agencies and a book-packaging operation. Now 46, she's the CEO of Tribe Inc., a $3 million Atlanta advertising agency that works with brands including Porsche, Home Depot and UPS, and peppered throughout Tribe's ranks are faces from her previous companies. "I think it is a huge shortcut to hire someone you already have a relationship with," Ms. Baskin says.

At age 77, Jack Goeken lays claim to having helped start a string of well-known enterprises: MCI, InFlight Phone, Airfone and several others. Now, he's deeply involved in a new start-up, Polybrite International Inc., a Naperville, Ill., company that produces a screw-in LED light bulb that will fit in normal lamps. His daughter Sandra, 49, has worked with him on every venture since MCI, and says one of her father's greatest strengths is "herding tigers" -- that is, finding entrepreneurial, and sometimes difficult to manage, individuals who can make a project happen, but then making sure they don't stick around too long.

"A team can come in and do a great start-up and make history, but the team that does that isn't the team to run it for 10 years," Ms. Goeken says. The key, she says, is to let those people know they'll be taken care of after a sale, so they don't hold a company's progress back worrying about a job. Bringing them on in the next venture is one inducement. Plus, she says, "they are a known entity and you take the risk out of the equation."

There are drawbacks to repeat employees. Mr. Godin, for one, believes the strategy can inhibit a fresh start. "One good thing is 'beginner's mind' -- people looking at something for the first time often have a fresh insight," he says. Plus, new businesses have different needs. At his first start-up, Yoyodyne, he says his team worked 21 hours a day in "emergency mode" -- a pattern he didn't want to repeat. "If I put the whole team together again, I don't know if we could have worked in anything but emergency mode."

More Money, Please

By contrast, hitting up the same investors, Mr. Godin believes, is almost always smart -- particularly if you made them money the first go-around. "They are doing everything on trust," he says.

David Neeleman, the founder of JetBlue Airways Corp., says treating investors fairly and staying close to them between ventures is critical -- as is giving them an opportunity to invest in subsequent ventures. In fact, he says, all of JetBlue's investors, except George Soros, had been investors in his first airline, Morris Air. "I just went back to the investors of Morris Air and said, 'Do you want to do it again?' " He raised $90 million for JetBlue from his old investors and $40 million from Mr. Soros. Mr. Neeleman stepped down as JetBlue's CEO earlier this year after a series of high-profile flight cancellations, though he remains chairman.

What's more, serial entrepreneurs find many of the contacts, and information, they pick up with early ventures can pay off down the road. They court vendors, customers, trade groups, chambers of commerce -- even if they don't need them right away. While working in earlier ventures for her father, Ms. Goeken often spent weekends in foreign countries instead of going home, inviting business contacts to dinner. For many years, she mailed 1,400 Christmas cards all over the world, learned about different religions and picked the brains of partners' low-level employees about their country's customs.

"It may not be that important to you right now, but they might have something to teach you," she says. "I'd invest more than just getting the deal done. And time and time again, I went back to the same people in new ventures."

A Question of Desire

One of the hardest tasks serial entrepreneurs face is recapturing the drive and direction that fueled their first venture, without letting the first success overshadow or dictate what they do next. Sometimes, it's as simple as learning to let go. Says Ms. Goeken: "Walking out of Airfone was the saddest day of my life. When I finally pulled myself together, I never looked back. I don't miss a single company now."

Other times, it isn't so clear-cut. After Nantucket Nectars was sold, the founders started a beverage-distribution-software company because it seemed a natural evolution from being the juice guys. Trouble was, both men hated software, and left before the company was sold.

"I felt like I was turning into a sheep," says Mr. Scott. "I started wondering what I'd do about the rest of my life and was insecure, afraid and slightly depressed." Finally he pushed himself to understand what got him to Nantucket Nectars, and arrived at a rather amorphous answer: passion.

"We were passionate about ice, and pumping out sewage systems on boats; juice was just one of 50 things that we liked," Mr. Scott says. With Plum TV, he loves the civic nature of local TV -- even though it's about as far from juice as you can get. "I think the best entrepreneurs are like artists and painters," Mr. Scott says. "It's about creating. It's not about business."

Likewise, his partner, Mr. First, also fumbled at different enterprises, including starting a grocery store, until his wife said to him, "You're bored stiff, aren't you?" That set off a period of his own soul-searching -- eventually, leading him full circle. What he loved most, it turned out, was what he had already done: building a consumer-products company. So in early 2005, he launched O, and the first bottles hit the Boston market that spring.

Mr. First concedes that he sometimes feels the burden of re-entering a field he once dominated. Consumers don't pick up O and want to drink it just because Nantucket Nectars was a big hit; he doesn't have the "Tom and Tom" story -- he doesn't even have the other Tom.

"I constantly think about how I was the cool guy at Nantucket Nectars, a juice guy," Mr. First says. "I'm risking going back into the same industry and being a loser."

