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Profits
From Selling Special Coupons
Look in your mailbox. What do you see almost every day?
Coupons. Look in your newspaper. What do you see EVERY day? Coupons. It seems
like coupons multiply like rabbits Why? Prices are rising, unlike a majority of
people's incomes. Coupons only make good financial sense. But what if you
discovered that someone's making money from coupons? They are, and so can you,
by selling a special type of coupon.
Manufacturers use coupons primarily to attract new customers.
The money savings entice people to try products they might otherwise not have.
The same can be true of local businesses in your area. Sure, they put coupons in
their newspaper ads. But you can give them the opportunity to get their coupons
into the hands of the exact customers they need, and at a far better price than
the local newspaper. You can produce a Local Business Coupon Book easily,
inexpensively, and profitably, if you follow the steps outlined here.
The first step in running a successful coupon publishing
business is to find the businesses that will advertise with you. Any business
that relies on local advertising is a good prospect. Here is a short list of
businesses you should consider: Theaters; Hair Salons; Fast Food Restaurants;
Record and CD Stores; Dry Cleaners; Supermarkets; Car Washes; Muffler Shops; Ice
Cream and Frozen Yogurt Shops. Basically, any store that could reasonably use a
coupon to draw in new customers is a prospect. You may want to specialize in one
area, such as fast food restaurants. Or, cover the whole gamut. Look through
your phone book for businesses you might not have thought of.
When you approach these businesses, target a group within a
five mile radius. It will be more time-efficient for you, and you can use the
area grouping in your sales pitch. Stress the fact that around 80 percent of
their business will come from that five mile radius. Tell them that you plan to
distribute the coupon book within that radius, so it will draw the best results.
To be really profitable, you should get at least 15 to 25
businesses in the book. The more, the better. How much to charge? That depends
on how many books you will be distributing, and what your costs are. One coupon
book producer charged $100 for a coupon going to 1,000 people in an eight mile
radius. His total cost was $300, and he sold 11 businesses coupons. This gave
him an $800 profit in one week!
The second step is to create the coupons. If you have a
computer, the job of designing the coupons can be quite easy with some of the
word processor/graphics packages available. If not, talk to your printer. He or
she will more than likely have some ready-made templates for coupons. You can
just fill in the blanks. If your printer doesn't have blank coupon sheets, you
can get an attractive sheet of six coupons with blanks for advertiser names and
addresses, offers, and expiration dates by sending $5 to Pat Flanagan Publishing
& Design, 540 Imus Dr., Mishawaka, IN 46545, and include your business name and
address, as well as your coupon book's title. They will be attractively typeset
along the bottom of the coupon!
Be sure to put YOUR business name on the coupon (in small
print, so it doesn't distract). Subconsciously, people will remember your
business name and associate it with saving money. In any case, you will need to
put the advertising business' name, address, phone, logo (if any, many
businesses will have them premade for you to use), the amount of the discount,
any conditions they may have, and an expiration date. Your printer can help you
with the layout, if you are inexperienced, or you can find easy to use layout
boards at an office supply or art store.
Assembling the coupon books can be done in a number of ways.
The easiest, and recommended, way to start is by simply stapling them together.
Only one staple will be necessary, on the left side of the stack of coupons.
Make a cover coupon with your business name and the name you've chosen for the
coupon book. Put that on top of the stack before you staple. Other methods are
perforating/padding, and perforating/perfect binding. Your printer should be
able to provide pricing information on these and other binding methods.
The third step is distributing. You have already identified
the radius within which you will distribute your coupon books. There are two
methods of delivery you can use. You can either deliver them by car or foot, or
you can bulk mail them. Bulk mailing is infinitely easier and more efficient,
but requires a bit of paperwork and registration fees. If you are delivering in
one zip code area, you can use either five digit presort mailing, or carrier
route presort mailing. You should check with your postmaster regarding rules and
fees. As soon as you have mailed the coupons, deliver a copy of the coupon book
to each business that has advertised in it, so they know that customers will now
be bringing them in.
The fourth and final step is follow up. You need to know how
your coupon books are doing. Ask the businesses that advertise in your book to
write the amount purchased by the coupon-bearing customer on the back of the
coupon, and to hold them for you. Stop by at least once a week and pick up the
redeemed coupons. Besides giving you purchase totals that you can refer to in
future sales to new customers, this also gives you a chance to talk to the
businesses about purchasing coupons in new books. You can show them right then
and there the results they have gotten, and they should be enthusiastic about
signing back on.
It is important to maintain a good relationship with the
businesses who advertise with you. Show them that you are committed to helping
them increase their business. If you care, so will they. This is a fun business
that can be started part-time, and can easily move to full-time. Remember the
man who cleared $800 his first week in this business. He was just starting out,
and you can do that, too!
Contact us for more info

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