The Antique Show

Watch live streaming video from theantiqueshow at livestream.com

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Robs Web Tips

http://www.robswebtips.com/

Sunday, February 1, 2009

My new link

http://www.tripadvisor.com/Travel-g57771-c108585/Gloucester:Virginia:Holly.Hill.Antiques.html

Trip Adviser

Saturday, January 31, 2009

Tripwiser

Tripadvisor



The above links are some of many sites recommending travel to Gloucester Va. It can provide links to your web and may bring more people to you. As a business on a budget – I have been trying to improve my web traffic and hopefully foot traffic as well and am personally doing this. Personally, I feel all businesses should add a link especially if they are tourism related.

A great place to list the place you sell at


Holly Hill Antiques

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Market to people who want to be marketed to

Market to people who want to be marketed to. All others, although in the majority, is a waste of resources. Tell a story and make these folks want the product.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Unique Selling Position

http://www.businesstown.com/advertising/basic-usp.asp

Unique Selling Proposition:

The Art of Finding Your Unique Selling Proposition
Positioning is about making your offering different from, and more valuable than, your competitors' offerings--and placing that idea in the minds of a target group of customers. Positioning attracts customers by creating a positive and unique identity for your company and its offerings. Positioning is vital for distinguishing your offering from everybody else's.

In a world where there are more and more products and services every day, your customers are on advertising overload all the time. So they pick something to believe and hold that notion until a message breaks through and persuades them to change.

People can't hold warring ideas in their heads. They can't believe that the Norton Anthology is the best study guide for English literature, then study from a set of Cliffs Notes and believe they're doing the best they can to pass their exams. They can't believe that all paper towels are pretty much alike, buy one that costs more than most, and think that they are wise shoppers. The point is, positioning is your effort to claim a high ground in that overloaded prospect's head and hold it against competition.

There may be very little difference between your product and your competitors'--but if you can't find a way to communicate uniqueness and connect it to a need of your target, you might as well quit fighting your competition and sell out to them. There are many different ways to stake out a position. Just remember, your position reflects your unique selling proposition, and it is what makes your offering more valuable to your customers than what's being offered by your competition.

Perception of your Business
How will your business be perceived as different from your competition in the minds of your targeted customers? To figure this out, you must look for your best customer and then design a position that matches his or her wants and needs to an advantage that only you can offer. Remember, you can't be all things to all people, but you can be the vendor of choice for a group of them.

Positioning Affects Every Aspect of Your Communications--And Your Business

Positioning is the basis for all your communications--your packaging and product design, sales promotions, advertising, and public relations. Everything you do must reinforce that position--otherwise you just undermine your marketing efforts and sow confusion instead of confidence. Positioning is serious business. You must choose the right position, for now and down the road.

Do the work now to develop a clear position for your business vis-à-vis your competitors. You'll ensure that you get the most from your advertising budget. The truth is that with enough money, you can buy success in advertising. Mediocre, unfocused messages from a company without a clear position will generate sales surprisingly well if that company buys enough time or space to pound the message home. But think how much farther that budget could take you if you had a focused message, a unique selling proposition, and a target audience for your offering. Positioning--and the creative approach that grows from it--make the difference.

Developing the Positioning Statement and the Tagline
To begin creating your own sense of positioning for your business, answer the following questions with short, articulate answers that relate your offering to your customers' needs.

    1. What does your business do?
    2. For whom?
    3. What is your biggest benefit to them?
    4. Prove your claim. To what do you attribute that benefit?
    5. How will your customers perceive this benefit, relative to the competition?

* Source Streetwise Do-It-Yourself Advertising
Never before has it been easier for small business managers to create their own advertising! Get more great advice!

Recent Actions

Still staying on topic
  • Continuing with the social networking - I need a picture to post
  • Will go thru my site to simplify the message www.hollyhill.biz
  • Need to add a visit Va page to my web
  • Need to put a what is it video on UTUBE