Giving Away Your Product Could Be the Smartest Move You Ever Make
Thursday, February 25th, 2010 at
6:56 am
Ready for one of the most successful marketing campaigns you’ve ever unleashed? Then get ready to give away your product.
Winners do it
Look at the Winter Olympics. Freebies were everywhere at the Olympics. Companies gave water bottles, coats, equipment and more to athletes. All this in hopes that their brand would reach homes and offices around the world.
You say you can’t afford to give away products to the global community? Well, if making sales is your goal, you can afford freebies to qualified customers.
Consider Vermont, U.S. based Ben & Jerry’s Every year they give away a free scoop of ice cream to anyone and everyone who comes into their stores.
Important: they also give away coupons customers can—and do—use for future purchases.
Marketing isn’t a lost cost!
I’m through trying to convince business owners that their marketing budgets are not spending sinkholes. Marketing is an investment. If you’re still stuck in the sinkhole mentality, quit reading now. I’m picking my battles. But do feel free to come back if you ever change your mind.
For the rest of us, giveaways are lead gen. We know when we give good stuff away for free, we’ll cross-sell and up-sell products, services and add-ons. We’ll make sales we wouldn’t otherwise have made. If people like the product, they’ll come back. With their credit cards.
It’s called lifetime value. How much does a scoop of ice cream cost Ben & Jerry’s compared with the lifetime value of a customer?
Believe in what you sell
If your product is crap, please don’t give it away. It will kill your business. Really, why are you even trying to sell it?
For a giveaway to be successful, it has to be something a customer would pay for. If they don’t value it, they’ll put it in a drawer and forget about it. (They probably won’t do that with the ice cream.)
Promote the free product
The giveaway needs to be a full-on marketing initiative. Make your audience aware of it and make them want it.
Enthusiasm starts with you. Generate buzz and create excited buyers who will talk about you. Use social media to get the word out through your audience’s networks.
I know a guy who ran a prepared meal business ‘restaurant dishes at your kitchen table’ or something similar was the tag line. He knew that once someone tried his meals they would come back and try more but his concept was new and he was having real trouble getting new customers to buy his food. So he gave it away. He gave them – for free – a couple of his best meals..and he went back the following week and sold ‘em lots more. Smart strategy.
Remove hurdles
If the product is free, but getting it is complicated, customers won’t respond. Make it easy. Capture contact information, but don’t make customers fill out detailed forms or give you their life story. That generates attrition, not loyalty.
Up-sell and cross-sell
Never give away a product and leave it to the customer to come back to you. Never. If the giveaway is high value, be ready to follow up and to make the sale. If your product is less expensive, use incentives like coupons, offers and more giveaways with additional purchases.
Don’t forget service!
So you give away a great product, generate buzz and make it easy for the customer to get the freebie. Then they come to your store or talk to a sales rep via the phone or email, only to be treated rudely. Yikes! They may take the giveaway, but they’ll never, ever buy from you.
This strategy works when you know that customers love what you do.
When you know that once someone tries your product or service they’ll be hooked.
That’s the situation when this approach blasts your sales and your profits into orbit.
So do they?
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You wouldn’t believe it but I’ve wasted all day digging for some articles about this. You’re a lifesaver, it was a great read and has helped me out to no end. Cheers,
Hey…thanks for that. Fantastic content. I’ll be coming back soon for more news. Cheers!
Hi Julie, there’s a variation here that you could utilise from something that I heard in ‘The Sticking Point Solution’ by Jay Abraham if it was something that interested you. Basics of it are, send them a stone, beautifully wrapped and offer the customer the option of having it set in the setting of their choice from an ‘occasions range’, (a range that you decide first, ring/necklace etc) at a specific price. Send them your catalogue if you have one or invite them to the store nearest them. The customer would be getting a freebie stone, they would be walking through your door to choose a setting and will see what else you have to sell and it would be more personal to them as they have chosen the setting AND you can only get this service if its your birthday/anniversary etc and you are on the mailing list. If you were sending them earrings anyway, could you match the cost of earrings to the cost of sending them a stone to have set?? I’ve not researched to see if anyone else offers a service like this, but it would be a pretty cool birthday present huh. Just an idea. Hope this gives you ideas even if you don’t like this one.
M x
Hi Julie, I understand what you’re saying – it’s like the customers ‘get used’ to the idea, the novelty has worn off…. but how about linking up with another local business where you each run a deal? I mean, with each purchase (or purchase over a certain value) you give a voucher for a discount/goodie bag/whatever at another (non-competing!) business to introduce customers to them, and they run a similar promotion for your products. I think it would need refining but you get the idea.
Nigel’s probably got some killer reason why this shouldn’t happen but I’m interested to hear it!
This definitely works, but people can start to take it for granted so you need to be smart about it too, and I have yet to solve the conundrum entirely. When we opened our first 3 shops, we would take customers details and birthdays – pretty standard for a jewellery company I would have thought. On their birthdays we sent them a card and a small pair of inexpensive, but pretty earrings, very prettily wrapped. We got lots of thank you letters and people often came initot he shop in person to thank the staff. Sometimes they also bought a pendant to go with the earrings.
But after a while, we stopped getting the level of response we had had at the beginning. We tried gift vouchers instead, but as expected that didn’t work so well as it was a more obvious marketing tool. But I’d love to find a way to get back to the response we achieved at the beginning.
Nigel
Great strategy. Any thoughts on giveaways when your product is French investment property starting at around 200k? I currently offer a free report on the Seven Secrets Of Leaseback which is good information but has no value in and of itself.
Cheers
Graham