efforts are key. What’s the difference between a sales effort and
a marketing effort? Portfolio visits, in-person appointments,
portfolios sent to buyers that you are interested in working
with—these are all sales efforts. Direct mail, sourcebook ads,
visual e-mails, and Web sites are all marketing tools. They
support the visual in the actual product, your portfolio.
Consider developing an advertising program that involves
the portfolio and two to three other marketing efforts. Buyers
need repetition. They need to see your imagery over and over
and preferably in different formats. Providing potential buyers
the opportunity to see your images in a direct mail piece, a
visual e-mail, and in a portfolio presentation is critical. Buyers
buy at different times, and they will find you through different
avenues. You need to cover your bases and create visibility.
Does this take money? Yes, but it needn’t be hugely expensive.
If finances are tight, create a portfolio and use visual e-mails
and lovely handmade (not homemade!) cards. Send to fewer
contacts but send consistently. Once a month is not too much
in my book.
Brand all of your sales and marketing tools. One of the
key ingredients in any successful program is branding. Using
your vision to set the tone, create a palette of colors, materi-
als, and design elements that will be present on your Web site
as well as in your portfolio and direct mail. When possible,
work with a graphic designer or art director to set the look of
your program. Branding helps to create visibility. Moreover, in
reality, you are building credibility with your audience when
you develop a thoughtful visual solution that conveys your
book’s message, as you will be living the language and
purpose of advertising and graphic design. A well-designed
program builds trust as it says professionalism, knowledge,
and confidence.
For any naysayers in the crowd, those of you who are com-
ing up with excuses as to why you can’t build a book and sell or
market your talent, I ask you to think of my plumber. He’s a
great guy, he works 9 to 5, he drives a Jaguar and goes home to
dinner every night at 5 pm. But he doesn’t create visuals; he
doesn’t get the opportunity to brainstorm ideas that he will
eventually see in a magazine or in an ad. He doesn’t get to use
a god-given talent and make money doing so.
PART6 / FAITH
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