<img height="1" width="1" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=192888919167017&amp;ev=PageView&amp;noscript=1">
Friday, March 29, 2024
March 29, 2024

Linkedin Pinterest

Small businesses make marketing mistakes

They are vulnerable to committing marketing misteps

By JOYCE M. ROSENBERG, Associated Press
Published: May 12, 2019, 6:00am
2 Photos
In this Monday, May 6, 2019, photo Jamie Masters shows her beauty products with the new labeling, at right, and old labeling, at left, in her home in Kansas City, Mo. At first Masters sold her products under the name Trinite Organiques, but people didn’t know how to pronounce it and they didn’t understand the name. After changing the name to 826 & Co., sales are picking up.
In this Monday, May 6, 2019, photo Jamie Masters shows her beauty products with the new labeling, at right, and old labeling, at left, in her home in Kansas City, Mo. At first Masters sold her products under the name Trinite Organiques, but people didn’t know how to pronounce it and they didn’t understand the name. After changing the name to 826 & Co., sales are picking up. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel) Photo Gallery

NEW YORK — When Tom Scarda heard about a franchise opportunity called Super Supper, he fell in love with it. He was so confident that he and his business partner decided against researching the concept — a marketing mistake that led to the failure of the business.

“It was great on paper but we didn’t know if there was really a market for it,” Scarda said. “We learned people were interested, but not interested enough for us to make a business out of it.”

Companies of any size can make marketing mistakes — an internet search will reveal gaffes committed by some of the world’s biggest companies, including Coca-Cola’s infamous “New Coke,” a reformulation that bombed in 1985. Mistakes are often the result of not getting enough information about what will sell. But small businesses can be particularly vulnerable to these mistakes — owners have a minimal knowledge of marketing, so they don’t know what the best avenues are for advertising products or services. Those who are aware of the need for market research might shy away from what they fear will be a big expense. Owners can also be so passionate about an idea that they fail to realize there won’t be enough customers who share their enthusiasm.

Scarda and his partner bought their Super Supper franchise in 2008; the locations essentially were kitchens where people could buy ingredients and cook meals to take home and freeze. The stores were part of the meal assembly industry that also includes stores that do the actual cooking.

Marketing help for small businesses

NEW YORK — Small business owners who are in the dark about how to market their companies can get help and training, some of it at low or no cost. Here are some options:

Marketing consultants, including some who specialize in working in small businesses, can create plans or advise owners in formulating their own. Some consultants specialize in social media or digital marketing. The cost can vary widely; asking other owners for referrals is a good way to start searching for a consultant.

• SCORE, the organization that offers free counseling to small businesses, has mentors who are current or former marketing executives, and many have expertise in strategies such social media. SCORE also holds local events, some of which are about marketing. You can find a SCORE counselor and learn more about the organization’s services at www.score.org.

• Small Business Development Centers sponsored by the Small Business Administration  also offer free help and classes including some that deal with social media and marketing. Many SBDCs are on university campuses. You can locate one at https://americassbdc.org.

• Some colleges and universities offer nondegree classes, either online or in person.

Most customers came to the store in Bethpage, N.Y., once out of curiosity. But the repeat business the company needed to survive never materialized. After two years, the location closed.

“If I had to do it all over again, I would do a lot more marketing research before I opened up,” said Scarda, who’s now a franchise consultant.

The solution to many small business marketing problems very often lies in getting help — either from consultants who can guide an owner, or from doing market research. That can prevent owners from marketing in a vacuum.

“It’s very easy to convince ourselves that we have good ideas,” said Tim Calkins, a marketing professor at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management. “There’s a huge value in getting some market research and customer feedback on an idea.”

Some marketing mistakes can extend to a company’s name, which can make or break the business. That’s why big corporations spend enormous amounts of money on consultants when they change names. Small business owners who rely on their own creativity can find that what sounds right to them doesn’t make sense to potential customers.

When Jaime Masters launched her skin care products company in 2007, she named it Trinite Organiques, using the French words for the Trinity and organics. She had recently suffered three losses including the death of her father, and “Trinity represented the three losses, the three ingredients that were in every product at the time and my faith which got me through those losses,” said Masters, who lives in Kansas City, Kan., and sells her products online and at events.

But the name fell flat with the public.

“There’s nothing wrong with a name having a personal meaning behind it but when no one can spell it or pronounce it and it’s too long you have a major problem,” Masters said.

After several years of struggling, Masters put together a focus group, using people she knew and some she didn’t know, and asked their opinion about an entirely different name, 826 & Co., based on her daughter’s birth date. This brand, launched two years ago, is succeeding.

Focus groups and other forms of market research can sound scary to a new owner with a tight budget. But it doesn’t have to break the bank, Calkins said.

“You can stand out in front of Home Depot and hand out a survey and a candy bar or bottle of water,” Calkins said.

Trying to sell a product or service calls for a plan; the pros call for target marketing, which aims at a specific group or groups of buyers. But new business owners may not take the time to create a plan.

Loading...