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Grassroots Marketing Anchorage AK

By using grassroots techniques in Anchorage, you can shoestring your way to effective marketing even without a big advertising budget. Try lifting a page from the success stories of these entrepreneurs – or create your own new approach.

Art International
907-258-9900
4000 Old Seward Hwy
Anchorage, AK
Ad Works
(907) 272-6100
5611 Silverado Way Ste D
Anchorage, AK
Marketing Solutions
907-569-7070
3501 Denali St
Anchorage, AK
Alaska Adventure Media
907-677-2900
6921 Brayton Dr
Anchorage, AK
Bradley Advertising Inc
907-258-0635
1840 Bragaw St
Anchorage, AK
Solstice Advertising
907-258-5411
2525 Blueberry Rd
Anchorage, AK
Cutting Edge Marketing
907-277-7927
3904 Hayes St
Anchorage, AK
Gonzalez Marketing
907-562-8640
4450 Cordova St
Anchorage, AK
Anchorage Municipality Tax
907-279-0618
1600 Gambell St
Anchorage, AK
Paragon Distributing
(907) 677-7852
1801 W 47TH Ave
Anchorage, AK
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6 Grassroots Marketing Success Stories

Grassroots marketing is the best way for your startup business to create awareness among potential customers and to establish a brand in whatever markets you’re targeting – local, regional or even national.

There’s nothing fancy about grassroots marketing techniques. All “grassroots” really means in this context is something unconventional that allows your brand to meet your customers where they live and work -- as contrasted with advertising, which depends on mass media to reach them.

“If you’re a startup, you don’t have a ton of money, so grassroots is what you have to do,” says Laura Betterly, a self-described “serial entrepreneur” who now is president of In Touch Media Group, a Clearwater, Fla., marketing concern that she founded.

Creativity and energy are what count in making grassroots marketing effective. Here are vignettes about a half-dozen grassroots techniques that different entrepreneurs have proven to work for them.

Grassroots marketing technique #1:
Attach your signs to telephone poles

When he started up his 1-800-GOTJUNK franchise in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Ben Hopper was having trouble with a tried-and-true grassroots-marketing technique: signs that he plunked into lawns and street corners. In his neck of the woods, homeowners and city work crews looked at them as clutter. So Hopper innovated and began tacking his signs to telephone poles. As long as he keeps them about nine or 10 feet off the ground, no one bothers them.

Author: The Sloan Brothers

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