GLM Gold Marketers

How to Turn the Firehose of Ideas Into Real, Live, Working Marketing in the Next 90 Days

Because we work with so many new and seasoned GLM members, we understand the challenges of converting all the ideas and strategies into real marketing that gets out the door and gets results. That’s why we took the opportunity to present at one of the breakout sessions and show you how you can do that.

In this presentation, prepare to experience many “ah-ha” moments when you finally start connecting the dots between GLM strategies and executable ideas and real actions for your law firm. In this session, you will get an overview of the must-have marketing items every law firm should have with plenty of real-life examples of how good marketing is done by other law firms. You will also give you an exclusive behind-the-scenes look at the marketing behind Ben Glass’s law firm. You’ll see the good, the bad, and the ugly. You’ll hear the marketing successes and failures. You’ll end with a to-do list and a confident vision for what needs to happen at your law firm and how exactly it needs to be done.

Remember…the advertising samples you see here are solely for instructional and educational purposes. Please don’t rip them off verbatim. Be inspired, but don’t outright copy. Some of the items may be licensed for re-use  if you are a GLM member. Contact me or GLM to find out.

Watch now…

 

 

Resources:

Download To-Do List

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Our Marketing Philosophy

 

In this busy marketplace where consumers are bombarded with thousands of messages everyday, you must find a way to stand apart from the rest.

How?

By making a direct, personal connection with them.

And we believe this is best done through consistently and correctly applied direct-response marketing principles.

There are two aspects to making a connection with your market 

One is creating a powerful marketing message that starts with an irresistible offer.

Free offers tend to be the most irresistible kind. That’s right, give them something first before you ask them to give you money.

This is the idea behind education-based marketing. Instead of marketing your services or your products, you market free information designed to help them and educate them to become better consumers.

Once they request your free information (this is the core of direct-response advertising), you instantly become a welcomed guest instead of an unwanted pest, and your marketing messages no longer fall on deaf ears.

Two is weaving a compelling story in your marketing message that touches their emotions.

This is typically done with what we call “pain points.” What is your prospects biggest fear, pain, discomfort in doing business with companies like you? You need to talk about these things so they know you “get it” and come to the conclusion that you are best qualified to meet their need and avoid the pain and discomfort they fear so much.

Another way to get your message read and touch their emotions is by sharing your story. Be personal. Put a face to your business. Be willing to be authentic and transparent and suddenly, you become much more interesting and different.

Creating an effective marketing message requires you to dare to be different and do the opposite of what your competitors are doing. 

It also requires that the people who are in charge of creating your marketing understand direct-response advertising. (Here’s a fun article about that).

We have a more intense aversion to a poor marketing message than we do to poor design. That is why we will always take the time to help you not just with a stunning design, but also to create a powerful message that can be used over and over again in all of your print marketing efforts.

But don’t take our word for it:

Greg JimenoI worked with Kia on developing an ad with a very short deadline. Kia was a terrific asset in brainstorming ideas and providing the kind of input necessary to create an ad that was different from our competitors. Kia took what was a vague idea and turned in into a stunning ad that far exceeded my expectations. Thank you so much for your great work and I look forward to working with you again in the future.

Greg Jimeno, Jimeno & Gray, PA
Glen Burnie, MD

 

If you have a marketing or design project in mind and would like to chat with me, send us a note. We’ll send you some additional information and get a call scheduled.

Or, if you want a deeper, more strategic consultation, request a Marketing Assets Analysis.

Happy Marketing to You,

Kia Arian

 

 

Kia Arian and the Zine Design Team

 

Helpful Links

Top Ten Biggest Mistakes Business Owners Make in Their Marketing
What Kind Of Marketing & Advertising Are YOU Doing?
Take Our Cosmo Quiz: Are we for you?

 

“I’m a Lousy Copywriter”

 

David Ogilvy is known as the father of modern advertising. His insights and ideas on advertising are legendary and still adhered to today in many successful campaigns. As with many geniuses, Ogilvy lead an interesting life. And he was a prolific writer. I ran across this gem recently and had to share it here. In a letter to Mr. Ray Calt in 1955, Ogilvy explains his process for writing advertising copy. It is not unlike our creative process here sometimes, except we substitute coffee for rum.

