Actionable Marketing Guide Newsletter

Published: Mon, 04/17/17

actionable marketing guide

Dear ,

Spring break combined with warm weather have cause New York to swell with tourists and shoppers.

Wide-eyed children experience New York City for the first time—be it visiting relatives, accompanying mom to work, or seeing the sights of the city.

Big shopping bags bulge with new clothes for Easter, Passover and Spring on the streets and sidewalks.

On the corner of my block sits The Church of the Holy Communion, a Gothic Revival structure now known as the Limelight. After an Easter service in the 1870s, the women in the congregation marched up Fifth Avenue in their Sunday best to bring food and donations to the poor. This became a annual event – the Easter Parade.

At the other end of the block is the Ladies Mile, the location of the first New York City department stores, an innovation in retail marketing. Starting in 1875, stores started advertising new fashions that patrons could show off during their Easter stroll up Fifth Avenue.

When I was young my mother bought us new spring outfits to wear out to dinner with my grandparents on Easter weekend.

Like these astute late nineteenth century merchants, take heed of current trends and integrate them into your marketing and merchandising. 

Start your annual marketing and promotional plan by slotting in key holidays relevant to your product offering. Include new shopping events such as Back-To-School. It’s now the second major shopping holiday after Christmas. First time college students are a big market these days.

Need help? Here’s a promotional plan to help you. It includes templates and charts.

While you’re planning, include monthly content themes for your content and promotions.

Not all holidays work for every business. For example, at The Economist, my boss wanted me to offer digital subscriptions for Valentine’s Day. (Not the most romantic gift!)

Incorporate special holidays. For example, Mexican restaurants celebrate Cinqo De Mayo with special higher priced menus.

Include personalized celebrations such as customer birthdays or anniversaries. For example, many women’s clothing stores offer a birthday promotion that’s targeted. Marriott offered a special promotion for my one year anniversary.

Be creative with emerging trends. For example I ran special “Harry Potter” promotions at Bertelsmann (even though the books flew off the shelves regardless of where I put or hid the promotion!) In New York City, there were special overnight events when new Potter books started selling.

Don’t wait for December to plan or update your holiday promotions. At a minimum, check what’s happening on a quarterly basis.

I’ve never worked for a business that didn’t feel the need to improve sales during the year. It’s the real life issues you don’t plan for that hurt your sales and profits.

I advise planning a promotion or two you can be used with limited notice. But (and this is critical), don’t put them in your initial budget. You need to have something ready when you have an issue.

Happy spring holidays whatever you celebrate!

Happy Marketing
Heidi.

Heidi Cohen
Actionable Marketing Guide

 

If you enjoy reading this email newsletter, perhaps there’s a friend or colleague that you’d like to recommend us to? Please send them this link to our email signup page. http://heidicohen.com/subscribe-to-actionable-marketing-newsletter/​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

 
RECENT POSTS ON THE ACTIONABLE MARKETING GUIDE

The 10 Plagues of Social Media

Have You Protected Your Business From Social Media Evils?

The 10 Plagues of Social MediaIs your business prepared for modern social media plagues?

Not sure what I’m talking about?

Social media can seriously harm your marketing and business like the biblical story of Moses and the 10 plagues in ancient Egypt.

In a world where most teens and adults have a smartphone, anyone can record and communicate issues in real time with audiences that extend beyond their inner circle of friends and family. Continue reading

11 Actionable Blogging Tips to Make Content Findable

Is Your Blog An Easter Egg Hunt For Quality Content?

11
Actionable Blogging Tips to Make Content FindableDo you make blog content findable?

Or do visitors think your blog is an Easter egg hunt for quality content? 

Unlike colorfully dyed eggs, your best blog content may lack the appropriate brilliance to shine through the information available across channels.

To make your blog content findable, dress it up so it stands out. Continue reading

How To Create Must-Read Recurring Content Columns

5 Regular Column Types Every Content Marketer Can Use

How To Create Must-Read Recurring Content ColumnsAre recurring content columns a part of your editorial mix?

A recurring content column is an ongoing column. It’s a regular element of your editorial calendar.

Think Page Six, the New York Post’s gossip page.

Or go high-brow with New York Times op-ed columnists like Tom Friedman, Paul Krugman and David Brooks. Continue reading

 
ACTIONABLE MARKETING GUIDE AROUND THE WEB
 
FREE eBOOK

Pivot Your Business

Why companies of all sizes need a modern platform to optimize growth.

Pivot Your Business

The pace of change in business today is unprecedented – and continues to accelerate. Business leaders today are tasked not only with optimizing their business for today's reality, but also for planning ahead for tomorrow's opportunities and risks.

Business pivots used to be the domain of startups or struggling behemoths, but now every business is expected to pivot and adapt to take advantage of constantly changing conditions.

Read this eBook in order to learn about this increasing pace of change, what it means for your business and industry, and most importantly – how to set up your business to succeed now and into the future.

Offered free from NetSuite Inc.

Download!

See More Free Offers
 

Can't wait for next week's edition of the Actionable Marketing Guide? Get an email notification when each new post is published – generally 2 to 4 times a week. ​​​​​​​


Having trouble reading this email? 

-- View as Web Page 

Photos: The Church of the Holy Communion as the Limelight Marketplace in 2010 by Beyond My Ken, CC A-SA