About Tarte Advertising Services Experience Press Blog Contact

Archive for February, 2010

Why are you apologizing?

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

My mom always used to say that you shouldn’t start out a thank you note with an apology, even if you were late sending the thank you. I read this post today from Seth Godin about not starting out blogs or emails or anything else with an apology. He has great reasons why you shouldn’t. I would also like to add that I feel like an apology at the beginning of anything makes the rest of the message feel very weak and defeated. That is definitely not how you want to come across to your customers, your potential customers, your employees, etc.

9_sorry_00kapologies23bx

(reposted from Seth Godin’s blog)

I don’t understand blog posts, emails and other messages that begin with an apology.

If you’re sorry to interrupt me with that spam, don’t send it.

If you know that yet another blog post on a topic that’s not of interest to your readers will annoy them, don’t post it.

If you’re in HR and you know that no one in the office is going to read your office-wide spam about yet another inane meeting, don’t bother us.

On the other hand, if it’s important, if it needs to be said, if it benefits not just you but the recipient, then just send it. Instead of an apology, clearly label it so it’s easy to ignore or discard. Even better, don’t send everyone a message aimed at just a few people. It’s easier than ever to focus on the people you need to focus on.

Just because it’s more convenient for you to blast everyone in your address book doesn’t mean it’s smart.

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

7 reasons why your business needs a Facebook page

Monday, February 22nd, 2010
  1. Pages allow a business to “Publish to the Stream” (this shows up on your fans homepage)
  2. Pages allow a business to engage fans with Rich Media (video, pictures, events)
  3. Pages let a business analyze how fans are interacting with the Insights Dashboard (FB has deep analytics)
  4. Pages let a business increase SEO (pages show up in higher Google keyword searches)
  5. Pages allow you to run highly targeted demographic ads to attract only those that are relevant to your business.
  6. Pages allow you to arrange Tabs in the order you like (with the exception of the Wall and Info)
  7. Pages allow you to force a particular tab to open first for new visitors.  Example: You can have a tab that introduces your team, your area, or you.

Reference: http://areweconnected.com

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

Why a Small Ad Agency May Be Just What You Need

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

(Reposting article by Dean Campbell | Published 10.25.06)

about1

Trying to decide whether you need the services of a big ad agency? Here are a few things to consider, before you hand over your marketing plan (and budget) for the coming year.

Big ad agencies are great. In their own little way. They take care of big budget projects, in a big way. But smaller jobs, like sell sheets, brochures, buck slips and direct mail? Forget it. You’re going to wait. And wait. And wait. On the other hand, a small agency has the time to give your business the one-on-one attention it needs. Thanks to lower overheads, a small agency it also much more flexible when it comes to both pricing and I-need-it-by-end-of-day timing.

Big agencies are renowned for two things: big egos and big bureaucracies. The Creative Director and Senior Account Manager who pitched your business? Odds are they’re off pitching another new business account somewhere and you’ll end up working with juniors. Or trainees. When you work with a small agency, you work directly with the President and Senior Creative talent. People with the experience and knowledge necessary to help you actually sell more and raise brand visibility.

Big agencies have a lot of layers. And mouths to feed. This means that unless you have a big advertising budget they can’t afford to service your account profitably. Conversely, a small agency will service the heck out of you. Even in the evenings, if need be. Without having to deal with all big agency politics, a small agency is free to focus on the task at hand – building your business and profitability.

Big agencies move painfully slowly. A small one moves at lightening speed. Without multiple approval layers to contend with, projects get executed efficiently and quickly. What’s more, without the typical agency divide between “creative” and “suits”, a small agency can be much more imaginative when it comes to both executional tactics and how to stretch your advertising dollar.

Small agency or big agency? I’d go with small. You still get big ideas. Just without the big, big price tag.

Tarte Advertising IS the small agency with big ideas. Call 513.984.8278 for information on how we can work with you.

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter