Marketing Plans That Work

You’re starting your own business. You know what to sell and who your customers are. But how will you decide what your marketing materials should look like or even what you’ll charge for your products or services?

You need to become an amateur sleuth and gather competitive intelligence to create an on-target marketing program and tailor your services or products to position against the competition.

It’s important to complete a competitive analysis during the start-up phase of your new business, about the time you’re putting together your marketing plan. In fact, if you get underway without performing a competitive analysis, you run the risk of creating marketing tools and product or service offerings that are way off the mark.

This can cost you valuable time and money during the critical early months. You should also plan to gather competitive intelligence as your business grows, in order to stay competitive.

Who’s Your Competition?

One of the biggest mistakes new entrepreneurs make is failing to recognize the range of competitors for their businesses. Your new company will have two types of competition-real and perceived. For example, imagine you’re a former college athlete who’s decided to start a personal fitness training business.

Your competitors will fall into two categories: other personal trainers, and gyms and health clubs that offer trainers or advisors on staff. Although you’d directly compete only with the other personal trainers, your prospects-people who want to shape up-would perceive the gyms that offer these services as a viable alternative to hiring you. So to complete your competitive analysis, you need to evaluate the marketing materials and services both types of competitors offer.

Get the Facts

The first step in your competitive analysis is to collect all the marketing materials used by your competitors-both perceived and real. Begin by clipping your competitors’ ads. Then request copies of their brochures and other marketing materials-not so you can copy their ideas, but so you can check out marketing strategies and formats, competitive pricing, special offers, the key benefits (or promises made), and clues to marketing niches that may be underserved.

If possible, you may even want to “mystery shop” your competitors-go out and actually buy their products or services so you can experience the purchasing process with their store personnel or salespeople. If your competitors are large enough, you can gather information about them on the Net.

Use major search engines to look for recent press releases and articles about them. There are even free sites on the Web that allow you to customize your own daily news page, such as NewsPage by NewsEdge Corp. (www.newspage.com).

And don’t forget to check out your competitors’ Web sites. How do your direct and perceived competitors use the Net to attract customers and sell products? This will give you important clues about information a Web site of your own should contain.
Put It All Together

Now you’re ready to draw some conclusions about the types of competitive offers and pricing your new business should use. Best of all, you’ll have clear guidelines for developing your marketing tools. Complete your analysis by answering these questions:

  • What size are their materials? Do most of your competitors use standard mailing envelopes, or are they using large folders with inserts?
  • Do your competitors use photography or illustrations in their materials?
  • Do they have Web sites, and how deep are they? Do they sell products online or just offer information?
  • How are your competitors’ products or services similar to yours? How are they different?
  • What key benefits do their marketing materials communicate? Can you offer additional benefits that are valuable to prospects?
  • What special product, service or pricing offers do your competitors use to stimulate responses to brochures and ads?

Once you discover the answers to these questions, create the marketing tools that will work harder than you do.

E-Commerce Primer – How To Begin Getting Paid

How do you get paid? By accepting credit cards for payments. How do you do that? A good first place to start your search for merchant status is your own bank. Most issue credit cards, and if you have a long-term relationship, that’s a big plus. Your bank says no? Try a few other local banks–offering to move all your accounts–and you just may be rewarded with merchant status.

You may also try other companies that specialize in issuing accounts to online merchants, including:

  • Cardservice International
  • VeriSign
  • Credit Card Processing Services
  • The Processing Network
  • 21st Century Resources

Or, log onto Google and search for credit card processing. You’ll find many dozens of outfits, large and small, that are on the prowl for startups seeking merchant accounts.

Credit cards aren’t processed cheaply, however, at least not for a startup. A typical fee schedule for a small-volume account (fewer than 1,000 transactions monthly) would include startup fees amounting to around $200 and monthly processing fees of around $20.

Making Customers Feel Secure

The one must-have for online credit card processing: secure, encrypted connections. You’ve seen this many times yourself. Go to virtually any major e-tailer, commence a purchase, and you are put into a “secure server” environment, where transaction data is scrambled to provide a measure of safety against hackers.

