📺 Stream EntrepreneurTV for Free 📺

5 Marketing Strategies That Don't Involve Social Media What else can a business do to reach people? Here are some ideas that don't involve likes, shares or tweets.

By Jess Ekstrom

entrepreneur daily

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Shutterstock

When coming up with marketing plans for your business, social media has become a given. When we create our marketing plans for Headbands of Hope, it's not if we're going to put it on Instagram, it's when and how. But because social media has become tremendously infused in every corner of our lives, it's easy for your marketing campaigns to get lost in such a saturated market.

What else can a business do to reach people? Here are some ideas that don't involve likes, shares or tweets:

1. Ambassador programs

I started my business in college. To get the word out, I recruited some of my college friends at other schools to be campus ambassadors for Headbands of Hope. An ambassador serves as representation for the brand and can help spread the word in his or her immediate community (in this case, campuses). We implemented a point-reward system where students can complete activities, such as giving a presentation on Headbands of Hope at a sorority chapter meeting, in exchange for points that they can cash in for headbands at the end of the month.

Related: Amending Your Marketing Strategy to More Effectively Reach a Changing America

Our campus programs have been so successful, that we're expanding in 2016 to have nursing ambassadors and community ambassadors. Figure out if there are particular communities that use your product (and will be vocal about it!) and create an ambassador program to help spread the word about your business.

2. Trade shows

Trade shows can get pricey depending on which ones you attend, but the return can be totally worth it. The biggest advantage to trade shows is relationships. It's one of the few scenarios where you can shake the hands of your consumers and also build relationships with other brands.

As a fashion company, we do wholesale trade shows such as Accessories the Show and America's Mart to meet representatives of stores and write orders.

Find out if your industry hosts any conferences or trade shows you can attend as an exhibitor. If that's too much of an expense, just come as an attendee and network as much as you can. Introduce yourself to the show administration and see if there are any "first timer" specials you can get as an exhibitor for next time.

3. Bloggers

You could link blogging to social media, but I choose to separate them. I truly mean when I say bloggers are how we got our first real customers (meaning they weren't my friends or family). Think about who your target audience is and what kind of blogs they would read.

Related: 3 Steps to Building Your Brand's Unfair Advantage

Parenting? Fashion? Nutrition? Business? Find blogs that match your audience and send them a pitch for a collaboration. Understand that you may have to give them a freebie of your product and/or a fee to be featured or reviewed.

Take it a step further and ask the blogger if they'd be willing to host a giveaway on his or her site by collecting email entries you can add to your newsletter.

4. Contribute

Do you have an industry-related topic you could talk about for hours? Maybe you have the secret to designing the perfect product packaging? Or how to develop a board of advisors? Put it on paper and send it off to blogs and websites that are looking for content. Ask them to include your bio and hyperlink it to your business site.

Most of the time you'll have to contribute content for free, but if you gain at least one new customer from an article (but hopefully you'll get lots more), I'd say it's worth it. It will also help your credentials and SEO.

5. Speak

Those same topics you can write about, can you give a presentation on them? Businesses, schools, conferences and organizations are always looking for speakers to energize and inspire their audiences. Don't make your whole talk a sales pitch, but you can talk about your business as an example of a greater lesson or motivation.

Reach out to your local chamber of commerce or even high schools, depending on your target audience. Don't forget to bring something with your business information on it that attendees can walk away with at the end of your program.

Call me old fashioned, but any time you can get in front of people and build relationships around your business, it's always a good opportunity.

Related: 3 Creative Marketing Strategies Inspired by the Music Industry's Collapse

Jess Ekstrom

CEO and Founder of HeadbandsOfHope.com, Speaker and Author.

Jessica Ekstrom founded Headbands of Hope when she was a senior in college in 2012. She created the company to bring joy back to kids who have lost their hair and help fund childhood cancer research. Headbands of Hope has given tens of thousands of dollars to childhood cancer research and has donated headbands to every children's hospital in the United States.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Innovation

How to Ensure High-Quality Patent Filings — 5 Key Steps for Portfolio Managers

Portfolio managers face challenges in selecting drafters who balance cost with quality, amidst complex patent jargon. This article aims to make it easier for portfolio managers to get the quality applications drafted.

Business News

Hulu, Disney+, and Max Are Combining to Make One Giant Streaming Bundle — Here's When the Big Changes Begin

The companies did not disclose the new pricing model for the combined service but announced it is set to launch this summer.

Side Hustle

These College Friends Started a 'Fun' Side Hustle That Landed Them on 'Shark Tank'— Now the Idea Is Helping Dozens Make Extra Cash: 'Start Saying Yes'

Jess Blakely and Willow Sprague brainstormed a business that would allow them to hang out more — but it turned into something much bigger.

Side Hustle

Want to Start a Simple Business That Helps the Planet? After 'One Night's Worth of Research,' He Started an Eco-Friendly Gig And Now Makes $200K a Year

Environmentally-conscious laws are picking up steam across the country. When one went into effect in Zach Cavacas's home state, he saw a lucrative business opportunity. Chances are, a similar law is coming to your state, or is already there.

How to Go Green

3 Ways We Can Help Eliminate Waste by Creating a Circular Economy

Circularity, a practice to reduce e-waste, drives humankind's quest for a circular economy and reshapes sustainable resource use.

Living

3 Steps to Prime Your Brain for a Growth Mindset

Take these three steps to cultivate a growth mindset and enhance your happiness and success.