Marketing Materials

Definition:

The printed pieces, such as brochures, letterhead and business cards, you'll use to market your business

Every company needs “literature,” printed pieces that do acareful and well thought-out job of presenting its products andservices: catalogs, newsletters, product sheets and brochures, letterhead, business cards, presentation folders, specificationsheets, case histories or application sheets, special eventbrochures, annual reports, manuals, technical bulletins, posters, product insert sheets, labeling, recruitment materials and soon.

With the increased availability of powerful desktop publishing systems and software, many companies decide to meet these needs internally. Resist this impulse. Your homegrown material will betray its off-the-cuff origin to most of the people who read it. Appearance is reality in marketing, and you have to look as professional as you are. And no matter how creative you are, a commercial copywriter or graphic designer can vastly improve almost any materials created by an entrepreneur.

Here are some tips for dealing with the literature needs you’ll face as your company expands and grows:

Get a professionally designed logo and stationery package. Do this, and don’t change it for at least 10years. Either hire an advertising agency to create it or a design studio/graphic artist. Don’t try this yourself, no matter how artistic you consider yourself. A professional artist will make sure your stationery materials reflect your corporate personality, while maintaining a clean and professional look. They will look good in color and in black and white; they’ll reproduce well in smaller sizes; they’ll fax clearly; and they’ll simply be more attractive than what you can expect to do yourself.

Learn the principles of solid graphic design. Understanding graphic design is a lifetime’s work, of course, but some reading and a sensitive eye can teach you a lot. Get hold of some graphic design books at a local bookstore and educate yourself. All your printed materials should follow fundamental design principles:

  • Keep the look clean and simple. Don’t overload the reader visually. Use a graphic grid to align the different elements in an orderly fashion.
  • Use heads and subheads to lead the reader. When the reader turns the page, where will he or she look? Use headings and subheadings to provide scanning points to keep the reader moving along.
  • Avoid too much type. Pages filled with writing are not appealing to the reader. Break up the copy with photos, illustrations, cartoons, charts, and so on.
  • Use white space. Avoid a crowded look, despite the temptation to make use of every inch of paper you are paying for. White space serves as a visual frame for the rest of the content on the page.
  • Stay with standard formats unless you have a good reason, not too many. All of us have grown accustomed to the standard 8-1/2″ x 11″ format for print materials. Even our filing systems are for things that size. If you go with an unusual size, your pieces may not lend themselves to being filed easily for reference.
  • Put a caption with each photo. We all want to know what we are looking at. And a caption gives you the chance not just to identify your product but to remind the reader of the benefit.
  • Use charts and graphs rather than tables. A brochure is a visual document. Use graphics to boost visual interest and make numbers meaningful.

Be sure your materials have a “family look.” Every piece of literature doesn’t have to look identical, but they should all look planned as a compatible unit. Imagine your literature laid out in front of you on a conference table. Does it all look like it comes from the same company? It should.

Invest in good photography. Small companies sometimes scrimp on getting good photos of their equipment, their job sites, their equipment in use, or their accessories and supplies. Strong, professionally done photography will set you apart from other small companies. Your customers want to be reassured of the quality of your product. Amateur snapshots give a very damaging impression of your professionalism. Good photography is an investment in your future.

Appoint one person as the lit boss. Your literature needs will be ever-changing, with trade shows, with products and markets, and with overall growth. You must have one person responsible for anticipating future needs, handling literature production, and maintaining inventory. Untended literature grows increasingly less useful and more frustrating. Every new piece should have a written rationale, audience description, and content outline, not unlike the rationale you develop for a professional advertising copy.

Related Content

Product Development

The overall process of strategy, organization, concept generation, product and marketing plan creation and evaluation, and commercialization of a new product

Exit Interview

The formal conversation that takes place between an employee and an HR or other manager to determine the reason(s) the employee is leaving

Primary Market Research

Iinformation that comes directly from the source--that is, potential customers. You can compile this information yourself or hire someone else to gather it for you via surveys, focus groups and other methods.

Credit Policy

Guidelines that spell out how to decide which customers are sold on open account, the exact payment terms, the limits set on outstanding balances and how to deal with delinquent accounts

Mergers

The combination of one or more corporations, LLCs, or other business entities into a single business entity; the joining of two or more companies to achieve greater efficiencies of scale and productivity

Subchapter S Corporation

A special form of corporation that allows the protection of limited liability but direct flow-through of profits and losses