Start passing the four-second test every time. And then go further:

Build a brand that draws your audience with colors, images and even the words that define them as a special tribe, loyal to you.

Phase 1.
The Comprehensive Branding Audit.

First question: Are you passing the four-second test? Where are your strengths? Where are your biggest opportunities to go pro? And how can we tie everything together to get you going as fast as we can, as affordably as we can?

My Comprehensive Branding Audit
My Comprehensive Branding Audit
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Phase 2.
Audience-Focused Identity Development.

Depending on what we uncover in your Branding Audit, you might need anything from minor tweaks to your branding materials - known in the business as your identity - to a full overhaul.

We'll start with your logo.

That's the one element that defines you everywhere. Then, the other elements we develop will depend a lot on where your audience spends its time. That, in turn, depends on factors like their age, their geography and their profession.

Are they completely online - with heavy use of social media like Facebook and Twitter?

If they're under about 45 and work in offices, they probably spend a lot of time online. You'll want to have a presence across a variety of social media.

Do they mix online and offline media?

Even the completely-online folks - down to about age 25 - consume some regular media. And no matter how young - including teens and preteens - people still like getting real, postal mail if it's relevant to their interests. Older folks like it too, which makes printed newsletters the single most valuable marketing tool you have. In any industry, for any audience. (But there's a trick to doing them right, so they really build your brand.)

AFID (rhymes with avid) packages . . .

Range from the very basic Four-Second First Impression to the full-on Corporate Power Presence - and has several options in between.

The Four-Second First Impression.
AFID Print.

Visual symbols.

Web presence.

Print materials:

AFID Web 1.0.

The current mix of online and offline marketing.

Visual symbols.

Web presence.

Print materials.

AFID Web 2.0.

A social-media presence that builds your brand personality - on top of the identity that shows you're a real pro for the long haul.

Visual symbols.

Web presence.

Print materials.

And, finally, The Corporate Power Presence.

Visual symbols.

Web presence.

Print materials.

Sales materials.

Phase 3.
Make Some Noise!

Once we've got your identity in place, you'll want to develop some sales materials that help assess your audience's needs and tell them more about what you offer.

Here's a partial list:

Phase 4.
Make some sales! With
Dynamic Integrated Marketing.

Too often, entrepreneurs will send out one mailing, one time, and decide that direct marketing doesn't work. And they're right, if that's all they do.

What it really takes is a sequence of four to seven contacts with your audience, across several different media, over no more than three weeks, that offers something your audience actually wants.

Not another exclusive private sale invitation or elite Gold member club - all of which are merely opportunities for you to separate them from their money.

But something that really solves a problem they have in their lives or businesses. That is directly relevant to their creative passions, or gives them outlets for fun and escape. That helps fulfill their needs for financial security and family well-being. Or that leads them in the direction of personal growth, as they find their best selves.

Make an offer that hits one or more of those proven hot buttons, and execute a Dynamic Integrated Marketing campaign blast to drive response, and you'll find you won't just generate response. You'll generate serious revenue.

A typical Dynamic Integrated Marketing blast includes:

6 x 9 direct mail package:
Landing page.

A one- to two-page microsite that fulfills at least one step of the offer and takes the prospect one step closer to the sale.

Email campaign.

Three to six emails that parallele the high points of the direct-mail promotion.

Twitter.

Multiple tweets over several days that link to a . . .

Promo/Squeeze page.

Explains the promotion to date, catches up newcomers and helps folks who've been responding advance to the next steps in the sales process.

Jumbo double postcard.

To nonbuyers; sweetens the offer to get them on board as the promotion begins to wane.

Email series 2.

Counts down to the final response deadline. As the mails go on, the tone gets more and more excited and desperate - less and less beliving that someone would actually let a great offer like this one get away. The final email, after the deadline has passed, tells the stragglers they really have missed the opportunity of the year. And we're very, very sorry.