Truth is, these worries are generally unfounded–the odds of a hacker grabbing an unencrypted credit card number from a non-secure website are pretty slender–but buyers feel reassured when they see they’re entering a secure site, and that means you need to provide it.

Is this a technical hassle for you? It shouldn’t be. Whatever vendor sells you credit card processing should also, as part of the package, provide a secure transaction environment. If they don’t, look elsewhere.

Fraud Prevention Tools

Contrary to reports of rising fraud rates, credit card payments remain one of the safest payment methods available online. Sophisticated internet solutions, such as the LinkPoint Secure Payment Gateway, process credit card payments in real time using Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) technology, which encrypts all confidential information during the transmission and authorization of transactions.

Other fraud-prevention tools, such as the Address Verification Service (AVS), make online credit card acceptance even safer. The service compares the numerical information in your customers’ addresses with records stored by card-issuing banks. It then returns codes that indicate whether the numbers match.

Although the information provided by the AVS does not affect the authorization of your transactions, it can help you make informed decisions about suspicious orders.

Besides the AVS, you can protect yourself by using the card validation code 2 (CVC2) and the card verification value (CVV2) verification systems of MasterCard and Visa, respectively. These verification services use the three-digit codes printed on all MasterCard and Visa cards to help you determine whether your customers possess legitimate cards.

Special Considerations

Be sure to ask prospective processors about the costs of storefront solutions that you must have to effectively operate your website, such as shopping carts, Web hosting, payment gateways, virtual terminals, virtual checks, databases for fulfilling orders, customer tracking, and a way to calculate tax and shipping charges.

Typical Fees

Shop around for a credit card processor that best suits your needs. Talk to several different processors and don’t be afraid to ask questions. Find out about:

  • The discount rate: The percentage of each transaction paid to the merchant account provider. If your monthly charges are less than a certain volume, the processor may charge a higher percentage.
  • Transaction fee: A flat rate charged for each transaction processed.
  • Equipment: Some examples include point-of-sale terminals, printers and peripherals. Also find out about installation costs. (This may or may not apply to you as an e-business.)
  • Monthly minimum fees: These are minimum fees that the merchant account provider collects each month from the merchant if the merchant’s discount rate and transaction fees don’t add up to the monthly minimum specified on the original merchant application. It is usually about $25 per month if the monthly minimum volume isn’t reached.
  • Reserve fees: If your credit history is in question, or if you own a new or high-risk business, you may be required to set up a reserve account, which protects the processor from any future losses. The reserve account is calculated as a percentage of your sales.
  • Chargeback fees: These are the costs charged by a processor to cover disputed charges.

Other Payment Options

  • Money orders. For customers who don’t have credit cards, money orders are a great payment alternative, particularly if you sell your products in an online auction environment, such as eBay.
  • Existing checking accounts. Services that transfer checking account funds electronically are another quick and easy option for customers without credit cards. Western Union’s MoneyZap service, for example, lets buyers pay merchants online from their existing checking accounts.
  • Check cards. Offline debit cards–aka check cards–are typically issued by large credit card companies through their participating banks. U.S. consumers today make the majority of their offline debit purchases with the Visa Check Card or MasterCard’s MasterMoney card. These enhanced ATM cards carry the Visa and MasterCard logos, respectively, and may be used everywhere the credit cards are accepted, including over the internet.
  • Electronic checks. These are another emerging e-payment option. Through a process called check conversion, brick-and-mortar merchants can transform their customers’ paper checks into electronic transactions that are processed through the automated clearing house (ACH) network.
  • Internet checks. You can also accept checks over the internet using payment-processing software, such as LinkPoint International’s VirtualCheck. Customers who elect to make check purchases from a website are prompted to key their information into a browser-based form. Again, data is encrypted and captured by the transaction processor’s payment gateway.
  • PayPal. Based in Mountain View, California, PayPal is the world’s largest online payment system. Recently acquired by eBay, PayPal lets consumers send money to anyone with an e-mail address through their credit card or checking account. Consumers sign up once for the free service-after that, they use their account number to buy products online securely, conveniently and cost-effectively.

