Many of my clients are SME’s whose businesses are localised in some way, usually to the boundaries of the city they are in. The budgets they have for marketing are limited, so they must make every dollar count.

A very common and deadly mistake they make is to not be aware of the distinction between ‘Sales activation’ and longer-term branding role of advertising.

They are very different, and impact your business differently.

I am old enough to remember the ‘Pink pages’ business directory. A phone book of all registered businesses in which you could advertise. Local shops, tradies, piano tuners, and hundreds of other types of businesses were listed. When you needed one, that is where you went to find them.

The pink pages is dead, replaced by Google.

You go to Google when you need to find something, today. Google does not sell anything beyond access. Other sites like Shopify and Amazon do sell stuff, but are focussed on the transaction, the immediate sale. You only go there when you are looking to buy, now.

Advertising is the opposite end of the stick.

Most of the times you see an ad, you are not in the market for that product or service. The objective of the ad is to be remembered, to leave a positive impression, so that when you are in the market, the product comes to mind as the saviour. In the jargon, you build up ‘brand salience’, the recall of the brand and the value it delivers when the need arises.

Local businesses cannot afford large scale media, so must be more creative. However, all the disciplines that large advertisers use to get their message across and embedded in the minds of their potential customers can be used. All come from the marketing 101 basics book, and often after a set-up cost, are then free.

Following are some of the advertising ‘media’ that have proved successful over the years in generating revenue for ‘Localised marketing’

      • Vehicle signage.
      • Local sponsorships, such as the kids soccer team.
      • Local collaborations. The shoe shop and dress shop jointly cross promoting.
      • Testimonials from well-known locals, an even unknown ones who are identified as ‘local’
      • Local social media.
      • Branded collateral, from stickers, to fridge magnets, shopping bags, T-shirts and caps.
      • Local signage,
      • Participation in, and sponsorship of local events
      • A ‘locally optimised’ website, and use of the ‘Google Business Profile‘. The GBP is essential, and free.
      • And, the best of all, referrals from locals to other locals.

You do not need to be a large business to be a successful advertiser, but you do need to think about advertising with a different mindset to the usual ‘grab a sale today’ that dominates the thinking of most local businesses.

Header credit: Windows Factory. The branding of Windows Factory vans have paid for themselves many times over, just from people stopping them in the street.