How to Use Fusion Marketing
Create a strategic alliance with a similar business and watch your business grow.
By Al Lautenslager
| May 22, 2006
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/marketing/marketingideas/guerrillamarketingcolumnistallautenslager/article159490.html
When I walked into the dry cleaners the other day to drop off my
shirts, I found a $5-off coupon on the counter for the pizza shop
two doors down. I decided I wanted pizza, so I walked down to the
pizza shop, redeemed my coupon, and found a coupon on their
counter for $5 off at the dry-cleaning place I was just at. These
two establishments were sending traffic to each other; they had
formed a strategic business alliance. In the world of Guerrilla
Marketing, this is known as fusion marketing.
As entrepreneurs, we always think we have to do things alone,
but its amazing the synergy available from collaborating or
aligning with others. Fusion marketing can take your business to
levels you never thought possible before now.
Those that are likely collaborators or fusion marketing
alliances are power partners. A "power partner" is a
business that has a similar target market as yours but doesn't
really compete with you. Examples of this are an estate planning
attorney and a life insurance salesperson; a graphic designer and a
printer; a real estate professional and a mortgage broker; a
wedding photographer and a caterer or disc jockey. I think when you
look at these examples you start to get the idea. The number of
power partners or fusion marketing partners is only limited by your
imagination.
Fusion arrangements can come in many forms in addition to the
coupon example above--you can join your mailing list with your
partners and do a joint mailing; you can make joint sales calls;
you can offer an incentive from your alliance partner for each
purchase of your product and vice-versa for your partner.
I know a printer who offers a free pizza coupon or free ice
cream coupon on the back page of their notepads. The pizza place
and ice cream store get the benefit of the distribution of the
notepads to the printing company's prospects, and the printing
company gets the benefit of offering their prospects something for
free.
Easy Steps to Setting Up Your Own
Fusion Marketing Arrangement
Here are easy steps you can take to set up your own fusion
marketing arrangements:
- Step 1: Define your power partners. A power
partner is someone who has similar prospects as you and who could
benefit from the same type of prospects, but isn't in the same
business. Examples: landscaper/builder, realtor/mortgage broker,
network marketer/entrepreneur, massage therapist/chiropractor.
- Step 2: Figure out with your power partner what
your offer will be. Maybe the printer gives a two-for-one offer
while the designer offers to design a logo along with the design
piece of a direct-mail piece. Maybe the attorney offers a free
consultation on wills while the insurance salesperson offers a tips
list on avoiding probate tax. Maybe the massage therapist offers a
free midday office visit for a massage break while the chiropractor
offers a back adjustment. Figure out what joint offer makes
sense.
- Step 3: Write up a general letter of
agreement. This doesn't have to be a major-league legal
document, but the one thing that hinders an alliance is lack of
communication. This assures who does what and gets what. It can be
a simple e-mail exchange.
- Step 4: Package it up. Write all the
verbiage: the marketing copy, sales letter, press releases (if
appropriate), e-mail letters, etc. Either have both businesses
write it up and compare notes or have one write it and let the
other approve. Be creative here. Be benefit-oriented. What's in
it for the prospect?
- Step 5: Combine mailing lists and communicate
to both sets. Don't worry about who has more or less--just
combine them. When I put my list together with your list we both
have a list much bigger than if we did it alone. You can do this
with direct mail or e-mail; obviously e-mail is cheaper.
- Step 6: Be responsive to any responses.
Fulfill offers; make it easy to sign up, to buy, to take the next
step and keep track. Follow up and attention will convert prospects
into paying customers. Share leads and conversions for future
follow-up and future marketing.
- Step 7: Follow up. Both businesses should
continue marketing to each of the converted people as follow-up
marketing.
That's all there really is to it. It's a straight set of
deliberate, planned-out steps, with a high degree of communication
and execution. That's what all marketing is, and the more
it's spelled out and planned out, the higher probability
someone will act upon in. That's what all the marketing I get
involved in does--this is the key to marketing. It's not going
to happen overnight but with steps, plans and accountability,
you'll increase your revenue. I prove it to myself every day,
and I prove it to my clients.
Al Lautenslager is the "Guerrilla Marketing" coach
at Entrepreneur.com and is an award-winning
marketing and PR consultant and direct-mail promotion specialist.
He's also the principle of Market For
Profits, a Chicago-based marketing consulting firm. His two
latest books, Guerrilla Marketing in 30 Days and The
Ultimate Guide to Direct Marketing are available at www.entrepreneurpress.com.
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