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Adding Common Sense to Your Stallion's Marketing Campaign "I’ve spent countless of dollars on advertising my stallion and have not sold the number of breedings I thought I would. What am I doing wrong?" This is a question I have been asked many times over the years and the answer is always the same: You need to develop a strong marketing campaign. The ingredients that go into creating this campaign are similar, no matter what budget you have to spend. What will differ is how you tailor that advertising, customizing it to fit your particular needs. Of course, we all feel that our stallion is not only the prettiest and most athletic, but also the most prepotent, easily passing on his superb conformation, movement and temperament to his offspring. However, in order to convince mare owners to breed to your stallion, you need to figure out how to effectively communicate your stallion's assets so they share your vision. Marketing begins with identifying the benefits your product has to offer, which in the case of a stallion would be the positive traits he passes on to his offspring. Advertising is how we communicate those benefits to the audience we want to reach, in this case mare owners. Before you spend a dollar on advertising, here are a few things I feel are paramount in planning how you will communicate your stallion's advantages and create a strong marketing campaign: (1) Identify Your Stallion's Strong Points--Whether it's a demand for a particular bloodline, an extreme physical trait, a unique consistency or a superior ability, you first have to objectively decide what it is that your stallion offers. How many times have we all heard "He sires halter AND performance winners"? That’s all fine and dandy, but aren’t we also told every beer tastes great yet has less calories? Doesn’t every car have the power of four-wheel drive yet handles like a luxury vehicle? Touting a generic benefit, one that can apply to most breeding stallions, yet does not tell a mare owner what makes your particular stallion stand out from the others. Ask yourself what it is exactly that your stallion has to offer. Have talented trainers and experienced breeders help you determine those qualities. Be objective and leave the "barn-blindness" in the barn. Once you specifically identify what is so special about your horse, finding mare owners looking for those qualities will become easier, your advertising message will be clearer and your spending on advertising will be more efficient. (2) Identify His Offspring's Strong Points--The product you are selling often is not your stallion, it is the quality of the foals your stallion produces. They are four-legged walking billboards and soon it will not matter what your stallion even looks like himself--all that matters is what he puts on the ground. Even if you have never run an ad, built a website or presented your stallion to a crowd, his foals have advertised for him--for better or for worse. Focus on his good foals, and make them your "posterr-children." Get an honest evaluation of your horse’s get to determine the most effective message the foals can display for you. Showcase not only your horse, but those quality mares who have been bred to him. If you have a young stallion without any foals on the ground, he must speak for himself. This is obviously a more difficult challenge as some of the strongest specimens of the breed do not always prove to be great breeding horses, and finding breeders who are willing to take a chance on a young stud can be difficult. Communicate the qualities your horse shows today and his potential as a breeding stallion. Locate the mares you feel will cross with your horse and pick up the phone. Your enthusiasm about your young stallion may go further than you think. Use others' accounts of him by promoting the quality mares that are booked to your stallion. Communicating their owners’ confidence in your horse is paramount. (3) Network– The biggest advocate of your stallion is you and the second is the happy customer. The easiest part of your marketing campaign is the continuing correspondence you have with your breeders. Following the careers and production records of your stallion’s progeny gives you the solid information you need to communicate your stallion's ability to produce winning offspring. For instance, if you find out he is siring regional or national champions in western pleasure, you can tout this in your ads or in speaking with mare owners. Imagine picturing several of those winning offspring in an ad with your stallion. Not only does this demonstrate your stallion's prepotency, but it also shows that you support those people who have invested in your stallion and makes your customers feel valued. Happy customers are the number one source for repeat business. (4) Follow Up--This is one of the most overlooked ingredients of a marketing plan, yet it is one of the most important. Spending thousands of dollars a year on an ad campaign is wasted when a perspective breeder waits too long for a breeding contract, or cannot understand it for lack of clarity. They are likely never breed to your stallion again if their semen was not delivered when promised, or if the person on the phone taking their request cannot supply them with the proper information. You have invited people to respond to an advertisement. Be ready when they do. The business transactions must stay clean and clear. Is your breeding facility set up that way? (5) Create an Affordable Advertising Budget-- When planning a budget for your stallion’s advertising, stay within your means. As your stallion’s breeding career grows and he begins to fill his book, you can gradually increase your advertising budget. For instance, you may start out with a smaller ad in a stallion directory, move up to a larger part-page ad and eventually take out a full-page ad. Remember if your stallion does not live up to your claims, or you can not provide good customer service, all the money spent on your positive advertising will be wasted and instead heard as a negative message. (6) Create a Quality, Unified Look-- Whether it is your horse’s name, a symbol, or photographic image, do not reinvent the wheel every time you place an ad or run a DVD. Making sure your advertising is unified in whatever you do to promote your horse is important and adds to brand awareness. Create a look that represents the quality you would like to be associated with your stallion and stick with it. (7) Spread Out Your Advertising--Once you've set up a budget, don't put all your advertising dollars in one communication tool. Spread it over several media, or communication channels to get the best exposure for your stallion. Advertising Tools In today's world, there are numerous avenues for advertising your stallion, including print advertisements, websites, emails, online classifieds, direct mail, videos and DVDs, interactive CDs and live presentations. Here are some of the advantages of each advertising tool.
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