Friday

Marketing to Schools

It's great if your store is near a high school, middle school, or elementary school, but you can't simply rely on the students and families to know you are there. You have to reach out to them, support their causes.

Below are the basics for reaching the different types of schools (the ones above, plus colleges and pre-schools), along with some helpful tricks to getting things done.

High Schools / Middle Schools
  • Become a partner in education (this is the hoop you jump through to getting in with all schools)
  • Invite admin and staff to visit you, do this with free product (thank them for all the hard work they do)
  • Spirit nights don't work as well with HS as they do with elementary kids. Focus on a specific group within the school (eg: cheerleaders or student council). Let them promote the event.
  • Fundraising for clubs. Everyone wants the sports teams, but remember that the band is a larger group with very loyal followers. If you support them, they'll support you.
  • Trade banquets for advertising dollars
  • Hire through the school's DECA program (or something similar)

Elementary Schools

  • Become a partner in education
  • Invite staff, admin, and PTA/O to see you for lunch or dinner
  • Fundraising for special projects
  • Spirit nights for this age group are great (remember to make them fun to encourage word of mouth and to post a sign on your door during those nights - you'll get credit from the rest of your customers for being a good guy)
  • Give teachers stickers to remind parents
  • Put signage in their carpool lanes
  • Make sure the admin promotes the event
  • Offer gift certificates to Office Depot to the teacher with the most kids at the event (make it a contest)

Pre-Schools

  • Pretty much the same as with elementary school kids, but here are a few twists
  • Fundraising is key for many of these schools
  • Mom's are more likely to get together after they drop kids off (if you're a coffeehouse, smoothie shop, health club take note)
  • Make sure you're kid friendly if you go after this group (high chairs, kid friendly menu, and always have a give-away and distraction for the kids - the happier they are the happier mom and dad will be)

Colleges

  • This is a community unto itself
  • Fraternities/Sorrorities: fundraising, spirit nights
  • Athletics: think intramural, club, and fraternity level
  • Pan-Hellenic council
  • Be a guerrilla marketer in the library (book marks, flyers on tables)
  • Coffeehouses: bottomless cups during finals week
  • Study break specials
  • Tailgating
  • T-shirts: ever seen a college kid turn down a free t-shirt?

The tactics can be different depending on your products, but the strategy is the same: care about what they care about, surround students and parents with your message, and put food into their mouths.

2 comments:

Kendall Press said...

What would you recommend for a printing company looking to market to both K-12 and the higher education market?

Bryan said...

You may need to start at the school-level (instead of the district level) to "pull" sales through instead of "pushing" them. Produce a monthly newsletter for each school in the district; produce the athletic program; produce a playbill for the drama club.

Can you get involved with fundraising at the district level?

Can you help recruit area businesses to be partners in education?

Can you refer/recruit advertisers for the programs?

Help them achieve their goals and they'll help you achieve yours.

This is more of a B2B issue than a traditional Mayberry one, but the concepts are still the same: who are your complementary audiences, do they know who you are (by face and by name), and how often do you talk to them? It's more sales than marketing.