![]() |
Click Here to see the latest posts! Ask any questions related to business / entrepreneurship / money-making / life NO BLATANT ADS PLEASE
Stay up to date! Get email notifications or |
|
SOWPub Business Forum Seeds of Wisdom Forum |
![]() |
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Idea is to put together groups of non-competing home service companies(landscaper, house cleaner, pool cleaner, etc.) for a cross-referral new customer lead program in specific neighborhoods/areas.
Each business would get 50 5x7 glossy postcards with a list of each business for that particular neighborhood to leave behind when they service their current customers in that neighborhood. Something like..."We serviced your home today!"...and "Looking for other high-quality home service companies in NAME OF NEIGHBORHOOD?"...call or email us at MY NUMBER or MY EMAIL ADDRESS and get 20% off your first service(s)!". I would distribute each lead ongoing. Each company would pay $19.95/month to participate and get UNLIMITED, WARM, word of mouth new customer referrals. Your thoughts are appreciated- thanks!! |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Quote:
This idea has been beat to death at the warrior forum. I don't have any specific link for you but I'd bet doing a search will find 'em. Now to answer your question. Yep, it's a great idea and only takes time to get off the ground. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I'll take a look Sandal thanks-
|
#4
|
||||
|
||||
![]() What exactly is the business getting? Say I'm a landscaper, I get 50 5x7 glossy postcards (ok so far)
a list of each business for that particular neighborhood...but most of my landscaping is in the suburbs, there aren't any businesses in that neighborhood. How many others are on the list? Do I get a bigger ad? Why would I not just leave my own card? I would NOT pay an ongoing fee for these referrals, what happens when I run out of postcards, do you supply more? And are they free to me, or do I pay to be on it too? Sounds kind of messy and not very well thought out. Gordon Can you explain it better? Quote:
|
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Quote:
Allow me to clarify if I can, with 3 highlights of the program: 1)The business gets something to leave behind to remind customers they were by that day and performed a service. I have a pool cleaner and a landscaper- I wouldn't know if they were at my house unless I saw them. "Thanks for your business!"...that sort of thing. 2)The business can use it as a way to ask for direct referrals. 3)Finally- the customer will see the other non-competing home service businesses listed, along with a discount to try another service(s). "The Best Of NAME OF NEIGHBORHOOD" or whatever tagline I come up with. There can be anywhere from 5-10 different home service businesses listed...but only one per business category. This is where the cross-referral comes in, as I personally would rather reach out to the window cleaner guy referred by my landscaper, than go out and find one on my own...people like referrals. There are no ads, although that might be the way to share each business on the card...not sure on that part yet. I'm sure there are lots of businesses that leave their own referral/we were here card, which I think is good business. But, at least where I live...I have never personally seen any. Lots of small business owners aren't that good at marketing. If a business gets just ONE referral from the program...they still come out ahead. If $19.95 is the monthly fee to participate, and the landscaper gets ONE new monthly paying customer at ~$100(I pay $190 myself)...why wouldn't they continue to pay the $19.95 ? Or the bug guy at $30-$40 ? Still makes more than he is paying for the program, but now has another customer to get more referrals from, more work down the road, etc. In regards to running out of postcards- I haven't thought that far ahead as of yet...I literally thought about the idea, then shared it here for input. Thanks again! |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]() You could probably accomplish this by creating a "preferred provider" list of home repair services and make a biz directory website. You could set up each large affluent neighborhood with it's own directory site and just clone the site and change the name for each neighborhood website. Use the same vendors too. Then post bandit signs and/or put flyers in the peoples mailbox touting the site named for their neighborhood. You should the control the leads and make them come through you as a toll booth. It would also allow you to create your own database of homeowners in each neighborhood and you could cross market the other vendors-i.e. painter, driveway sealer, lawn service, pool guy. etc
ps obviously a preferred pricing hook would cause people to at least seek a quote from your vendors, and you would get paid a lead fee even if they use a different vendor |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Quote:
|
#8
|
||||
|
||||
![]() On a 5x7 postcard there will be 7 listings (splitting the difference with you)
Their listing will have a biz name, but no phone number, people have to call you to get the referral, right so far? These are leave behind cards alerting the homeowner (if not at home) the service was done, say the pool cleaner. The 6 other guys could be a carpet cleaner, deck cleaner, roofer, carpenter, plumber and an electrician. So the pool guy comes, cleans my pool, leaves the card. Why do I not just throw it away? It is the hit and mostly miss approach like the 9x12 guys, the coupon booklets, the valpaks or just the landscaper with his own 5x7 card to leave behind with a referral offer, some cash for his current customer. So I have to be in the market for another service when this is left behind. As for referrals working, absolutely, which is why Angie's list is one of the first stops millions are going to for reliable referrals. Now, you've got 7 businesses paying 19.95 a month, you taking in 140 bux per month per area, and you have 350 postcards printed 50 each. Now you have to contact the 7 businesses, sell them on the benefit of being on one of these drop off cards. If it is free for them, you may find a few who figure one lead pays the monthly fee. Is it month to month or a signed contract for a given length, cause if 2 drop out then you need to print newer postcards. Imagine you have 5 areas in your town, N, S, E, W and Central city. 7 businesses become 35 unless they get all the areas, and do they pay by the "neighborhood" 19.95 a month per area? Who mans the phone when someone calls in? And who calls or emails the lead to the business? Having spent the last two years testing this very niche, let me be candid... I think you had a better idea a few months back, but gave up on it just a little too soon...the 9x6 with 6 advertisers, and email solicitation... this idea is going to be a nightmare if you do it, TEST heavily before you invest much time or money into. Being in this game, not a 10 foot pole away would I consider it, But good for you for thinking about things GordonJ PS. You might want to take a look at what you were doing and see if you can marry it with this one. Quote:
Last edited by GordonJ : June 15, 2015 at 09:31 PM. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Quote:
Thanks again Gordon...I owe you at least a 6 pack for all of your awesome advice/input! For some reason, every time I get into the "marketing for local business" game...I quickly get out. Then I get back in with another version of the same concept..."marketing for local business". Must be some weird addiction. I'm going to follow The SumoApp methodology of business ideas...which is to do something manually for free. And if it works- scale it up from there and charge for it. Something has got to get me out of the corporate world...way too boring! |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Quote:
Nothing wrong with the going after the "marketing for local business" niche. However the last thing you want to do is be dependent on the local business to be the distributor of the marketing piece. Quite frankly they're too unreliable for it. Most of them aren't of the right mindset (not too mention quite often after they've provided a service for you, their hands & appearance is a mess) and they simply aren't the vehicle of distribution you would want. The big problem I have with many of the "marketing for local business" ideas, including the whole 9x12 thing is that you're going to be putting in one heck of a lot of work for not a lot of return. And that amount of work is a detriment to scaling the thing up. The other challenge is the low cost of the ads themselves. On any sort of postcard the ads can only be so big which limits the amount you can ask for in exchange for the space. That's where the penny-saver folks or the Val-Pak folks have a big edge, they can be offering much larger (and more costly) ad space to folks like car-dealers who worth a mint in larger format marketing pieces but aren't a good target for postcard marketers. |
![]() |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Other recent posts on the forum...
Get the report on Harvey Brody's Answers to a Question-Oriented-Person