Mail order catalogs have long been one of the top ways for inventors to sell their products. Why is this? Catalogs don’t mind taking products from one product companies, which is something avoided by many retail stores and distributors. But beyond that, catalogs can help you very effectively meet your sales goals and are often used as a launch pad for a new product. Catalogs can:
Catalogs cater to specific audiences with a narrow product line. Levenger, for example, is a catalog of upscale products for serious readers. Find catalogs that sell to your target audience, sell products priced similarly to yours (economy, midrange, or premium), and sell products that are complementary to, but not the same as, yours.
Get a copy of each catalog, and look at the different products to find where yours fits. Double-check that each catalog’s target market and pricing fit your product. Then make a list of the top 10 catalogs to which you will send presentation packages.
You typically won’t need to send a sample product. Catalogs often prefer to see a brochure or sales flier and price schedule first, then request a sample if they are interested in the product.
When you mail your package to the catalog company, include a mock-up of a typical page from the catalog that features your product alongside other complementary products already in the catalog. This shows the catalog buyer how your pricing and product features are a perfect fit.
Create a clear visual that lets people immediately connect to your product. This image can be of the product itself, or it can be of the situation the product solves. For example, a product picture of the dispensing racks that hold multiple drink cans in the refrigerator is easily understood by potential customers. But they may need a visual of a dandelion-removing tool in action to quickly understand how it works.
Match the style of copy on your sales materials to the style of each catalog. Many marketers who sell to various catalogs custom-write their materials each time. Having the right style helps persuade buyers that your product is perfect for their catalogs.
If you have any past publicity, include it in your presentation. If you don’t have any, manufacture some. Host an event–it doesn’t have to be big–that allows people to use your product, and then ask them to offer testimonials. For example, you could organize a 5-kilometer bike ride for 10 people to showcase a new, more comfortable bicycle seat.
When you send your package is just as important as what you send. Catalogs typically decide to buy products only once or twice a year, when they are laying out their new catalogs. Often, this date could be four to five months before the catalog is actually printed. Find out when a cataloger finalizes its product decisions, then mail to the catalog twice: two months before the final date, and again two weeks before the date. Mailing two months before will help get your product considered in the regular decision process. Mailing two weeks before the deadline puts you in front of catalog buyers right when they are trying to fill last-minute holes in the catalog.
Before sending your package, find out the name of the buyer for your type of product. If you call and ask, most catalogs will tell you. If you don’t know who the buyer is, you won’t know if your information reaches the right person, and you won’t know who to call when following up.
Catalogs don’t want products everyone else has. You can often get a foothold in the market if you tell buyers your product will only be in one or two catalogs the following year. This gives them a little more incentive to buy, and it allows you to ask the buyer for a response by a certain date so that you can contact other buyers if the first catalog doesn’t want your product.
One of the biggest advantages of catalog sales is that you have few expenses other than manufacturing costs. There are minimal sales and marketing expenses, which in most other marketing channels consume 20 to 40 percent of your sales dollars. You will probably make money as long as you can sell your product for 50 percent more than your manufacturing cost.
The only major expense is that catalogers often ask you to pay part of the printing cost. This should be no more than 15 percent of your projected sales volume. If the printing costs are too high, you can frequently negotiate a better deal. Tell the catalog you’ll pay with free goods; for example, you’ll include 15 percent extra merchandise with each shipment to pay for printing.
As a rule, catalogs change a substantial number of product offerings every printing. So unless your product is a top seller, you can expect to be dropped from a catalog every now and then. You can minimize the roller-coaster effect of catalog sales by creating strong relationships with buyers. Ask buyers what their goals are for the next issue and what you could do with your product to help them meet their objectives. You should also:
The drawback to catalog sales is that your product is exposed to a wide variety of people. Potential competitors can see your product, realize it has potential and decide to compete with you. You should at least have “patent pending” status before approaching catalogers, or you risk someone taking your idea.
If you think catalogs would work well for you, but maybe want some help, make sure to check out Don Debelak’s Catalog Marketing Program at selltocatalogs.com.
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