Are you getting the best for the dollars you allocate for promotion and branding? Who is advising you, and how solid is their experience. Do they have enough solutions to be objective, and to be bold enough to question when you possibly may be ‘going off on a tangent’ or losing sight of your core objectives?
Okay, here are 2 options:
A) Do nothing, keep ‘wading through it’ and react only to haphazard advertising opportunities that are thrown out to you. Spend more than you need to on advertising that may not even be reaching the right target or sending the right message.
B) Make the call to a dedicated team who will give honest objective advice, and if you do agree to utilize their services, you can be confident that you are getting excellent value. Redefine your marketing objectives, plan ahead, save money on costs, develop a cohesive advertising strategy, and relax a bit, maybe even get out a bit more! Call Pumpt Advertising.
Well, who the hell is Pumpt anyway?
Pumpt Advertising is a rapidly growing company that is focused on companies that need advertising support but don’t require the service of a complete traditional agency. They work best with business owners and marketers who understand the value of having someone to manage all of the buying, planning and logistics involved with full advertising campaigns or small print projects. This may range from a national Point Of Purchase promotion, to corresponding media such as letterbox drops, radio, billboards, TV and other media that may be required. They can also help to manage the communications to your existing customer base via Direct Addressed Mail, providing every part of the solution – from the initial brief right through to the piece being received in your customer’s hand.
Pumpt was started by Dominic Sutton over 5 years ago, when and opportunity was seen to provide a one stop shop for those businesses who were too small to be served properly by ad agencies, but too large to be properly serviced in all spectrums of what they need by a direct supplier such as a printer or radio station.