How to Make Your Marketing Work TogetherLaunching a PR campaign, building a website, buying an ad: These actions won't automatically bring in the business, but what will is combining your marketing efforts.

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

However it appears to the public, don't kid yourself into thinking that marketing is show business. It is not.

Think of marketing as sell business, as solve-a-problem business, as create-a-desire business, but don't think for a moment that you're around to entertain the throngs. No matter how much you may advertise, marketing is definitely not advertising.

Related:200 Marketing Weapons

Sure, advertising is seen by a lot of people. And there was a time when it worked. But it certainly doesn't work now nearly as well as it used to.

If you have a website, don't expect it to work. Planning an ad campaign? Expect grief. How about public relations? Doesn't work as well as it used to. So what does work?

Marketing combinations work. If you have a website and you advertise it vigorously and you run a publicity program to tie in with it, they will all work--each part of the formula contributing its own particular magic.

That's why advertising is not marketing, and email is not marketing, and telephone calls are not marketing--not alone they're not. But as part of a combination, they're lethal. It's the wise use of many of them.

Related:Five Ways to Gear Up Your Marketing for the Holiday Shopping Season

Marketing Combinations
We know a successful bed seller with a mom-and-pop store who chalks up more than $1 million in sales each month and uses only four marketing weapons:

1. Radio commercials that direct people to his website and his showroom.

2. A website that answers questions and directs visitors to his showroom.

3. Trained salespeople who capitalize on the momentum created by the radio and website.

4. The free gift of a comforter, a set of sheets, two pillowcases, and two good pillows which ensures healthy word-of-mouth marketing after the sales.

How expensive is that combination of marketing weapons? Not very expensive--but extremely effective. That should be your goal: marketing that is not very expensive but extremely effective.

Everyone knows that people look online first before making a purchase. So is being online the trick for your business? It is part of the trick, but being online is not marketing.

Many people continue to think that marketing is telemarketing or couponing or social networking. All of those actions are part of marketing, but none of them are the whole deal. Don't think we're still in an age of single-weapon marketing. If you do, you may be the only one left who thinks that way.

Your task is to be aware of all the marketing weapons available to you, to experiment with many of them, and then to identify the combination that provides the highest profit to you.

Here's something else that marketing isn't: brochures. People rush out to produce a brochure, thinking that's all the marketing they'll need. It probably is a very important link in the chain that leads to success, but a brochure certainly is not marketing all by itself. Maybe it used to be, but this is not your parents' generation. It's yours.

Also, dismiss the notion that marketing is complicated. Marketing becomes complicated for people who just cannot grasp the simplicity of marketing. They begin with a marketing plan, then they commit to it.

Related:Apple's Simple Marketing Manifesto

Fortunes are lost regularly by people who expect miracles from marketing. But the marketing business is not the miracle business. It's the patience business. It's the planning business. If you expect miracles, you're going to get ulcers.

Marketing is an opportunity to earn profits with your business, a chance to cooperate with other businesses in your community or your industry, and a process of building lasting relationships. But a miracle worker, it is not.

The Best of Guerrilla Marketing -- Guerrilla Marketing RemThis article is an excerpt fromThe Best of Guerrilla Marketing -- Guerrilla Marketing Remix(Entrepreneur Press, 2011) by Jay Conrad and Jeannie Levinson.

Jay Conrad Levinson is the author ofGuerrilla Marketingand chairman ofGuerrilla Marketing International. Jeannie Levinson is the president of Guerrilla Marketing International and is a founder of the Guerrilla Marketing Association. They are the co-authors ofThe Best ofGuerrilla Marketing -- Guerrilla Marketing Remixfrom Entrepreneur Press and are based in Florida.

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

Business News

'I Can Feel the Rage': 80-Year-Old Couple Charged $120 to Print Boarding Passes Before Flight

The couple was traveling on Ryanair from London to France.

Starting a Business

A Retiree in Florida Started This 'Fun' Remote Side Hustle Out of Boredom. Now She Makes Up to $3,000 a Week.

When Chanda Torrey retired, she looked around for an enjoyable hobby that might also bring in some income. Now she's offering up her playbook to others.

Business News

Pilot Dies In the Bathroom After Flight Departs from Miami. Airline Is 'Deeply Saddened By This Event.'

LATAM Airlines Captain Iván Andaur Santibáñez collapsed midway through the journey, prompting his co-pilots to make an emergency landing.

Growing a Business

这个护士把储蓄500美元变成100美元n in Sales After Sharing Her Hair Care Routine on YouTube. Now She's Revealing Her Secrets to Success.

Courtney Adeleye sold $10 million worth of products out of her home within three years of launch.

Living

6 Things Successful People do Before 9 a.m.

Doing something useful when you feel least like doing anything almost guarantees a productive day.

Business News

Remote Employee Fired for 'Low Keystroke Activity' During Working Hours After 18 Years of Employment

The Australian woman is claiming she was wrongfully terminated and surveilled.