Showing posts with label newsletter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label newsletter. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

How to ramp up marketing for a recovery

We're seeing a difference in the way our various clients are marketing right now.

The entrepreneurial, smaller to mid-size companies are continuing to put up a good fight. They're either marketing aggressively and continuously, or adding new capabilities such as Web sites to augment their sales efforts. Our largest corporate clients are, in some cases, a different story. More oriented toward detailed budgeting and do-or-die profit projections (as well as being observed by anxious shareholders) their marketing has been somewhat more cautious, with projects going on hold or reduced in scope, and decisions put off by higher-ups until the next quarter or so.

As marketers, of course we're pro-marketing. You can't hide your way out of a recession. Silence is NOT golden in this case. However, as strategists, we're also sympathetic to the way different organizations must do business.

So... what's quick, affordable and can yield results exciting enough to stimulate the next activity?

Create a single initiative to motivate your customers. Run an End the Recession Promotion. If customers buy a particular new product or open an account, you give them a related gift or incentive... or perhaps a second product free.

Get people together. There's no better way to laugh in the face of adversity than to make clear that your company is not taking part in any further downturn. Mind you, this get-together is special. It's one in which you make your new energy, direction or differentiation clear either through an important announcement, an incentive toward buying your newest and greatest offering or a funny and motivational speech directed toward the audience's interests. Build relationships, and then follow up after the event.

Call the media! Do you have a new product, market or major initiative? Celebrate it with a press conference. Include (as appropriate) product demonstrations, a tour of the manufacturing facility or an introduction to the creative force behind the new idea... you know, like meeting Steve Jobs.

Do it online. Spring clean your Web site. Does your Web site bore even you? Does it look like your Uncle Leon designed it? The Web is very important now as your public face. Use it to inform, inspire, communicate, and (yes!) perhaps even sell. It's an investment that will pay you back.

Become a thought leader. Write a bylined article (or we'll do it for you) about where your industry, or its technologies, or consumer demand is going. Publish it in publications that your prospects read. Reprint it and send it out to prospects. Let your salespeople hand it out as yet more evidence of your expertise.

Start a GOOD newsletter. Let it convey what's new, why customers are lucky to work with you, why now is the time to invest in what you want to sell. Do it at least twice a year. E-news or print... it's up to you.

Partner with another company. You sell window treatments, they sell windows. For a limited time, customers who buy windows get a 40% discount on any of your fashionable designs!

Add your own idea here. Inaction isn't useful, but daring outreach is. You'll be glad, whether in three months, six or a year that you moved aggressively while others did not. What will work for you?

Monday, October 27, 2008

Don't slash that marketing budget just yet.

[caption id="attachment_225" align="alignleft" width="114" caption="No, you aren't throwing it to the wind - really!"]

Of course the economy is shaky now, that's pretty obvious. But let's say you're a marketing VP and your manager awaits your 2009 marketing budget. Or you own your company and need to decide...

What to do?

Impassioned self-interest aside, I'm going to suggest you continue to manage a solid marketing program. But how can you justify it to your boss... or yourself?

The big picture:

-The US government is pouring its heart and soul (and its apparently endless "spare" cash for which we'll pay later) into an economic recovery plan so unprecedentedly massive that chances are good it will have a positive impact during 2009. (Okay, chances are maybe 55-45, but anyway...)

-Even though McCain has now assured us that he will win, there's a very big chance that he won't. And that is good news for the economy even in the short term. Barack Obama is a rock star. He'll start his term with a groundswell of excitement among the public, both here and abroad, and that will support optimism and some economic improvements - even now, many Americans are optimistic that the economy will improve. Consumer confidence matters a lot.

-Marketers have better tools than they did in the past. As a prime example, detailed return-on-investment analytics mean that marketers understand (and can defend!) how specific marketing investments are panning out and no longer feel a pressing need to scale back for the sake of short-term savings.

-A recession does not mean that business stops in its tracks. In fact, some sectors continue to do well. Selling to the military? Selling products to kids (believe it or not, that's one of the last places some families cut); health care products; anything that makes business, the home, or life itself more efficient; or anything that demonstrably saves money - you have an opportunity to shine right now. Oh, yes, and therapists apparently do very well in these times, but that's just a side note!

-Not in such a great sector? Still, business, even if slower, goes on. Your smart marketing helps improve your market share while competitors are pulling back and missing opportunities.

-Pulling back and losing business is a vicious cycle. Cutting your marketing is a good way to start a downward journey.

-In all this, it pays to be smart. Being consultative, showing you have your prospect's interests at heart, showing how your product or service solves a problem... now is not the time for vapid or unfocused marketing - as if there ever is such a time!

The little picture:

-Okay, if you have to cut a little bit from the budget, even after all I've tried to tell you, so be it, Jedi. Please make sure the dollars you do spend work especially hard - public relations, the Web, interactive communications, newsletters, and targeted outreach to very specific prospect groups should always be part of your plan.

It promises to be an interesting year. Your thoughts?