2 minute read

Convoy Creatives

Next Article
Deibler Home Team

Deibler Home Team

DIGITAL MARKETING

Convoy Creatives

Chris Martin provides his clients with the same high level of expertise he used to launch his own business. Early in 2022, the 36-year-old Frederick native established Convoy Creatives to formalize the social media, digital marketing, and design work he had been doing for a decade. “My freelance jobs multiplied to the point that they blossomed into a business,” Martin said. “I started with one or two clients a month. Right now, I have 15.”

Why choose the name Convoy? In the military context, the word suggests a group traveling together for mutual support and protection. “That’s the relationship I like to have with my clients,” Martin explained. “We work together to meet goals.”

Martin knows that every business is different and each business owner has unique goals.

“Some want top-to-bottom marketing, including maintenance and development of their social media presence, and maximizing their digital marketing – which involves engaging with their followers, and tracking analytics,” he said. “Others may just want me to design an eye-catching label for a new or existing product or brand, an album cover, or a T-shirt.”

Martin prefers to take meetings with potential clients face-to-face, so both parties can evaluate whether the relationship will work. “If we both think it’s a good fit, I proceed to create a plan based on what I’ve heard. I find that most clients know intuitively what they need,” he said.

“I especially like being involved with a business that is about to open, or one that has been around forever,” Martin said. “It’s never too early or too late to reach a broader audience, expand your brand, rebrand, or modernize to enter the digital age.” Martin built his expertise through hands-on experience. As a freshman at Frederick Community College, he studied graphic design. He left school to work in the music industry, spending a dozen years touring – primarily as bassist, but also handling his band’s public relations and design needs. Other bands invited him to create artwork for their own albums and T-shirts. A Chamber of Commerce member, Martin prefers to work with Frederick County businesses who share his love of the community. Five percent of Convoy Creatives’ monthly sales go to Martin’s alma mater, Ballenger Creek Elementary School. “The funds go to families and students who can’t afford to pay for lunch. I’ve got them covered,” he said. At quarterly Impact Club meetings, he said, each member donates $100 and votes for one of three nonprofit organization presenters that will receive the total money. In addition, Martin is a newly-appointed member of the board of directors for Housing Frederick, “a nonprofit resource for the housing continuum in Frederick County that will develop partnerships to solve community challenges better served through a united effort.”

convoycreatives@gmail.com • convoycreatives.com

This article is from: