Think You Have a “Golden” Marketing Idea?

Don’t forget to check the fine print (with your attorney). If you don’t want to view the entire episode, read below:

Michael Scott wants to sell paper. Borrowing an idea from the Roald Dahl book, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, he decides to put 5 Golden Tickets in pallets of paper to be randomly shipped to existing clients. The tickets allow a company getting the ticket to receive 10% off its paper order. Problem is, Michael decides to seed them himself and all the tickets end up with the same company. Worse, there are no restrictions: no limit to the number of tickets one company can have; no time restrictions; no restriction on the number of orders to which the ticket applies; no limitation on minimum or maximum orders. There go the Dunder-Mifflin profits (and Jim’s commission).

Like a Curious George book, it all works out in the end, but in difficult economic times, clients often make rookie errors when rolling out a promotion that can be easily dispensed with by first “role playing” the promotion, and then, spending a little time with an attorney, who may know about various state and local laws that could affect the outcome. At a minimum, the client should ask itself these questions before proceeding:

– Does this promotion attract the right clientele?
– If I where the target, would I care?
– Is it impossible to “game” the promotion (take advantage of a loophole)?
– Will this have an overall positive impact on the bottom line?

If a client can answer the foregoing questions affirmatively, it’s taken the first step to a promising promotion.

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