Starting
A Co-Op Coupon Business From Your Home
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Mail out coupons, circular and ads for up to 30
clients at a time on a cooperative basis. Contract to print (have
printed or use provided) and mail out coupons to area residents
and/or businesses on a cooperative, non-competing basis.
Although you mail offers from several clients
at any one time in the same envelope, you guarantee that only
non-competive offers are contained in any one mailing.
For example, you would not include a 5 cent discount
coupon for potatoes from store A, and another 7 cents from store
B (store A would never do business with you again). But you could
include a free oil change coupon from a service station with either.
Generally, it is best not to include two of the
same type stores or merchants in the same mailing --even though
the products themselves are not competitors, the merchants are.
Most businesses find it difficult and expensive
to send out their own flyers (advertisements, coupons, etc.),
much less work out the details of coupon discounts.
It requires know-how and is consuming to design
a coupon program and even more so to set up a workable mailing
program for one store.
Most merchants are not particularly talented or
experienced in this department, which makes the job all the more
difficult for them.
The cost of envelopes, manpower to stuff and address
them, rent for the mailing list and postage can quickly add up
to 50 cents or more for each piece mailed!
This is why so many local merchants use newspaper
inserts, despite the fact that they are very expensive and not
everyone sees their ads there -- it is cheaper and a lot less
work than trying to do it themselves.
A person in the coupon business will soon become
quite knowledgeable in this type of advertising, which means they
can fulfill a definite need for the merchants in their community.
This business involves showing merchants in your
area how you can print AND mail their coupons, flyers and ads
to an up-to-date, qualified local mailing list for 3 to 4 cents
per item! Not only will you relieve them of the requirements to
invest a good deal of their (non-expert) time and money, you will
save them as much as 90% of the cost. If you were a merchant,
wouldn't you listen?
You can help design coupons, offer standard models,
or use the client's design -- the possible varieties are endless.
One plan would be to offer one or two color coupons
for "Windy Bucks" (in Chicago) coupons for discounts
and free introductory services such as 10% a permanent or a free
soda with a meal, two dinners for the price of one, or a free
car wash with a lubrication job.
This is where YOUR imagination needs to "catch
fire" -- write down all sorts of ideas and have them ready
to suggest when you need them.
For example, you could have the basic Windy Bucks
printed with black ink on light green paper and then pay the printer
a little extra to insert specific client information red ink (their
name and offer) in red. You could use different colored paper
for several different clients, or even offer an "exclusive"
design or border (at an extra price, of course).
One "buck" could be printed with a five
and become $5 towards the purchase of $50 at Jones Hardware; the
next, worth a free shampoo at Sally's Salon and so forth.
You must promise to mail our a certain number
of coupons to bona fide residents (and/or businesses) within a
specified period of time (say, 30 days) and inform your clients
that although there will probably be others in the same mailing,
there will be NO COMPETING offers OR BUSINESSES (this is VERY
important).
Your printing should be based on your costs, including
printing, postage, paper and of course, your time.
Be sure to scale your offers so the larger the
order, the cheaper the price, AND work out "specials"
to offer -- combination orders of either different products and
offers or future mailings.
For example, 1,000 Windy bucks with their info printed in red,
mailed out might be $45 per M; 3,000 - $39; 5,000 - $37, etc.
Then, a combination of 3 different offers might
be offered at the 3,000 price -- or a contract for 1,000 per month
for five months might be offered at the 5,000 price. These are
just a few examples of many possible ways to offer discounts that
encourage larger orders -- which is your objective because you
not only make more profit; you get better rates on larger orders
too.
One thing you might need is a good mailing list,
which is a viable alternative to the "occupant" approach.
You can rent or purchase one or start accumulating your own.
If you live in a rural or small town area, you
can build a pretty good mailing list from the phone book (use
the prefixes to help determine the zip code).
If you have a computer, you can get a program
with ZIP codes -- or you can look them up in the post office directory
(assuming you don't want to buy one).
Some merchants will have their own mailing lists
-- and may allow you to use them. If so, you could combine theirs
with yours to eventually build a pretty good list. of course,
you can also purchase club and organizational listings, voter
registration lists and keep all addresses of anyone answering
mailed out offers.
A fairly important decision might be necessary
in a promotion like the Windy Bucks example -- you will need to
determine if you want to emphasize your company and idea or simply
promote whatever the clients desire.
Of course, the client's wishes always come first
and you may not have a good promotion idea (yet). If you do, you
will be able to offer some pretty good prices as well as a chance
for merchants to "get on the bandwagon" -- join in a
program that is working. Otherwise, you (and your company name)
stay behind the scenes as an advertising agent that helps design,
print and disseminate your client's materials for their promotion.
