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    <td colspan="14" align="left" valign="top" bgcolor="#FFFFFF" ><h1>Advertising In The Training Trade Magazines: 10 Do's and Don'ts.</h1>
    <h4><span class="default">Trade magazine advertising may or may 
        not deserve a place in your training business marketing mix. 
        But you'll never know unless you can come up with an effective 
        ad in the first place.</span></h4>
      <!--#include virtual="/incl.sharethis.html" -->
      <p><span class="default">So here are some do's and don'ts to 
        improve your odds.</span></p>
      <h2><span class="default">DO's</span></h2>
      <ol>
        <li><span class="default"><b>Do measure every ad insertion you 
          run.</b> If your goal is to generate qualified sales leads, 
          then measure the cost per lead compared with other lead 
          generating options like direct mail, trade shows and Web 
          banner advertising. As a rule of thumb, you can justify 
          trade advertising if a lead costs you no more than 2x what 
          a direct mail lead costs -- because you are reaching an 
          expanded market universe. On the other hand, if your trade 
          ads consistently pull poorly, don't continue to advertise 
          based on warm and fuzzy hopes that you are increasing "awareness" 
          or "mindshare" (unless you are able to measure this and 
          equate it to increased business). You are just kidding yourself 
          -- and padding the pockets of your friendly ad salesperson. </span>
            <p>         
        </li>
        <li><span class="default"><b>Do test different audience appeals. </b>Single out three or four powerful benefits your product 
          or service has to offer the training community, and come 
          up with a strong "promise" headline and supporting ad copy 
          behind each one. Then test each promise ad in consecutive 
          trade magazine issues to determine which benefit to throw 
          the weight of your budget behind. If you have a limited 
          budget, test in small space or in the classifieds section 
          (being certain each ad is the same size and in approximately 
          the same position). Don't try a full page ad until you know 
          what works best.</span>
            <p><span class="default">Of course you can also test various 
              promotion appeals through focus group research simulations. 
              But if you're mainly concerned about the "whats" your 
              audience is interested in -- and less concerned about 
              the "whys" -- then an ad promise test can be both cheaper 
              and more reliable.</span>
            <p>         
        </li>
        <li><span class="default"><b>Do consider offering a premium.</b>          No, not coffee cups or tee shirts. Offer a premium that 
          provides an unselfish service to the training audience you 
          are trying to cater to -- while implicitly witnessing to 
          your expertise. For instance, if you are selling supervisory 
          training you might want to offer a self-scoring supervisory 
          needs assessment. If you are selling course authoring software, 
          you might want to offer a research report on what leading 
          companies are spending to develop an hour of technology-based 
          training. If you do go with a premium, don't bury it at 
          the bottom of the ad as an afterthought -- sell it in the 
          headline.</span>
            <p>         
        </li>
        <li><span class="default"><b>Do take off the gloves and compare 
          yourself to your competition. </b>Especially when you're in 
          a mature, highly competitive niche -- like training management 
          software, NT certification or customer service. Don't waste 
          space pontificating about commonplace features and benefits. 
          Speak to how you're unique in a way that's important to 
          your training audience -- and prove it.</span>
            <p><span class="default">If you're not certain how best 
              to competitively differentiate yourself, drop everything 
              and make this your No. 1 priority. You don't want your 
              salespeople as a loss for words when a prospect says "And 
              why should we choose YOU?"</span>
            <p><span class="default">Finally, don't just think of comparative 
              advertising in terms of knocking the competition. It's 
              also a highly effective way to go if you have an esoteric 
              training offering (e.g. "Hypnotic Suggestion Skills") 
              and are looking to position it in the context of a more 
              established training category, say, sales training.</span>
            <p>         
        </li>
        <li><span class="default"><b>Do understand the needs of your 
          training audience, and speak to them in your ad</b>. Human resource 
          professionals crave trainee appreciation, management recognition, 
          bang for the buck and a career-enhancing reputation for 
          innovation. They want to bless and control all of the training 
          everyone in their company participates in and contribute 
          to every important corporate initiative. They seek opportunities 
          to demonstrate their own expertise and contribute in a personal 
          way to the learning design and learning experience. They 
          don't want to be the victim of a technology dead end or 
          a flunky for a vendor-centric solution.</span>
            <p><span class="default">Unfortunately, most ad writers 
              haven't a clue what's on the mind of training professionals 
              -- and the ads they create show it. Be sure your creative 
              people are thoroughly briefed. Better yet, invite some 
              of your training professional customers to your next advertising 
              briefing session, and ask them to share what's on their 
              minds.</span>
            <p>         
        </li>
        <li><b><span class="default">Do consider "bandwagon" advertising 
          if you have the opportunity.</span></b><span class="default"> No training professional worth 
          their salt wants to be left behind as their peers climb 
          on board an exciting new training breakthrough. Just be 
          sure your "breakthrough" claims are supported by facts, 
          not hyperbole. Years ago we ran a sales training ad that 
          went like this" "In just six months, 247 of the Fortune 
          500 have switched to our new scientific system of selling. 