Are You High Risk?

Just because some merchant account providers lump e-businesses in with other high-risk businesses, like telemarketers, merchants in the travel and cruise industries and internet auctions, it doesn’t have to mean you won’t be able to open a merchant account. It does mean, though, that it may be more challenging to set one up.

Merchant account providers–banks and independent sales organizations–will also consider how long you’ve been in business, your credit history and any previous merchant accounts you’ve held with other processors.

Your length of time in business matters because merchant account providers want an assurance that you understand the business environment in which you operate, can identify the potential risks you face, know how to prevent or reduce fraud, and understand how to manage credit card acceptance. Regardless of risk, this kind of knowledge comes only with first-hand business experience.

Your credit report will show how well you’ve repaid past loans, and if you’ve had any liens, judgments or bankruptcies filed against you. A favorable credit history will go a long way toward establishing your credibility as a prospective merchant.

And if you’ve had an earlier, well-maintained merchant account, it’s a positive indicator of how you’re going to deal with your new processor. Terminated merchant accounts will show up on the Member Alert to Control High-Risk Merchants file, also known as the Combined Terminated Merchant File.

If your previous processor terminated your merchant account because you defaulted on it, or if you incurred too many chargebacks, this may negatively impact opening a future account.

To increase your merchant account eligibility, follow these tips:

  • Ensure a positive credit rating. Remove any past bankruptcies, late payments or liens from your credit report before you apply for a merchant account. To obtain your credit report, contact a credit reporting bureau such as TRW or a company that provides merged credit reports from major reporting agencies, such as Equifax, Experian or Trans Union.
  • Be honest about previous merchant accounts, bankruptcies, liens or judgments. By acknowledging past financial challenges, you improve your credibility and may encounter one less barrier to opening a new merchant account. You cannot hide information that’s part of the public record.
  • Be willing to pay higher fees or accommodate special account requirements. If you need to abide by special restrictions or pay slightly higher fees in order to open a merchant account, by all means do it! It’s worth it to provide your customers with as many noncash payment options as possible. It will help you generate revenues and stimulate impulse purchases.

Find Your Perfect Product

It’s a great idea: You found the perfect niche market, lots of customers, profit potential galore, the ultimate location and a stellar e-commerce site.

The only problem — where to find all the products you need to stock your shelves.

This happens all the time with entrepreneurs. Even if you come up with a brilliant idea of a product you want to sell, there’s still the tiny detail of finding the actual product. You want to sell AAA but “Where exactly can I get a supply of AAA to sell and get it for a fair price?”

The good news is, finding what you need isn’t quite the needle-in-a-haystack task it’s envisioned to be.

“My experience is, there are a lot of existing channels used to match up manufacturers and distributors of products. Trade shows and trade magazines are two of the best,” says Roger Green, co-founder of Cullinane & Green Inc.

Trade shows alone offer multiple opportunities for you to not only spot upcoming trends, but also to network with potential suppliers and hopefully find just the right product source. The New York International Gift Fair, for instance, attracts thousands of exhibitors, organized by type of product. Attending a trade show also gives you the opportunity to demonstrate you mean business. “By being there, you establish yourself as someone being in business as opposed to being a consumer.

The overwhelming majority [of attendees] are serious buyers,” says Green, who, along with partner Joe Cullinane, has a diverse background in sales, marketing and senior management that’s familiarized him with the ins and outs of product sourcing. “You also get to compare prices across a range, and you get a good sense of the business without having to put a lot of air miles into it.”

Trade magazines, meanwhile, can be an inexpensive way to find companies with which you want to correspond. Scour them frequently for mentions of any companies that might offer the products you need, then try to find out whether they’ll be exhibiting at any upcoming trade shows you can attend.

Trade organizations or industry associations related to the products you’re interested in are yet another potential source of valuable contacts, including international companies. “[These organizations] have trade missions, and they have access to manufacturers from other countries,” says Green. He notes that one of their main goals is to match up buyers and sellers.

