In this high-tech age of point-and-shoot cameras, photo-clad cell phones, sophisticated off-the-shelf printers and real-time Internet access, can anyone really tell the difference between desktop digital and professional print?

“Of course,” you say. Well, prove it.

Show us the difference between a high-quality printed brochure, for example, and a laser-copied counterfeit. SWOT Team, this issue's dilemma is the debate over digital or print. Who's side are you on?

When an organization is trying to build a professional image, should it attempt to save money on professional printing by opting for lesser-quality color copies?

Let us know where you stand on the digital asset divide. Then, after you've leapt over the precipice to one side or the other, read below to see your peers' excellent advice on a less controversial subject: developing a Web content strategy. As always, thank you, for your excellent suggestions.

If you think digital is dead, or if you've never been caught on the Web, write to us and ask our SWOT Team about your dilemma. Tapping into our collective experience, strength and support works. You could win a free copy of our book, A Marketer's Guide to e-Newsletter Publishing.

SWOT Team, unite and make a difference!

• Give advice about this issue's dilemma.

• Read your peers' responses to the previous dilemma (below).

• Submit your own dilemma.

This Issue's Dilemma

SWOT Category: Internal Weakness

Should we save money on color copies or print high-quality materials?

Our director is opting to produce all our brochures on color copiers to save money instead of sending them out to be professionally printed on quality paper. How do I convince him that this is not professional and takes away from the image of the organization that I am working so hard to build up? How do you win the digital versus print argument?

—Anonymous

Previous Dilemma

SWOT Category: External Opportunity

How do you develop a coherent Web marketing strategy?

As President of a hospitality company, I am looking for ways to increase visibility and business online. For example, a small, 22-room, recently renovated historic hotel owned by a nonprofit needs midweek business. Located in a small non-gaming town 25 miles from Las Vegas and minutes from world-class golf, this hotel has the charm of a B&B and offers the privacy and amenities of a boutique hotel. Its new Web site accepts online bookings via a GDS supplier, but there is no coherent online strategy. The sales and marketing budget of $1,500 per month has not been allocated yet.

How do we get more people to the Web site, and once they are there, what ideas can you give me for selling more mid-week bookings? Ultimately, how do we go about developing an effective online marketing strategy?

—Larry Kimball, President, Historic Hospitality, LLC

Summary of Advice Received

Larry, a few themes emerged and overlapped in the helpful advice we received from your peers: research your local customers and prospects; come up with a promotion that will be entice Web visitors to book midweek business; and rely on business-to-business marketing, as well as business to consumer marketing, to advertise this promotion. All of these themes can ultimately support your Web strategy and help shape it to be a more effective means of promoting your hotel.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Hank Stroll (Hank@InternetVIZ.com) is publisher at InternetVIZ, a custom publisher of 24 B2B e-newsletters reaching 490,000 business executives.

Tamara is a writer at InternetVIZ and is available for freelance work.