Still, Mr. First says, he's slowly learning to use the previous success to grease wheels where he can: Grocery chains, for instance, believe if he can do it once, he can do it again. The same is true with investors. "It gives me credibility," he says, "and the fight is too tough to leave a weapon in the bag."

[Via - The Starup Journal


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Ads That Push the Envelope

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Ads that have impact are like nitroglycerine. Handle them properly and they can move mountains for you; get careless with them and you’ll blow yourself up.

The worst thing you can do when you’ve written a powerful ad is to show it to your friends and ask their opinion. Put an ad on trial and every juror will judge two things: Could this ad offend anyone? Was it entertaining?

Consequently, most ads aren’t written to persuade; they're written not to offend. But the kinds of ads that produce results make us answer yes to these three questions: Did it get my attention? Was it relevant? Did I believe it?

Ads that twist our attention away from what we’d been doing are always a bit annoying. This is why ads that get results also get complaints. Learn to ignore complaints from controlling people, or your ads will forever be emasculated.

Were you slightly offended by that last statement? That's exactly the kind of statement that'll get complaints. But it'll also get results.

I once wrote a radio ad that included the line, “That just ain’t gonna happen.” My client, a diamond jeweler, received two letters and four phone calls from irate listeners who claimed he was contributing to the erosion of the English language. One of the letters concluded, “How can our children hope to learn proper grammar when the leading advertisers of our city speak incorrectly? I must insist that you withdraw this ad from the airwaves immediately, or my friends and I will have no recourse other than to discontinue shopping in your establishment.”

By the time my client had received the fifth complaint, it felt to him like the sky was falling. But then I reminded him that one of our goals was to be perceived as less formal and less intimidating than other diamond jewelry sellers. I told him, “These few complaints are simply part of the price we must pay to win the heart of the common man. And the common man believes all jewelers are snobs.”

I won the argument. My client continued the ad. Traffic and sales went up by 28 percent.

Later that year, I wrote the same client an ad that said, “Buy her the diamond she’s been dreaming of since she was a little girl.” Men responded exactly as we'd predicted, but we also got two letters from women who felt somewhat belittled. They said they were doing very well, thank you, and didn’t need any man to buy them diamonds.

I immediately sent the following ad script to my client: “This is Richard Kessler of Kesslers Diamond Center. I suggested in a recent radio ad that every man should buy the woman he loves ‘the diamond she’s been dreaming of since she was a little girl.’ [pause] What was I thinking? This nation is full of women who can and do buy diamonds for themselves, and we want to be their store, too. Gosh, I feel like a knucklehead.”

That apology went a long way toward winning the hearts of independent women throughout the city. We soon began to see an increase in traffic from women purchasing diamonds for themselves.

Why did I respond to the two complaints from women after ignoring the six complaints from the defenders of English grammar? Although only two women took the time to complain, it seemed likely thousands of other women felt the same way when they heard the ad. The defenders of English grammar, on the other hand, probably represented only themselves and a dozen other people. Also, an apology to the women was consistent with our goal of being perceived as less formal and intimidating than other jewelers. Transparency and honesty in admitting your mistakes is very reassuring to potential customers.

You can, however, go too far when advertising. When handling the nitroglycerine of a statement with impact, always avoid: racial stereotyping, obvious sexual innuendo and matters of religion or faith.

If you avoid these three categories of insult, you’re not likely to do your company damage. But if you've committed a genuine blunder, follow these guidelines:

  1. Apologize for it openly, sincerely and transparently in the same medium in which the offence was made.
  2. Send a handwritten apology and thank you to the person or persons who brought the faux pas to your attention.
  3. Don’t make excuses.

My jeweler client, a genuinely nice guy, had a fabulous year. During the week after Christmas, he aired the following ad. See if it fits the image of the rest of his campaign.

The hardest thing about being a jeweler is that you never know how big a store you should build or how many people you should hire to work in it. No matter how small you build it, there will be plenty of times when it’s empty and you’ve got no customers at all. And no matter how big you build it or how many people you hire to work there, there will be times when you’ve got more customers than you can serve. And that’s even worse.

This is Richard Kessler of Kesslers Diamond Center. If you came to Kesslers during the holidays and found way too many people ahead of you, I hope you’ll accept my apology. We work hard to ensure that every person who walks through our door has a magical experience, but sometimes we fall short of the mark. This year, my New Year's resolution is to find new and better ways to make sure that you have a relaxed and pleasant experience at Kesslers Diamond Center, no matter when you come to see us. I’m Richard Kessler, and I really dowant to be your jeweler.

We didn’t include a street address or phone number because that would have commercialized the ad and made it seem insincere. Do you have the courage to run two or three ads like these a year? If so, go write some ads that get attention, drive traffic and generate complaints.


Roy Williams is Entrepreneur.com's "Advertising" columnist and the founder and president of international ad agency Wizard of Ads.


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