So how do you go about finding the right industry association? Check out these resources for help in locating the proper channels:

  • Directory of Associations from Concept Marketing Group Inc.
  • Gale’s Encyclopedia of Associations. And if you’re not interested in purchasing your own set, most large public libraries carry a copy in their reference department
  • National Trade and Professional Associations of the United States

“You should also look at companies that are regional,” adds Cullinane, author of “21st Century Selling” and adjunct professor of marketing at DeVry University’s Keller Graduate School of Management. “[Look at] retail stores that are very successful in one [geographic] area and not selling anywhere else.”

Start by contacting someone at the company or store and asking them whether they might want to sell their product in your hometown. “If something’s been successful in one area, you’ll find the company will want to expand but just don’t have the resources to do it,” says Cullinane.

Image Counts

Finding the suppliers you want is just the first step toward stocking your shelves with the proper inventory. Next, you’ve got some impressing to do. “You have to be perceived as a company and not a consumer,” stresses Cullinane.

“You have to present yourself as someone who is seriously interested in building a business,” adds Green, who advises establishing yourself as a business entity as opposed to a sole proprietorship. ” ‘Inc.’ makes all the difference in the world in [the company extending you] credit in the future.”

Keep in mind, also, that some firms, especially international ones, often prefer working with registered wholesalers of their products as opposed to retailers, says Green, so be prepared to inquire with a particular company about how you might become one. Companies that offer this option to buyers will likely ask you to fill out a few forms and provide some details on your banking history and so forth.

You may need letters of credit and references in order to prove your ability to make good on your word. The advantage of becoming a wholesaler? Wholesale rates, which are often well below the retail prices of a given company.

When making that initial contact with a potential vendor, be prepared to talk about what you do and why they would want to do business with you. Letters of credit from your bank, and letters of reference from people who know you and can vouch for your credibility, are also key-those can help you get an appointment with the vendor in the first place. Green advises starting small:

“Find an easy one, and then build from there. If you start dealing with someone local who knows you and can see you, in a few months, you’ll have a track record and can use the first one as a reference. It’s like starting a fire: use kindling first, not the log.”

Look to your social network to determine whether you might know anyone who can help you. Make sure you tell friends and family what you’re doing-you never know who they might know. “It’s amazing the results you’ll get [when you spread the word],” says Cullinane.

One caveat: If you do business with someone you know, make sure you clearly establish the terms of the relationship from the start. As Green cautions, “It’s still a business relationship at the end of the day,” cautions Green.

“There’s a saying among lawyers: The best contracts are drawn between people who don’t trust each other.”

So enlist the help of an attorney who knows the ins and outs of drawing up the kind of contract you need-the money will be well-spent in the long run.

So You’ve Got a Supplier

Once you’ve found the companies that manufacture the products you want to sell, you need to get samples and be sure they’re exactly what you want. “Be prepared to invest in that,” says Green. “Sometimes companies will supply samples at no charge, but not always. And don’t go looking for freebies-that can ruin your credibility.”

How many vendors do you need? “Just enough,” says Cullinane. In B2B situations, you’ll likely want at least two suppliers, maybe three. It’s a good idea to have backup suppliers in case something ever falls through with one of your regulars. “A lot of times you build your business around one supplier,” explains Cullinane, “and if something [happens to them], you could be out of business.”

Above all, remember the most important element of a successful retail business: the customer. Even if you’ve got a handle on where to get your product, you’ll want to make sure you haven’t forgotten the crucial step of determining whether that product will be met with a warm reception. “An entrepreneur needs to look at ‘What do my customers need that they can’t get?’ ” says Cullinane. “Satisfy that niche. Be the person who provides that.”

Click Away

  • Use the Web in your search for suppliers. “With powerful search engines like Google, you can locate suppliers all over the world,” says product-sourcing guru Roger Green. “It’s a low-cost way to go exploring.”
  • TheThomas Register online will help you locate companies and products manufactured in North America. You can also place orders online and view thousands of online company catalogs and Web sites.
  • Don’t overlook the U.S. Department of Commerce in your search for suppliers. “Let them know you want to do business, and they’ll do some match-ups,” says Green.
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