In either case, the longer you are at it and the
more qualified will you become -- and the more merchants will
want to take advantage of your experience and services. As the
saying goes: "the harder you work, the luckier you will get."
Before signing up any clients, work out arrangements
with a printer (unless you can do your own). Find out all the
"shortcuts" price breaks and cost of different paper,
ink, color combinations, as well as what sizes the printer can
accommodate and what type of cuts or logos are available (at what
price).
Normally, standard cuts (borders, pointing fingers)
are provided at little or no charge and custom cuts are so much
per square inch.
Note that you can usually save money by having
more than one made at a time. Standard coupons should be in the
3 x 8 inch range, but always sized so that you can get as many
as possible on a single sheet of standard or legal sized paper
(to save $$).
Your cost for printing good quality single color
coupons should be in the 2 to 5 cents per page range (depending
on quantity, how many prices you check and how well you bargain).
Using colored paper and inks can increase the
effect without much extra cost (in comparison to two colors of
ink or color printing).
Mailing list addresses run about a half cent each;
envelopes one to 7 cents each, postage 10-13 cents, and your bulk
mailing permit about $50 over year after the initial permit.
Printing costs can be lowered by designing and
keeping general formats and merely substituting internal copy
for clients.
One color ink is cheaper than two; black and white
is much cheaper than color, colored paper and/or various ink colors
are cheaper and almost as effective as two color printing (which
requires two "runs" through the press).
Some local printers are quite expensive, while
others will want your business enough to "deal" (The
more business you can bring them, the more "clout" you
will have).
If you have or can hire a desktop publishing system,,
you can prepare "camera ready" masters that can be reproduced
inexpensively by a photo offset printer (small runs can be handled
by copy services).
Note that some of your clients will provide their
own material (from their home offices) -- either to copy or ready
to mail. You may also be able to save by compiling your own mailing
lists (see B235).
Finally, you should offer "exclusive"
mailings, where you mail out client's material -- for a significantly
price of course. It may be worth it to a client because you have
the know-how, production facilities and the bulk rate permit.
They certainly don't want to believe their product
is not good! Your advice should always be honest in the sense
that you first advise them on how to be effective; second, how
to save money, and third, according to your profit margin.
You also should be extremely careful not to get
in between rival clients or appear to be favoring one over the
other.
Never discuss one client with another (if you
talk about one, you will talk about all of them). Just "steer"
them away from advertising or layouts that would appear to compete
directly through your services.
Finally, be especially wary of "distress
orders." Many businesses, when they are on the brink of disaster
will try to bolster their position through heavy advertising.
trouble is that if it doesn't work, the advertising is added to
their list of unpaid bills. Don't be their "last resort."
BUSINESS SOURCES
BIG CITY LITHOGRAPH, 550 N. Claremont Blvd.,Claremont,
CA 91711. Photo offset printer.
THE PRINTING FACTORY, Box 27, Nesconset, NY 11767.
Printers of mail order materials.
GRAPHICS ARTS TECHNICAL, 4615 Forbes Ave.,Pittsburgh,
PA 15214. Printing supplies for the home printer.
TURNBAUGH PRINT SUPPLY, 104 S. Sporting Hill Rd.,Mechanicsburg,
PA 17055. 717/737/5637. sells new and used printing presses and
supplies.
EMPRINT, 329 Gunkel, Dayton, OH 45410, 513/2523-1452.
Small used offset printing presses.
DOT PASTEUP SUPPLY CO., Box 369, Omaha, NE 68101.
Free catalog of paste-up supplies for making newsletters, advertisements,
flyers, etc.
DUPLIPRINTERS, INC., 222/226 Broadway, Newburgh,
NY 12550. sells kits for in-home printing; sales and dealerships.
Starter kit - $72.
COUP-PAK, 585 Stewart Ave.,Garden City, NY 11530.
Information on an advertising coupon business without investment.
DOVER PUBLICATIONS, INC., 31 East 2nd St.,Mineola,
NY 11051. Discount books, clip art, stencils, etc.
QUILL CORPORATION, 100 Schelter Rd.,Lincolnshire,
IL 60917-4700, 312/634-4800. Office supplies.
SWEDCO, Box 29, Mooresville, NC 28115. 3 line
rubber stamps - $3; business cards - $13 per thousand.
ZPS, Box 581, Libertyville, IL 60048-2556. Business
cards (raised print - $11.50 per K) and letterhead stationery.
Will print your copy ready logo or design, even whole card.
WALTER DRAKE, 4119 Drake Bldg.,Colorado Springs,
CO 80940. Short run business cards (250 - $3), stationery, etc.
Good quality, but no choice of style or color.

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