Better still, the number of ways landscapers can use postcards is limited only by their imagination. Here are but a few of those ideas:
1. Seasonal Reminders Many homeowners know very little about the seasonality of lawn maintenance, planting and such. So why not tell them. Try sending regular reminders, such as: "Planting season is right around the corner! Do you have ideas for your backyard? Call us for a free on-the-lawn consultation."
2. Customer Follow-up You're probably familiar with the 80/20 rule -- you get 80% of your business from 20% of your customers. You've probably also heard how much more expensive it is to acquire a new customer than to retain a current one.
With this in mind, why not send your best customers thank-you cards, holiday greetings or special offers? It's a great way to stay in touch with the 20% who mean the most to your business.
3. Neighborhood Prospecting Around a "Prize Lawn" You've worked hard to maintain the lawn at 245 Maple Drive. And it looks fantastic! So don't be shy -- tell the rest of the neighborhood who's behind the beauty. With postcard marketing, you can target the exact streets and subdivisions you want. This lets you draw attention to projects the recipient has probably already seen! Can you see the possibilities of such an approach?
4. Tip-of-the-Month Series Want an easy way to stay "top of mind" with your prospecting area? Want to build value into your postcards to keep them out of the trashcan? Try a tip-of-the-month series. The concept is simple: take your sales message, and wrap it inside a helpful hint so the homeowner has an extra reason to keep it.
The goal here is not to give away your trade secrets -- but to make your audience aware of your services, while also increasing the shelf-life of your postcards. Try to envision the kinds of postcards people might put up on their refrigerators or bulleting boards. That's your goal!
5. Special Offers Postcards with strong offers outperform the more "informational" pieces. So if you're offering some kind of discount or special, send it straight to your audience's mailboxes. With a newspaper or magazine ad, you're limited as to how specific you can make your offer. But with postcards, you can speak more directly to the various segments of your audience. That's the winning formula of direct mail -- a strong offer with relevant information, sent to a precisely targeted audience.
For instance, maybe you send a postcard to a new subdivision with a headline that reads: "Landscaping Special for the Residents of Maplewood Park." This kind of relevance and specific targeting can dramatically increase response rates.
6. Website Tie-in Have a website? If so, you have a perfect marketing partner to complement your postcards. The reasons are somewhat psychological:
The goal of any marketing program is to gain new business, but sometimes you have to offer indirect paths as well as the direct ones. Direct paths are for direct people. A direct path on a postcard would be a phone number. Some interested prospects will choose the direct route and call you straightaway.
But those who are less direct would rather learn more about you first. They need to get comfortable before they "raise their hands."
So why not build an informational resource section of your website and point to it with your postcards? Maybe you'll offer tips on how to care for local plants and grasses. Maybe you'll post a photo gallery showing some of your past projects and clients. Or both!
The point is to offer different response channels for the different personality types. A direct phone number for the direct people, and an indirect website path for the more timid souls. Then mention both paths on your postcards, and you've increased your chance for response -- be it direct or indirect.
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Landscape designs around hot tubs don't need to be complex to look professional. Simply purchasing attractive pots or planters as well as your favorite shrubs and flowers to surround the hot tub is one option. I like taking two pots and placing them on each side of the steps. I then plant two finely manicured trees within the pots; be sure to get trees that will not outgrow the pot or become too tall. The entrance to your hot tub is framed with beautiful greenery, and looks beautiful and welcoming.
When it comes to the area around your hot tub, it's important to have landscaping ideas for privacy. One way to landscape around your hot tub, with privacy in mind, is a screened in gazebo. A gazebo will help to make the hot tub the focal point of your backyard, while allowing you to comfortably use your hot tub in rainy weather. To make it look nice, you can add a couple of simple planter boxes around the outside of the gazebo. If you're not a gardener, you could choose to plant some low maintenance silk flowers instead.
It would be virtually impossible to enumerate all the possible ideas for landscaping around hot tubs. Let us concentrate here on an Asian themed hot tub that would be a wonderful addition to a yard. A walkway with plants lightly draped over it offers a combination of shade and sunshine and provides an Asian atmosphere as well. You can also rim the tub with cedar planters filled with trees and other plantings appropriate for the weather in your area. That will give your hot tub the sense of permanence one gets with in-ground tubs.
The best kind of landscaped hot tub includes both an in ground hot tub and an in ground swimming pool. A small tropical jungle adds to the beauty of the hot tub and pool area. To create this, start by setting out attractive flowerpots in two groups of 3 (odd numbers are better-looking). To create a terraced look, try using three different sizes in each group. Finish creating a tropical look by filling the pots with hibiscus flowers, a miniature palm bush, and some naturally-flowing ivy.
There are so many ideas for landscaping around hot tubs that this only touches on the many possibilities. However whenever landscaping around a hot tub you must remember to still allow for the drain of the hot tub to be open. You wouldn't want to flood all your lovely landscaping while refilling the hot tub. Remember that you can be as creative as you want. Make it your own backyard oasis.
Both Brandon Cornett & Jasmine Leclair are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Brandon Cornett has sinced written about articles on various topics from Realestate Marketing, Home Buyers Guide and Real Estate. Brandon Cornett is the editor of PostcardSmart.com, the Internet's largest website dedicated entirely to direct mail marketing with postcards. For more expert articles on postcard marketing, visit. Brandon Cornett's top article generates over 4400 views. to your Favourites.
Jasmine Leclair has sinced written about articles on various topics from Marketing. don't have to be complicated to look nice. When it comes to the area around your hot tu. Jasmine Leclair's top article generates over 2400 views. to your Favourites.