Frugal Marketing
Inexpensive Marketing Solutions Thrifty Marketing Techniques

FREE Money-Saving Tips in Your Mailbox Every Month! Select the newsletters you'd like to receive, then enter your email address below.

Frugal Fun Tips (Read Archives)

Frugal Marketing Tips (Read Archives)

Positive Power of Principled Profit

Your name will NEVER be sold!
Click here for our privacy/copyright policy.

Bargain Techniques for Thrifty Marketing
Grassroots Marketing, Getting Noticed in a Noisy World Marketing Without Megabucks: How to Sell Anything on a Shoestring
Principled Profits, Marketing that Puts People First

Low Cost Marketing Tools and Techniques

Low Cost Marketing


Marketing Inexpensively
© 2001-2002 FrugalMarketing.com















 

Introduction to Frugal Marketing

By Shel Horowitz

Frugal marketing is the idea that you don't have to spend a lot of money to be an effective marketer. In fact, you'll often be a better marketer if you spend less. And by keeping costs down, you'll be profitable sooner!

This article (and the one that follows) is a "living example" of one frugal marketing strategy: that you can write a page whose main goal is to be "found" when people look for certain terms--that you can get publicity on the Internet through a keyword-rich page, and still make it useful for a human reader. If it reads a bit stilted, that's why. This is why specific phrases such as press releases, publicity on the Internet, newspaper and magazine articles, and Internet discussion groups come up over and over again. But making a page that's friendly to robotic spiders is only one small part of the mix.

The frugal marketing approach includes free publicity in the media: Using press releases (news releases), pitch letters, and other strategies to get positive media coverage in newspaper and magazine articles (not to mention online publicity through the thousands of Internet publications) or free airtime on broadcast media.

Frugal marketing uses online publicity strategies such as participation in Internet discussion groups and mailing lists, one-to-one e-mail, seeding articles, and of course, an inexpensive but effective Internet domain and website.

Frugal marketing means being a "guerrilla" at trade shows, walking the floor for contacts instead of exhibiting--and spending little or no money.

And frugal marketing covers a lot more. The more you spend time at this site, the more you'll learn about making your marketing dollar work harder and stretch farther. Low costs. Great results. Doesn't that sound like a sensible approach to marketing?

If some of the notorious Internet dot-bombs had followed the principles of frugal marketing, they might still be around, enjoying a high ROI. If amazon.com had used frugal marketing techniques more extensively, the company could have been profitable at least three years before it finally had a quarter "in the black," in the 4th quarter of 2001. In 1998, for instance, the company's marketing cost was $133 million; its overall loss was "only" $124.5 million. Just replacing 10% of its wildly inflated marketing budget with frugal methods would have turned that huge loss into a $4 million profit!

Instead of such expensive strategies as banner ads, amazon could have been actively participating in online discussion groups. Amazon did use news releases, but was most successful only in getting coverage on the business page, rather than in newspaper and magazine articles that targeted the general reader--its real customer.

This site offers over 200 resources for frugal marketers--including the complete archive of Shel Horowitz's Monthly Frugal Marketing Tips (which I've written every month since May, 1997), as well as excerpts from the frugal marketing bible: Grassroots Marketing: Getting Noticed in a Noisy World (a Finalist for ForeWord Magazine's Book of the Year Award). Like the site (but in much more detail), the book tells you how to get free publicity through media coverage, Internet discussion groups, media you make and distribute yourself, and much more.

I submit that by using such strategies as Internet discussion groups and mailing lists, free publicity in the media, and a guerrilla approach to such traditional marketing activities as advertising, direct mail and trade shows, that many businesses can grow and prosper with a ridiculously low marketing budget. In my book, I actually demonstrate how a business could succeed with a marketing budget as small as ten dollars. Of course, it's easier with more, but it can be done. When the media contact you after you write a great news release and you see that free publicity in newspaper and magazine articles, you can just smile while others wonder how you did it.

Welcome. Stay as long as you like. Enjoy. And learn how to be a marketing success with a minimalist budget.


How to Use Press Releases to Have the Media Contact You and Get Free Publicity in Newspapers and Magazines, or Free media Coverage on the Radio

By Shel Horowitz

Press releases (you can also call them news releases) are a great tool for getting media coverage--my favorite kind of free publicity--and they should be part of every PR strategy. The majority of press releases go straight into the recycle bin--or simply get lost in the deluge of press materials. And some of the reason is that an amazing number of news releases break some of the basic rules.

So be a successful media contact and get the free publicity. Set your news releases apart from the crowd--do it right! That, along with proper follow up, will boost your odds significantly.

The crucial part is not so much in the structure of the release, but in the ingredients. Just as when you bake a cake, it needs flour, eggs, flavoring agents, and sweetener--but you can assemble them in thousands of different permutations within that basic "cake structure"

So here's what you should have in your computer cupboard when sending a press release to try to get mentioned in newspaper and magazine articles, or to get free airtime on the radio:

  1. A news hook--something to pin the story on that makes people want to read past the first couple of lines. You are competing with a huge number of inputs so yours has to be memorable. Otherwise--you get skipped over and someone else gets the free publicity.
  2. An understanding of who's reading the news release and what they're looking for, i.e., one size definitely does *not* fit all. This is why I always ask my press release clients who will be reading it. Some audiences want something sexy or overdramatic, others want just the facts, others want a local or niche angle.
  3. The right list to send it to, preferably with individual editors'/reporters' names, recently verified, who write the kinds of newspaper and magazine articles you're aiming at in your free publicity campaign.
  4. Full contact info! The best release in the world is useless if the reporter doesn't have the tools to follow up. Likewise, complete info about the product or event (including ordering information, if appropriate)
  5. A format that's accessible to the news media. This means good writing. Ideally, you'll see your exact words in print, in newspaper and magazine articles. It also means using only one side of the page, making it easy to read, and making sure it's addressed to the right department (at the right fax number or e-mail address).
Other things are nice to have, but not essential: some sort of third-party validation, for example, or quotes from the principal person involved, or a summary.

Eventually, it becomes second nature. I can knock off an easy release (say, for a community happening) in about 20 minutes, and the papers will pick it up. For a project with a national audience and significantly more research involved, it still usually only takes me one to two hours.

A fairly complete course in writing and distributing press releases that get the media to contact you or write newspaper and magazine articles about you is contained in my book, Grassroots Marketing: Getting Noticed in a Noisy World. Preview it at https://www.frugalmarketing.com/gm.shtml