Anchor Marketing Services

Marketing For The Real World

Welcome To The Anchor Marketing Services Blog...

Image is everything. Always remember that your credibility adds to or subtracts from your image. Just ask any athlete who's used "performance enhancing alternatives." The brokered image is now replaced. Use long term thought with any short term idea.

Richard Uhnavy, Founder
Anchor Marketing Services, LLC

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  • How to Establish “Brand Presence” – Even If You’re Not a Brand Marketer

    Posted By Richard Uhnavy on February 18, 2009

    By Michael Masterson & MaryEllen Tribby

    The end goals of direct-response marketing (DRM) and brand marketing are entirely different. Direct response wants to get the customer to provide information or open his wallet. Branding, on the other hand, wants to get the customer to remember the product.

    But today, with the power of the Internet behind them, branding and DRM work more closely together… closer than they ever have in the history of advertising.

    Think about Early to Rise. Because ETR is a true daily – delivered seven days a week and reaching close to 450,000 people – it has developed a certain “brand presence.”

    By “brand presence,” we mean that ETR has a specific look and feel. It has a strong mission statement and specific core values. These are aspects of our “brand” that have been with us since ETR’s inception.

    All of the products we produce carry our logo. So when you see our banner ads on other websites and text ads in other newsletters, you know by the logo that the ads come from ETR.

    But at its heart, ETR is not a brand marketer. ETR is a direct-response e-newsletter. That’s how we developed our subscriber list. That’s how we’ve grown our business. And because we’ve been consistent with our message, our values, and our product quality, we’ve been able to create a brand presence that other people recognize. A brand can develop organically from good direct-response marketing.

    For most small businesses (the non-Cokes and non-Nikes of the world), this is the best way to grow. Spend your money on great multi-channel direct-response campaigns and let your brand develop while you make money.

    [ETR Note: The above article is an excerpt from Changing the Channel: 12 Easy Ways to Make Millions for Your Business, the best-selling book by MaryEllen Tribby and Michael Masterson. You don't have to be a CEO to put Changing the Channel's 12 Profit Accelerators into action. They can work whether you're a brand-new employee... or an entrepreneur... or the head honcho. If you don't yet have your copy of Changing the Channel, order it today.]

     This article appears courtesy of Early To Rise, an e-zine dedicated to making money, improving your health and quality of life. For a complimentary subscription, visit http://www.earlytorise.com.

     

    The Secret to Selling to Seniors

    Posted By Richard Uhnavy on February 12, 2009

    By John Forde

    What do you know about marketing to the older generation? It might not be enough. Check this out:

    • According to the last U.S. census, the fastest-growing market is people 50 years and older. Right now, that’s about 37 percent of the total U.S. population. By 2015, it should hit 45 percent.

    • Nearly 30 percent of these people are on the Internet. Not to mention an incredible 80 percent of seniors in the top income bracket.

    • How much money do these folks have? About 70 percent of all the disposable income in the U.S. Around $1.6 trillion. Overall, they have a combined household net worth of around $19 trillion.

    • The over-50 crowd – just in the U.S. – spends about $7 billion per year online.

    • They also buy 40 percent of all new cars, 80 percent of all new luxury cars, 74 percent of all prescription drugs, and 80 percent of all leisure travel. And this same crowd – close to 75 percent of them are grandparents – buys 25 percent of the toys sold in the U.S.

    To lump together everyone in the “older generation” is to include every race… every economic, religious, and political background… every level of income… you name it. Almost every marketing niche in existence somehow overlaps with the post-50 set.

    And it’s about to get even more diverse…

    Between 2005 and 2030, the total market of consumers between the ages of 18 and 59 will grow only about 7 percent larger. Meanwhile, the market of people over 60 will grow 81 percent. That’s huge. Somewhere around 20.5 million more customers.

    With all those folks going grey – with such diverse interests and needs – what to sell? Creams, lotions, pills, and wheelchairs?

    Not hardly. In the 1930s, it made sense to think of 65 and up as the age of obsolescence. Not anymore. If there’s one clear trend it’s this: A whole new concept of what it means to be older has evolved.

    By and large…

    Today’s Older Generation Is Healthier

    There’s lots of talk about how life expectancy is soaring. Hogwash. Science doesn’t expect anyone to live past 114 years. And that’s the way it’s been for a long time. What’s changed, though, is how well we’re living and how long we’re doing so.

    Only about 5 percent of the older population lives in nursing homes, according to agingresearch.org. We’re shifting from acute to chronic ailments that may make life a little tougher, but don’t stop us from doing and accomplishing all kinds of great things, regardless of age. We’re also getting in shape and staying in shape.

    And we’re discovering that bad health has more to do with bad habits than with heredity. And that diet and exercise can even hold off diseases we might be genetically susceptible to.

    If you’re marketing to this crowd, you’d better throw in adventure travel, fitness products, vitamins, dignified fashions and sportswear – in general, a lot more “younger” products and sales pitches than anyone might have imagined 20 years ago.

    Today’s Older Generation Wants To Learn

    Age-related memory loss and brain function is way over-estimated. New research even suggests it has a lot more to do with how you expect to age rather than any actual mental or physiological changes.

    More important, we’re all just a little more aware of learning opportunities today. And the opportunities are more accessible than ever before. That’s as true for the older population as it is for everyone else.

    There’s a booming market for mail-order education, seminars, educational travel, and more. Heck, my own grandfather learned to speak French at 76 years old. That’s better than I’m doing at 39!

    The Older Generation Wants To Work

    In too many cases, economic pressures force some people to work longer than they want to.

    That’s a problem. 

    But there’s also a huge segment of the older population that just wants to keep on working. Some never retire from their jobs, some volunteer, still others launch second careers. And that may help explain why products that teach new skills and let people launch home businesses can do so well.

    The bottom line?

    Check your assumptions about the senior market. They’re a lot younger than you might think.

    [ETR Note: Knowing your customer is one of the most important aspects of making a sale. Learn the ins and outs of finding a target market, attracting traffic to your site, making sales, and more from some of the best experts in the business (including copywriting expert John Forde) with a membership in ETR's Internet Money Club. Learn the details here.

    And to get John's wisdom and insights into copywriting (and much more), sign up for his free e-letter, Copywriter's Roundtable, at copywritersroundtable.com. Or send an e-mail to signup@jackforde.com. Get a free report about 15 deadly copy mistakes and how to avoid them when you sign up today.]

     This article appears courtesy of Early To Rise, an e-zine dedicated to making money, improving your health and quality of life. For a complimentary subscription, visit http://www.earlytorise.com.