Hey guy's,
Was wondering how most of you advertise.
In all the years I have been into cb and ham radio repair, I have never did any kind of advertising. Only word of mouth.
Most of my repiar work deals with older tube equipment. And a lot of it.
I do repair newer state of the art equipment but I love the old stuff.
I would say that 50% of my repairs are local. 50 miles and less. 40% is 50 to 100 miles. The remaining 10% comes from Florida to Virginia.
Well yesterday I decided to run down to the local dollar store and buy some floresent poster board and a thick black magic marker. Came home and made some simple signs with phone number:
The Radio Shop
CB-Marine-Ham
Radio Repair
I put these up yesterday around 5:30pm at several intersections. I live in the sticks here. And already got a dozen phone calls. Should of thought about that sooner. Most of the locals around here do not even know I am here.
Dont get me wrong. I stay as busy as I want to. But you can not beat the walk in simple repairs either. Some of the stuff I work on may take many days on the repair bench. That makes for slow income.
I yet to sale any new stuff. Radios, antennas, ect. I may start stocking some cb and vhf antennas soon and maybe a radio or 2. I have been selling used stuff. Icoms, Kenwood rigs.
Just thought I share.
Business is good.
Was wondering how most of you advertise.
In all the years I have been into cb and ham radio repair, I have never did any kind of advertising. Only word of mouth.
Most of my repiar work deals with older tube equipment. And a lot of it.
I do repair newer state of the art equipment but I love the old stuff.
I would say that 50% of my repairs are local. 50 miles and less. 40% is 50 to 100 miles. The remaining 10% comes from Florida to Virginia.
Well yesterday I decided to run down to the local dollar store and buy some floresent poster board and a thick black magic marker. Came home and made some simple signs with phone number:
The Radio Shop
CB-Marine-Ham
Radio Repair
I put these up yesterday around 5:30pm at several intersections. I live in the sticks here. And already got a dozen phone calls. Should of thought about that sooner. Most of the locals around here do not even know I am here.
Dont get me wrong. I stay as busy as I want to. But you can not beat the walk in simple repairs either. Some of the stuff I work on may take many days on the repair bench. That makes for slow income.
I yet to sale any new stuff. Radios, antennas, ect. I may start stocking some cb and vhf antennas soon and maybe a radio or 2. I have been selling used stuff. Icoms, Kenwood rigs.
Just thought I share.
Business is good.