The 411 on marketing & advertising your small business

A Q&A with Danielle Centofanti-Davidson, owner of Main St. Business Strategies, and Joanne Louis-Paul, Business Development Director and writer with Rivertown Magazine

Danielle Centofanti-Davidson is a Tarrytown, NY native who worked and lived in NYC after graduating Marist College. After 9+ years working in PR and advertising for national brands, she found her way back to the Hudson Valley and started supporting the marketing needs of local businesses. 

Now, she’s the Owner and Lead Marketer behind Main St. Business Strategies, a boutique agency catering to small and medium-sized businesses across the Hudson Valley and tri-state area. 

Primarily focusing on marketing consulting, brand partnerships, social media strategy, and PR, Danielle supports clients spanning retail, manufacturing, interior design, floristry, and lifestyle makers, just to name a few. Pop over to her IG to see what she and her clients have going on!

Joanne Louis-Paul, Rivertown Magazine

Born, raised, and gratefully living in Rockland County, Joanne Louis-Paul believes in the power of community and is passionate about conscious consumerism and supporting local economies. 

In addition to her work with Rivertown Magazine, Joanne is the Founder of the ever-growing Hudson Valley United Freelancers + Entrepreneurs community and the Co-founder/COO of Hudson Valley Sustainable Fashion Week.

Relationship-oriented collaboration is essential to survival, so all the work she does – be it partnering with Rockland and Bergen Counties’ best and brightest businesses or connecting entrepreneurs with important resources and each other – is held together by this central mission. 

How we help Hudson Valley businesses with their marketing and advertising strategies

Q: Joanne, what’s the primary goal of your role at Rivertown Magazine? 

A: I’m a Business Development Director and writer with Rivertown Magazine. My dual skillset allows me to work with small business owners to design a cohesive advertising strategy that fits into their overall marketing goals while finding their standout story and bringing that to life for potential clients and customers through beautiful editorial content.

Q: And what is the core goal of your work with Main St. Business Strategies, Danielle

A: My primary goal is to bring approachable, creative marketing strategies to small and medium-sized businesses in NY and the tri-state area. I help businesses communicate what their real differentiator is. Whether it be their product or service, in-store experience, customer service, ethos, or mission statement, each business has something that inherently sets it apart from the rest and I work with business owners to creatively market that. The end goal is making sure the businesses that make up our community and economy are long-lasting.  

Advertising and marketing: Give us the 411

Q: Joanne, knowing advertising is typically part of a business’ wider marketing strategy and budget, what type of businesses do well advertising with Rivertown Magazine? 

A: Our magazine is best suited for business owners who know exactly what they’re promoting and in what timeframe. Since we specialize in editorial-style advertising, businesses with compelling stories also do well in our publication.

Q: Danielle, do you have any tips for businesses looking to break into advertising as part of their marketing strategy? 

A: First, it’s helpful to understand how marketing and advertising work together. Marketing should be looked at as the overarching strategy guiding a business’ roadmap to achieving a goal. Included within that roadmap is advertising, which sits alongside PR, organic communication channels (social media, web), partnerships, etc, and it’s intended to garner measurable reach against a specific target audience using paid tactics. As a business, it’s important to consider which audience you want to reach before spending advertising dollars - this requires a little bit of research. 

Quality content in marketing is king for businesses, publications, and audiences. 

Q: Since Rivertown Magazine is making its comeback after a pandemic hiatus, what are some new things businesses and locals can expect, Joanne

A: We are excited to announce that we have new owners with over 20 years of experience in media and publishing. Alain Begun and Bruce Apar have been successfully running River Journal and River Journal North in Westchester for many years, so we at Rivertown now have access to those publications and their demographics, as well. 

Locals can expect fun new recurring features in each issue, including Meet the Maker, where I’ll be interviewing a different Rockland-based artisan and highlighting their work.

Q: Danielle, what’s one area of marketing clients are most overwhelmed by and often shy away from that they shouldn’t?

A: Content marketing. Content is an incredibly overused word with a definition that’s become more and more unclear, but at its core, it’s really less daunting than we’ve built it up to be. Basically, “content” is how we highlight what differentiates our business from another using words and/or visuals. Having at least one idea that can be communicated effectively in two to three different formats – whether it’s a blog post or social media video, for example – is hugely beneficial. Always consider repurposing a single idea into a number of versions for various platforms and spaces! 

Danielle Centofanti Davidson

Owner & Founder of Main St. Business Strategies

Previous
Previous

Heard It On Main St. with Nicole Vallario, Owner of Falena

Next
Next

Marketing lessons small businesses can learn from 2023’s ACADEMY AWARD® Nominations