Desk Jockey
Member
- Joined
- Oct 9, 2006
- Messages
- 64,833
- Name
- Rico Suave
Brent folds them into origami swans.I don't get the shape of that card.
I do agree the new cards are going to work out perfectly and geared towards my target market. We've already paid... ...thanked her for the referral.I have a call center answer my phones and they have a new lady there, so on Saturday she referred a 3 story whole house cleaning to DA Burns..
The cards do look great and should work for your intended audience. Still need to incorporate the origami swans.
We've already paid... ...thanked her for the referral.
I know what you mean about porty work. Since we're getting more tiny scraps of carpet in high-rise downtown condos and the parking rates keeping going up we've decided to charge the same way we charge for yachts and airplanes - .78 psf and a $175 minimum. Should we call our... your call center and let them know?![]()

Ok...another women's perspective. I like #1 better, but to be honest, neither one get's me wet. (Yes I just said that!).
When appealing to residential...the family pic will make all the difference. Can't tell you how much positive feedback we received when we made the switch to the family shot from "John posing with the truck", but it seems you are going after commercial. So this may not be the right marketing message....
Your phone number should be much more prominent.
Layout should appeal more to business class. The examples posted were great. Seriously consider investing the $150-$200 in having a graphic designer professional do your card. If you don't have one, I'm happy to recommend one who can work with you via email and send you files back and forth. You are a professional, trying to attract other professionals (and I would think you want the high end professional buildings....lawyers, medical facilities, high end apartment complexes, banks, financial investment firms and the like right???) The card you have just doesn't convey that.
Great angle for residential, but seriously consider scrapping it and starting over. (sorry...but you wanted honest feedback).
Very true with what you say, I think one of the biggest problems with O/O is they make their own marketing material.. which usually isn't very good. We gotta stick to what we are good at and sub out the things we aren't.I like #1 better, but to be honest, neither one get's me wet. (Yes I just said that!).

