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If you're in direct marketing, you're continually looking for new
list sources everybody's tired of mailing to the same lists. If you're not
in direct marketing and thinking about putting a mailing together,
here's something a little different: take a look at marketing through
associations.
Why would anyone ever market to associations? They're
great targets: try sending a press release to an association's publication
- whether it's a newsletter or a magazine. Why, you can alert an
entire industry of your products or services with one or two well-placed
news releases.
Since the magazines and newsletters of associations are not
the mainstream prospecting tools of most marketers who market
through more traditional channels association publications receive just a
fraction of the press releases and promotional articles that go to major
publishers. Yet the comprehensive lists of over 23,000 associations go
astonishingly deep in most major and minor markets. In addition, association
publications are usually well regarded and lend excellent credibility to the
firms that get ink in their house publications.
Why else would you market through associations? Maybe
you're an affinity marketer - and you'd like to have the 96,000 members of
the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association apply for the
special trial rate of your new credit card. Or, maybe you'd like the
National Electrical Contractors Association - with 80 people on staff, and a
budget of $10 to $25 million to support their 4,000 member firms that
comprise 118 local chapters (along with the entire personnel of each member
firm) - to apply for your new phone service. Associations can deliver
thousands of their members - new customers for you - with a just a
few contacts and a modest budget.
You'd definitely market through associations if you're part of
the hospitality industry and would like to arrange a convention -
complete with hotel rooms, ballrooms, and services for the complete
screaming regime of whoever shows up - of the 2,300,000 members of the
National Education Association of the United States. Or go for a smaller piece
of their $100,000,000 budget - give or take a few million - get hired as
a speaker or on-site entertainment, or snag some of the
association's printing business. Association lists work for all the above.
Associations are key targets for the entire hospitality industry sales force:
hotels, convention space, caterers, promotional products, printed
material, ballrooms, ground services, and on-site entertainment, to name a few.
Quite frankly, I realize the big organizations are not for everyone.
Not everyone is looking for the big numbers, even in lists. Some
people are just looking for a short cut - an entry wedge into an industry at
the top level. For this purpose, association lists are also useful in
marketing to the elite leaders of select industries.
For example: If you wanted to get in bed with all of the
53 companies who belong to the Biscuit and Cracker Distributors
Association, a reference book showing detailed information about their
association may be just your cup of tea. You'll find their address - along
with their association size, annual budget, history, newsletter and
publication detail, meeting and convention dates, website, email address, and
their executive director's name - on page 179 of the National Trade
and Professional Associations of the United States directory.
The 828-page National Trade and Professional Associations of
the United States ($99) reference tool lists 7,600 associations, and
is published annually by Columbia Books, Inc.
(www.columbiabooks.com;
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888-265-0600, fax 410-810-0911) along with its companion, the
State and Regional Associations of the
U.S. directory ($79). The state and regional association guide is particularly useful if you are
targeting specific geographic areas and want access to top local
association contacts not included in the national book. The State and
Regional Associations of the U.S. directory also has a higher percentage
of association managers who, while managing multiple associations,
cross many industry lines when sourcing vendors or affinity marketers.
Information in both Columbia Books directories is
cross-referenced by association index, subject index (500 subjects/alpha), also by
budget index, geographic index, executive index, and acronym name index.
Association management companies are also shown. All of their data
is available on disk. These two reference tools fit in your briefcase,
and make surprisingly great reading, if - like me - you're a marketer and
have no other life outside of marketing and occasionally watching cat-dog
on TV (ask your kids!).
Association lists and data are also available in the
Encyclopedia of Associations by The Gale Group (800-877-GALE) on disk, CD, and
on-line through Lexis-Nexis. This hardbound, three-volume set ($505)
is the motherload of associations - showing detailed information on
more than 23,000 local, state, national, and international associations.
Gale says that seven out of every ten Americans belong to an association,
and now I believe it: they all show up here in this extensive directory set.
Referenced and cross-referenced in every which-way possible,
you can reach the 30,000 members of Retinitis Pigmentosa International,
the 200 members of the 1954 Buick Skylark Club, the 20 members of
the Vacuum Cleaner Manufacturers Association (VCMA), or the
10 members of the Holy Innocents Reparation Committee with equal ease.
Marketing to - or through - associations may turn out to be a
key component of your campaign; don't overlook these great resources
for their membership lists or for opportunities for joint ventures in
affinity marketing.
Their directors represent key players who are in charge and in
tune with virtually any industry, so they make great resources if you
need information. Sometimes mailing or faxing a few simple questions to
an association headquarters may produce more information faster
than research in books or reading trade periodicals for an entire year.
The foremost goal of most associations is to educate their members -
might as well have them educate their members about your products
and services.
Jeffrey Dobkin, author of the incredible 400-page marketing manual,
How To Market A Product for Under $500 ($29.95), and
Uncommon Marketing Techniques ($17.95) - 33 of his latest columns on small business marketing, exactly like the
one you just read, now has a third book: Inside Secrets of Direct
Marketing. Books are available directly from the publisher - 800-234-IDEA. These books are
completely filled with tips and techniques to make your marketing faster, cheaper, more
effective - and fun. You never learned this stuff in college! Dobkin cuts right through
the theoretical crap and demonstrates a wealth of practical how-to direct marketing
techniques. He is also a speaker, a direct mail copywriter who will change your
letters and direct mail into packages that sizzle with response, and a marketing consultant.
To place an order, call toll free: 800-234-IDEA, or to speak with Mr. Dobkin
personally call 610/642-1000. Fax 610/642-6832. Phone orders welcome - Visa,
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