Re: Print advertising - Mailing list pgsql-advocacy
From | nhrcommu@rochester.rr.com |
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Subject | Re: Print advertising |
Date | |
Msg-id | 437925437bb2.437bb2437925@nyroc.rr.com Whole thread Raw |
Responses |
Re: Print advertising
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List | pgsql-advocacy |
May have misunderstood me a bit, though Gavin's idea is a good one and needed. I would never suggest advertising. In my mind it is contra to "the movement". I'm suggesting a press release that is really a - What it is & Why you need it, letter. Small village (<50,000 people) papers are hungry for news. Most have 2 or 3 part-time reporters that write about the local football team's performance and assorted local tidbits. I think they would run an article as a press release. Not email --- just a regular old piece of paper with a stamp. Hand addressed with a real signature. The release should be non-tech; write a bit about "us vs them" (small vs big) AND make a call for the local PC fixer + the school admin and even the local government to come to the site..... this is where Gavin's idea would fit in nicely. Personalized printing is a large part of my business. I don't have a problem sending out 10 K of these over the course of a year on my nickel, including postage. Just need a good letter and content Gavin mentioned --- kind of a STARTER'S KIT. But I agree --- no advertising. Waste of money. After all, the release would be from one community to another. Thanks, Mike ----- Original Message ----- From: Gavin Sherry <swm@linuxworld.com.au> Date: Sunday, November 20, 2005 6:59 pm Subject: Re: [pgsql-advocacy] Print advertising > Hi all, > > On Sun, 20 Nov 2005, Josh Berkus wrote: > > > Mike, > > > > I'm taking this back on-list because I think it's a critical > discussion.> > > > I have a fuzzy feeling that there are a few people > > > in the world that do not sit around reading > > > Information Week as part of their daily routine. A > > > CEO of a 20 person company in Oneonta, NY may not > > > even know that there IS such a thing as PG..... but > > > he sure knows that he has needs and 1 of them is > > > saving money. He probably DOES read the local > > > paper... because he may be in it. And if he reads > > > some plain talk about PG, he may grab his "computer > > > guy" by the stacking swivel and say... "Why wasn't I > > > told about this?" > > > > I think you're absolutely right. However, I'm personally at a > loss on how to > > reach these people without spending a fortune on print > advertising. The > > problem is that small businesses simply don't read any national > publications> consistently. There are some key ones we could take > on -- ComputerWorld, > > Philanthropy Journal -- but on the whole it would be hit-or-miss. > And for > > small local papers, there are probably 25,000 of them in the US. > > I second your scepticism here. I've had some experience of IT > marketingand marketing/advertising in general. Effective > advertising, especially to > small business, requires a broad and long running campaign -- read: > expensive. In my opinion, the ad placed by the mozilla guys in a > major US > daily was good for morale bit not an effective way of marketing the > project. > > The thing that we're good at is attracting people to the project > for its > technical features. This is our strength. One of the things that > companiessurrounding PostgreSQL -- particularly the big ones -- are > good at is > sales and marketing. I think most of the work involved in > attracting small > businesses not looking specifically for an open source database can be > left to them. > > That being said, I think there are some key areas we need to take > care of: > case studies on the web site, testimonials on the web site and a > kind of > 'Why PostgreSQL' check list, which blends testimonials with a list of > features. I'm currently sitting on a bunch of case studies for the Web > site. Unfortunately, I have very little time to work on them. The > first of > these should come through very soon. > > Thanks, > > Gavin > > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)----------------------- > ---- > TIP 6: explain analyze is your friend >
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