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What to Do When Your Ad Is Not WorkingAds... OK, not my favorite option for how to sell services or how to bring in clients and customers (more on why in a minute), but it can work IF you do it right. Sadly, most ads give business owners pitiful results and it ends up being a huge chunk of wasted cash. And for the new entrepreneurs, definitely not the first thing to think about if you're starting a home-based business. Ads can be dangerousThe ad sales person knocks on your door and says our ad will be seen by hundreds of thousands of people. We can already smell the cash coming in. It's bound to create sales, right? Wrong. Pay careful attention to how you're being sold on ads. Not all ad sales people do this of course, but we need to be careful. 1. Appeal to your target marketTake a look at your ad. What does it say? Is it all about you or is it all about your target market. Of course, I'm also assuming you have selected a narrow and focused target market (that's not "everyone"). This gives you the ability to become intimately familiar with their key problems so you are truly able speak their language in an ad. If you're not speaking their language, this may be why they're not listening. 2. Speak to their key problemsIf your ad is all about what you do and all the products and services you offer, the focus is on the wrong thing. An ad needs to be about the problems you solve, the results you can help your clients/customers achieve, or the burning desire you fulfill for them. It has to tune into station WIIFM (what's in it for me). And, of course, your ad should be in a publication (online or offline) that you know is read by your target market/ideal prospect. Be sure you ask for the demographics of the readers of that publication. 3. Give a "call to action"A "call to action" is a clear and specific invitation to take action. Call this ph# for a free consultation, pick up your free special report here, get a free audio/video here, come in on this date to get a discount. Your ad must end by inviting the reader to take action. And if you did a great job of appealing to their problems/desires and highlighting the results you help them achieve, they'd be more than eager to take the next step with you. 4. RepetitionStudies have shown that customers buy only after several iterations of seeing your ad or hearing from you. Typically more than 7 iterations which is why ads can get costly for a solo business owner. If you choose to do ads, make sure your budget can easily accommodate 7 or more iterations of placing the ad. Although your ad sales person may sell you a single ad, buying one ad will most likely be a waste of your precious cash. So if your ad is not working, ask yourselfIs my ad being placed in front of my ideal prospects/target market? More informationAnd now I'd like to offer you the FREE one-hour audio seminar for solo entrepreneurs on "How to Create a Steady Stream of Clients For Your Solo Business" at www.moreclientsaudio.com. Allison Babb is an author, speaker and Small Business Coach to solo entrepreneurs at: http://www.GreatSmallBusinessAdvice.com. |