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Research
on the $16.9 Billion Promo Products Industry: Why T-Shirts & Pens Can Out-Do
TV & Internet
SUMMARY:
76.1% of consumers studied said
they could remember the brand name of a company that gave them a promotional
item in the past year -- versus 53% who could remember a TV or print ad from the
past month, and only 27% recalled an online ad.
Promotional
products -- from logo t-shirts to brand-stamped rose petals -- really work. And
there's plenty of research data to prove it.
Which
explains why in a search-marketing-mad world the promo products industry is
quietly raking in nearly three times more ad dollars.
They’re on your desk, on
backs at the gym, on nightstands and breakfast tables, and each time a free
promotional product is put to use it’s causing an impression.
Promo products from logo-ed
mugs to baseball hats are the advertisement that keeps on messaging … in some
cases for years.
Consider this recall rate data:
Banner ads
27%
Print & TV ads 53.5%
Promo products 76.1%
So, although the average
promo product -- basically anything you give away with your logo on it -- often
costs more per unit than any other ad unit CPM, the extra impressions and
branding warm-fuzzies make promo products more cost effective than you may
think.
That's why at $16.9 billion
spent per year, US marketers are investing almost three times as much in
promotional products than they are in much-hyped search marketing.
Research
data round-up: The numbers behind promo products
Whether
the goal is to increase consumer loyalty, warm up business prospects, or
encourage your biggest brand fans' evangelism, a promotional product campaign
can work harder for you than almost any other type of messaging.
Here's the data organized by
campaign goals:
->
Long-lasting/repeat exposure:
o 73% of those who used the
promotional product that they had received stated that they used it at least
once a week
o 45.2% used it at least
once a day
Source: L.J Market Research
-> An
increase of company image
o 52.1% of participants
reported having a more favorable impression of the advertiser since receiving
the item.
Source: L.J Market Research
o 76.3% of attendees had a
favorable attitude toward the company that gave them the product.
Source:
Georgia
Southern University
->
Generation of business
o 52% of participants in the
study did business with the advertiser after receiving the promotional product.
o Of those who had not done
business with the advertiser that gave them the product, almost half stated that
they were more likely to do business with the company that gave them the item.
Source: L.J Market Research
->
Increase in referrals
o Accompanying a request for
referrals, an offer of a promotional product incentive or an offer of a
promotional product incentive and eligibility in a sweepstakes drew as many as
500% more referrals than an appeal letter alone.
Source:
Louisiana
State
University
and Glenrich Business Study
o Customers who received a
promotional product were 14% more likely to provide leads than those who did
not.
Source:
Baylor
University
, Mary Kay Study
o Salespeople who handed out
promo items received 22% more referrals than those who did not give out free
gifts.
Source:
Baylor
University
, Mary Kay Study
-> Higher
recall
o 76.1% of participants
could recall the name of the advertiser on the promotional product that they
received in the past 12 months. In comparison only 53.5% of participants could
recall the name of an advertiser they had seen in a magazine or newspaper in the
previous week
Source: L.J. Market Researc
-> Recall
at Tradeshows
o 71.6% of attendees who
received a promotional product remembered the name of the company that gave them
the product
Source: Georgia Southern University Study
->
Greater reach
o 71% of business travelers
randomly surveyed reported receiving a promotional product in the last 12 months
o 33.7% of this group had
the item on their person - a coveted location for ad messages
o 55% of participants
generally kept their promotional products for more than a year.
o 22% of participants kept
the promotional product that they had received for at least six months.
Source: L.J Market Research
5
Considerations -- How to pick the best promo product for your campaign
Biggest mistake: when you're
selecting a promo product to offer your marketplace, don't assume the most
unusual or most costly item will work the best. Here's what will work:
1. Your
target demographic
Just because you think
something is ultra-neat or beyond-dull doesn't mean they do. (Example, IT
professionals surveyed in March 2005 said they yearned for iPods, although most
tech marketers were bored of offering them.) Consider what they are likely to
throw away, what they'll keep, what they'll give to the kids, and what will make
them run around the office showing absolutely everyone.
2. Value
Promo
products can have one of three values (not necessarily tied to the price you pay
for them); either they are:
a. extremely useful so the
prospect will keep them close and refresh the impression frequently; (think
mugs, t-shirt, pens, oversized chip bag clips)
b. lavishly valuable so the
prospect will be impressed by the value you place in your relationship with
them; (think consumer electronics, leather-bound books, etc.)
c. unique and cool so your
prospect will start a viral "look what I got" campaign on your behalf
with their friends and colleagues (think roses with logo-embossed petals,
light-up ice cubes, etc.)
3. Your
brand
Think over your brand and
campaign to see if there is a tie-in you can make. The more you can relate the
item to the rest of your messaging, the more powerful the campaign as a whole
becomes.
4. Logos
Many brands' logos, in
particular in B-to-B, were not designed with promotional items in mind. Will the
logo be big enough within the limited print-space to stand out at a reasonable
distance? (Example: MarketingSherpa is too long to fit well on
items such as mugs.) Also, do you have logo colors restrictions you must obey?
And don't forget your URL or toll-free phone number along with (or in place of)
your tagline.
5.
Distribution
How heavy is the item? What
type of shipping will work and has it been tested? (Some pens have been rejected
by the post office because they broke through envelopes when mail sorting
equipment bent them.) Plus, can you brand the shipping carrier and also is it
possible to insert additional materials such as a note? What are the additional
costs associated with this?
Also,
if you are planning to mail the item to prospects and consumers, how do you
intend to make sure that only "qualified" prospects get it? Do you
need to clean your database beforehand, or add rules, regs and deadlines onto on
online form?
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