Want to energize your print campaign? Add demographic or
psychographic segmentation and personalization. Want to energize your print
campaign even more? Combine print with other media to amplify its effect.
The most common cross-media campaigns these days are print and
e-mail, but you might also want to consider banner ads, social media, SMS text
messaging, search engine advertising and other avenues that complement print.
Each will have different uses and benefits, depending on your marketing goals
and the target demographic you are trying to reach.
Here are some basic rules to keep in mind:
1. Consistent branding
across all media.
Different media have different requirements and limitations,
so you aren’t going to be able to maintain 100% consistency all the time. But
whenever possible, try to use the same images, color schemes, messaging and
other elements across media.
2. Strategic
application of media.
Know what role, specifically, each medium is supposed to play.
If you are going to combine e-mail with print, what are you trying to
accomplish? Are you trying to “prime the pump” for the print piece? Are you
using e-mail as a follow-up? Maybe if you’re driving traffic to a
campaign-specific website, you might want to consider Internet banner
advertising in demographic “hot spots.” The key is to match the medium to the
audience and the message so that each medium plays off the other’s strengths.
3. Appropriate matching
of media to the audience.
Ensure that you use the right medium to communicate with each
target audience. Not all media are appropriate for every demographic. You’re
not going to reach many senior citizens with SMS, for example. Plus, the mix is
always changing. For example, only teenagers and college students used to use Facebook,
but increasingly professionals and businesses use it as well.
Identify your marketing objectives, and then ensure that each
medium is the right one to accomplish those goals. Make sure that you match the
medium to your demographic and your offer, and use it appropriately within the
best practices of that medium.
There is a learning curve associated with multi-channel
marketing, but the ability to amplify and reinforce your marketing message can
be invaluable.
Jeff Lampert
Director of Marketing & Business Development
Business is a game, played for fantastic stakes, and you're in competition with experts. If you want to win, you have to learn to be a master of the game.
― Sidney Sheldon, Master of the Game
― Sidney Sheldon, Master of the Game
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