Wednesday, April 25, 2018

#3 Secrets of Ad Placement: Go Where Your Competitors Go

Issue #3 —Wednesday, April 25, 2018

SECRETS OF AD PLACEMENT: 
Go Where Your Competitors Go


Posted by Denny Hatch

On a trip to Jackson Hole, Wyoming, tall and lanky outdoorsman John Peterman bought himself an ankle-length horseman’s coat—standard gear in the West but unusual and distinctive back East. He wrote in his first catalog:

“People want things that are hard to find. Things that have romance, but a factual romance about them.
     
“I had this proven all over again when people actually stopped me in the street (in New York, in Tokyo, in London) to ask me where I got the coat I was wearing.  

“So many people tried to buy my coat off my back that I’ve started a small company to make them available.  It seems like everybody (well, not everybody) has always wanted a classic horseman’s duster but never knew exactly where to get one.
     
“I ran a little ad in The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal and in a few months sold this wonderful coat in cities all over the country and to celebrities and to a mysterious gentleman in Japan who ordered two thousand of them.”

That was 1987. Peterman sold 2,500 dusters and added three more items to his line. That year, revenues climbed to $560,000 and the company broke even. The following year, Peterman and copywriter Donald Staley launched the first catalog.

The J. Peterman Company was off and running.

Lillian Katz’s Story


In 1951, working from her kitchen table in a tiny apartment, newly married Lillian Katz ran this little $495 black-and-white ad in the mail order section of Seventeen Magazine.


She generated 6,400 orders and $32,000 in sales. Katz—a 5-foot-1-inch dynamo—changed her name to Lillian Vernon and spent the next 50 years building a catalog business with annual sales of $250 million.

Takeaways to Consider
• A fledgling Shark Tank inventor might want to advertise where nobody else advertises—virgin territory! Trust me. These venues have been tested a gazillion times and never generated response.

• Lillian Katz went into the mail order section of Seventeen, brimming with little ads like hers. She came up with a USP (Unique Selling Proposition), low price and involvement that set her apart from all others. Bingo!

• John Peterman went where guys go: The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal, loaded with ads for bespoke men’s wear, cigars and man cave gadgetry.

• "Going where your competitors go" makes sense for TV and online as well as print.

• "Fish where the fish are."
—MacRae Ross

###

Word count: 406

Note to Readers:  May I send you an alert when each new blog is being published? If so, kindly give me the okay by sending your First Name, Last Name and e-mail to dennyhatch@yahoo.com. I guarantee your personal information will not be shared with anyone at any time for any reason. I look forward to being in touch! Cheers!

Invitation to Marketers and Direct Marketers: Guest blog posts are welcome. If you have a marketing story to tell, case history, concept to propose or a memoir, give a shout. I’ll get right back to you. (Kindly stay within the limit of 500 words.) I am: dennyhatch@yahoo.com. 
215-644-9526 (rings on my desk).

You Are Invited to Join the Discussion!

3 comments:

  1. When you go duck hunting, you go where the ducks are. Duh!

    ReplyDelete
  2. The trick here seems to me to be one of translating this principle from paper and ink into today's medium. Show me how and where to be able to do this and you've got a friend for life...

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thank you for taking the time to write.
    What triggered this post was watching episodes of Shark Tank starring fledgling entrepreneurs who put up thousands of dollars to create a product or service. Suddenly they are desperate for more cash. On Shark Tank, they go public—looking for investors to pony up six and seven figures in return for a percentage of the business.
    Alas, they are also telling millions of viewers around the world about their business models, the nitty-gritty of costs, false starts and marketing results. In my opinion, Shark Tank is a giant trough of proprietary information to be scarfed up by piggish thieves throughout Asia and the Far East. It gives me the creeps.
    This issue of the blog is the story of two fledgling entrepreneurs who started with tiny ads and built huge businesses. Neither Peterman nor Vernon was a seasoned marketer. They came up with products they believed in and loved, did exhaustive arithmetic, went where the logical customers were and were rewarded. They started small and they alone knew their results. They grew their businesses slowly and with great care. To me, this is thrilling.
    Maybe the concept of “going where your competitors go” is simplistic.
    In 60 years of marketing, I have seen and heard of myriad examples where well intentioned but inexperienced marketers made elementary mistakes and ran out of money. Ouch.
    Thanks again for writing. —DH

    ReplyDelete