          Shouldn't you find out WHY?" We were inundated by 1000s 
          of responses.</span>
            <p>         
        </li>
        <li><span class="default"><b>Do consider 
          product or service testimonials. </b>Especially if you can get 
          your client(s) to witness to a product performance attribute 
          that's of crucial concern to the rest of the training professional 
          community. Yes, it helps if your client is a blue chip with 
          a reputation for innovation and best-in-class practices. 
          However, don't just name-drop or reference a boring, client-unique 
          or industry-specific case study that no prospect organization 
          will identify with.</span></li>
      </ol>
      <h2><span class="default">DON'Ts</span></h2>
      <ol>
        <li><span class="default"><b>Don't bother with "people count" 
          advertising or other bleeding heart, holy crusade approaches.</b>          It's called preaching to the choir. Training professionals 
          may be altruistic (face it, we all are or we wouldn't be 
          in this business!) but they're reading training trade magazines 
          to become more productive and successful -- not to feel 
          good.</span>
            <p>         
        </li>
        <li><span class="default"><b>Don't direct top messages </b>like "New 
          learning system improves return on equity by up to 26%" 
          to a training trade magazine audience. HR executives don't 
          have ROE on their goal sheets -- CEOs do. (By the way, when 
          the training magazines say they reach 1000s of CEOs, they're 
          talking about you -- not the CEOs of your blue chip clients.) 
          This doesn't mean you shouldn't make a bottom-line case 
          for your training offerings. Just that you should tailor 
          your message to the bottom line concerns of training professionals, 
          e.g. "Now certify your entire IT organization in NT for 
          less than $1500 per employee."</span>
            <p><span class="default">By the way, if you feel you have 
              a killer top message to communicate to top executives, 
              try small space advertising in the "Wall Street Journal." 
              It doesn't cost any more than a big splashy ad in one 
              of the training trade books. Plus you will also reach 
              a lot of big picture HR execs.</span>
            <p>         
        </li>
        <li><b><span class="default">Don't scrub 
          a powerful trade ad campaign while it's still contributing</span></b><span class="default">. 
          Keep in mind, even if you advertise 12 months straight in 
          every issue of every training trade magazine, your typical 
          busy prospect may only have seen your ad once or twice. 
          More great advertising is replaced because the advertiser 
          lost interest than because of market fatigue. Another good 
          reason to let a good campaign ride is to better amortize 
          your initial creative effort. You don't want to spend more 
          money developing your ads than placing them!</span></li>
      </ol>
      <p><span class="default">Let me wind up with some good news 
        and some not-so-good news.</span></p>
      <p><span class="default">The good news is that over the past 
        five or ten years the leading training trade magazines have 
        evolved into highly respectable reads. Diligent research. 
        Penetrating reporting. Authoritative how-to features.</span></p>
      <p><span class="default">The not-so-good news is that most training 
        trade advertising still leaves a lot to be desired. In preparing 
        this article, I went through the most recent issue of the 
        four leading industry trade magazines and clipped out every 
        full page ad -- some 43 ads in all -- grading each ad from 
        A+ to F. The report card: 7 A+ to B, 6 B- to C, and 30 C- 
        to F.</span></p>
      <p><span class="default">How did your ad do? Check out the above 
        10 do's and don'ts and see what you think.</span></p>
      <p>^ <a href="#top">TOP of page</a> </p></td>
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Anon7 - 2021