April 19, 1955
Dear Mr. Calt:

On March 22nd you wrote to me asking for some notes on my work habits as a copywriter. They are appalling, as you are about to see:

  1. I have never written an advertisement in the office. Too many interruptions. I do all my writing at home.
  2. I spend a long time studying the precedents. I look at every advertisement which has appeared for competing products during the past 20 years.
  3. I am helpless without research material—and the more “motivational” the better.
  4. I write out a definition of the problem and a statement of the purpose which I wish the campaign to achieve. Then I go no further until the statement and its principles have been accepted by the client.
  5. Before actually writing the copy, I write down every conceivable fact and selling idea. Then I get them organized and relate them to research and the copy platform.
  6. Then I write the headline. As a matter of fact I try to write 20 alternative headlines for every advertisement. And I never select the final headline without asking the opinion of other people in the agency. In some cases I seek the help of the research department and get them to do a split-run on a battery of headlines.
  7. At this point I can no longer postpone the actual copy. So I go home and sit down at my desk. I find myself entirely without ideas. I get bad-tempered. If my wife comes into the room I growl at her. (This has gotten worse since I gave up smoking.)
  8. I am terrified of producing a lousy advertisement. This causes me to throw away the first 20 attempts.
  9. If all else fails, I drink half a bottle of rum and play a Handel oratorio on the gramophone. This generally produces an uncontrollable gush of copy.
  10. The next morning I get up early and edit the gush.
  11. Then I take the train to New York and my secretary types a draft. (I cannot type, which is very inconvenient.)
  12. I am a lousy copywriter, but I am a good editor. So I go to work editing my own draft. After four or five editings, it looks good enough to show to the client. If the client changes the copy, I get angry—because I took a lot of trouble writing it, and what I wrote I wrote on purpose.

Altogether it is a slow and laborious business. I understand that some copywriters have much greater facility.

Yours sincerely,
D.O.

Why We’re Different

 

Have you ever spent precious time, resources, and money creating strategic copy and a compelling message for a marketing campaign, only to have it fall apart at the hands of the graphic designer?

Tell me if this sounds familiar…

You get the final finished piece and know something is wrong, but can’t put your finger on it. You don’t even know what to suggest to fix it. You’re a marketer, not a designer.

To make matters worse, you don’t want to argue with the designer, offend them, or hurt their feelings, so you reluctantly accept the job knowing it kinda sucks, and just hope for the best.

You look for another designer the next time you need something created. But you’re back to square one…schlepping over your files, logos, content, ideas to them to get the relationship started, and…well, once again…hope for the best.

Well, there’s a better strategy than “hope for the best.”

Imagine this scenario instead:

You spend precious time, resources, and money creating strategic copy and a compelling message for a marketing campaign and are ready to hand it over to your designer to translate your idea into a visual presentation.

Your designer asks you questions about the goal of the marketing piece, your target market, your offer, your call-to-action, and the follow up to the marketing effort.

She makes suggestions for improvements and more clarity based on your past marketing, your brand, your strengths, and your positioning in your market.

She then presents you with a design that brings attention to your message (and not her uh-mazing design talents) and creates the exact flow in message, ideas, and emotion that you had envisioned.

Once you see the marketing idea in a visual presentation, you are able to “experience it” in full, as it’s meant to be experienced by your market. Your designer gives you suggestions based on other successful marketing she has worked on and seen implemented, and work with you to create a final finished piece that accurately captures your goals and vision for the campaign.

As if that wasn’t enough, she then helps you put gas in it by getting it printed, published, mailed or whatever it needs to get it out the door and into your market’s hands.

And if that wasn’t enough, your future projects are easier and faster to create and implement because she has a firm grasp of your message, your brand, and your past marketing. She has all your marketing assets. And she brings all that past goodness and experience to bear on every new project.

Too good to be true?

It’s not.

The professionals at Zine are a different breed in the world of design and marketing.

We have a deep understanding of marketing, copywriting and design and are able to unite these elements in every marketing project that our clients dream up.

Founded by Kia Arian, Zine specializes in direct response advertising and print marketing, which is still one of the most compelling and results-oriented approaches to marketing.

A designer by trade, Kia knew she had to become an expert in marketing to survive in an increasingly commoditized industry. It was her marketing skills and knowledge that has grown and sustained her agency since 2004.

In that journey, she discovered how little the vast majority of designers knew about effective marketing and business success.

They are mostly “purists” who value the art and aesthetic of marketing more than tracking results and increasing profits.

Entrepreneurs, business owners and marketers come to her after being unable to find designers who understand the core goal and intent of their marketing and who can be trusted to correctly implement their ideas instead of butchering the message with fancy design.

Up until now, their only options were either to slog through it themselves, burn through marketing gurus and specialists with nothing to show at the end, or resort to gig designers from Fiverr or Odesk and end up with disjointed marketing and hit-or-miss quality.

As a small business owner herself, Kia understands those frustrations and instinctively helps business owners and professionals correctly implement their marketing ideas, get results, and feel confident and proud of their message and their work.

Her team at Zine understands that business owners and marketers need agility, accuracy, and return on every marketing dollar they spend. She is an advocate for entrepreneurs and business owners, and teaches and coaches them to create a brand and a message that is focused (purposeful), authentic (powerful), and gets the results they want (profitable).

What drives us?

The belief that each person possesses innate, God-given talents and a message that the world needs to hear.

Through Zine, we’re able to help those who have always known there was more to their business and their life, who are hungry for more, and who have the resolve to discover their unique message and the courage to boldly proclaim it.

If this resonates with you, contact us and schedule a 30 minute call to see if we’re a good fit for each other.