Join our Waitlist for Expert Advice!

3 Ways Businesses Can Profit From Local Outreach A community outreach program can help your business gain local traction and visibility without a huge investment.

By Jana Barrett

This story originally appeared on Bizness Apps

heshphoto | Getty Images

Small business marketing is tough -- especially on a shoestring budget -- so developing a community outreach program is an excellent way to gain local traction and up visibility without a huge investment. Here are three low-cost community outreach strategies that add real value to your marketing campaign and give you more bang for your buck.

1. Donate to Schools

Approach schools in the area and offer them something their funding typically won't cover, like discounted services for faculty and personnel or classroom donations. It's a win-win for them, so they'll rarely decline the offer. What's in it for you? Schools encompass the entire community; students connect you to families and families connect you to neighborhoods. At the local level, this is even more effective than social media marketing.

Students are also a great mouthpiece for your brand. They talk and share more widely than most other groups, and your reach is truly limitless if you maintain a long-term relationship with a school -- few other places have new faces cycling in every year. In other words, you can set into motion a chain of brand promotion events with one initial donation, potentially becoming a household name just from the exposure.

2. Partner with NGOs

Just like schools, NGOs are often short on funding and open to mutually beneficial partnerships. By offering them products or services in exchange for positive publicity, you'll build a respected brand image and foster highly profitable relationships. Host a fundraising event for an NGO and you could get your brand's name on their staff's shirts and caps, your logo on their marketing materials, etc.

NGOs have high contact rates with the general public. They go place to place, person to person, focusing on attracting interest for their cause, so even volunteering at their events will increase your visibility. The more the public associates your brand with a worthy cause, the more your reputation will flourish. Plus, it's incredibly gratifying as a business owner to help an organization make a difference, particularly if you're passionate about their work.

3. Build SMB Bonds

There's major power in numbers. Pool your efforts with other local businesses to put on a free event for the public where you can promote your brand and get face time with the community -- just focus less on product-pushing and more on making it a good time for all. On-site marketing events like grand openings or anniversary parties will rarely gain you new business, but free public events sponsored by multiple companies expose you to different crowds and center around the community. This a more genuine experience for attendees, fostering natural brand association.

When small businesses collaborate, everyone benefits. On a daily basis, you can boost each other's brands and gain referrals from businesses with clientele who trust and respect their recommendations. That's a powerful thing in a community. You'll garner far more revenue by teaming up than you will in your lone efforts, establishing personal and professional relationships that outlast your marketing campaigns.

Jana Barrett is a customer support manager at Bizness Apps.

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

Business News

You Have One Month Left to Buy a House, According to Barbara Corcoran. Here's Why.

"If you are planning on waiting a year and seeing where interest rates go, you are out of your mind," Corcoran said.

Business News

Meta Fires Employee Making $400,000 Per Year Over a $25 Meal Voucher Issue

Other staff members were fired for the same reason, per a new report.

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.

Thought Leaders

These 3 Trends Will Change What It Means to Be an Entrepreneur in 2025

Here are three entrepreneurship trends from the new Global Entrepreneurship Monitor report that are changing the landscape for the future.

Side Hustle

I Made $14,000 in 1 Week With a Spontaneous Halloween Costume Side Hustle — Here's How

Sabba Keynejad was in art school when he started to refine his entrepreneurial skills.

Franchise

The McRib Is Back, But Only at Select McDonald's — Here's Where to Find It

This scarcity is nothing new. In 2022, McDonald's announced a "Farewell Tour" for the McRib, suggesting that it might be the last time customers could get their hands on it.