Marketing Your Way Through a Rough Economy

Sunday, June 6th, 2010

On the Harvard Business School Blog Professor John Quelch provides the following tips for Marketing during tough times (http://hbswk.hbs.edu/item/5878.html):

1. Research the customer. Instead of cutting the market research budget, you need to know more than ever how consumers are redefining value and responding to the recession. Price elasticity curves are changing. Consumers take more time searching for durable goods and negotiate harder at the point of sale. They are more willing to postpone purchases, trade down, or buy less. Must-have features of yesterday are today’s can-live-withouts. Trusted brands are especially valued and they can still launch new products successfully, but interest in new brands and new categories fades. Conspicuous consumption becomes less prevalent.

2. Focus on family values. When economic hard times loom, we tend to retreat to our village. Look for cozy hearth-and-home family scenes in advertising to replace images of extreme sports, adventure, and rugged individualism. Zany humor and appeals on the basis of fear are out. Greeting card sales, telephone use, and discretionary spending on home furnishings and home entertainment will hold up well, as uncertainty prompts us to stay at home but also stay connected with family and friends.

3. Maintain marketing spending. This is not the time to cut advertising. It is well documented that brands that increase advertising during a recession, when competitors are cutting back, can improve market share and return on investment at lower cost than during good economic times. Uncertain consumers need the reassurance of known brands, and more consumers at home watching television can deliver higher than expected audiences at lower cost-per-thousand impressions. Brands with deep pockets may be able to negotiate favorable advertising rates and lock them in for several years. If you have to cut marketing spending, try to maintain the frequency of advertisements by shifting from 30-second to 15-second advertisements, substituting radio for television advertising, or increasing the use of direct marketing, which gives more immediate sales impact.

4. Adjust product portfolios. Marketers must reforecast demand for each item in their product lines as consumers trade down to models that stress good value, such as cars with fewer options. Tough times favor multi-purpose goods over specialized products, and weaker items in product lines should be pruned. In grocery-products categories, good-quality own-brands gain at the expense of national brands. Industrial customers prefer to see products and services unbundled and priced separately. Gimmicks are out; reliability, durability, safety, and performance are in. New products, especially those that address the new consumer reality and thereby put pressure on competitors, should still be introduced, but advertising should stress superior price performance, not corporate image.

5. Support distributors. In uncertain times, no one wants to tie up working capital in excess inventories. Early-buy allowances, extended financing, and generous return policies motivate distributors to stock your full product line. This is particularly true with unproven new products. Be careful about expanding distribution to lower-priced channels; doing so can jeopardize existing relationships and your brand image. However, now may be the time to drop your weaker distributors and upgrade your sales force by recruiting those sacked by other companies.

6. Adjust pricing tactics. Customers will be shopping around for the best deals. You do not necessarily have to cut list prices, but you may need to offer more temporary price promotions, reduce thresholds for quantity discounts, extend credit to long-standing customers, and price smaller pack sizes more aggressively. In tough times, price cuts attract more consumer support than promotions such as sweepstakes and mail-in offers.

7. Stress market share. In all but a few technology categories where growth prospects are strong, companies are in a battle for market share and, in some cases, survival. Knowing your cost structure can ensure that any cuts or consolidation initiatives will save the most money with minimum customer impact. Companies such as Wal-Mart and Southwest Airlines, with strong positions and the most productive cost structures in their industries, can expect to gain market share. Other companies with healthy balance sheets can do so by acquiring weak competitors.

8. Emphasize core values. Although most companies are making employees redundant, chief executives can cement the loyalty of those who remain by assuring employees that the company has survived difficult times before, maintaining quality rather than cutting corners, and servicing existing customers rather than trying to be all things to all people. CEOs must spend more time with customers and employees. Economic recession can elevate the importance of the finance director’s balance sheet over the marketing manager’s income statement. Managing working capital can easily dominate managing customer relationships. CEOs must counter this. Successful companies do not abandon their marketing strategies in a recession; they adapt them.

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Join us for a Brandeli Webinar on May 12–Maximize Your Marketing ROI!

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

Increase your marketing effectiveness.  

Reduce your overall marketing costs.  

Upgrade your brand potential.  

 

To learn how, join us for an introductory tour of Brandeli.  Brandeli is an online communications platform that provides the brand architecture and marketing functionality you need to prevail in today’s hyper-competitive market.  With its robust personalization and variable messaging features, Brandeli gives you the power to instantaneously flex and adapt your communications to specific audiences and changing market conditions.Brandeli

provides organizations with the ability to create, manage, produce and disseminate their internal and external brand communication assets through a secure online portal.  With Brandeli you can quickly and easily create an intuitive and dynamic brand management environment operating in real-time.  Your Brandeli portal is available 24/7 to the groups you select such as employees, customers, vendors, sales representatives, and product distributors - no matter where they are!  Users simply log in to their individual account through your Brandeli portal, access the brand assets available to them, customize or edit their chosen materials, then place their order to be delivered to the address they have specified.  What are some of the things you can do with Brandeli

?
THE BASICS:  business cards, folders, letterhead, envelopes, etc.
SALES COLLATERAL:  brochures, sell sheets, catalogs, flyers, training maunals, letters, etc.
CUSTOMER COMMUNICATIONS:  newsletters, brochures, welcome kits, magazines, magalogs, postcards, etc.
CORPORATE COMMUNICATIONS:  letters, presentations, media releases, brochures, annual reports, etc.
1:1 MARKETING:  data-driven personalization of printed/web-based materials using acquired lists or data from your databases.
PERSONALIZED EMAIL CAMPAIGNS:  with tracking capabilities and Personalized URL components.
E-STORE:  for branded apparel/premiums, collateral and any other product.
TRAINING MATERIALS:  presentations, handbooks, etc.

 

Title:

 

How to Maximize Marketing ROI wth Brandeli

     

Date:

 

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

     

Time:

 

11:00 AM - 12:00 PM EDT

 

After registering you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the Webinar.

 

 

System Requirements
PC-based attendees
Required: Windows® 7, Vista, XP, 2003 Server or 2000

 

Macintosh®-based attendees
Required: Mac OS® X 10.4.11 (Tiger®) or newer

 

Space is limited.
Reserve your Webinar seat now at:
https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/574578689

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Cost vs. Benefit Analysis

Monday, December 21st, 2009

‘Tis the season to get your final budgets together before welcoming the new year, and although the focus is inevitably going to be on numbers, the question really is not how many dollars–but what is the return on those dollars. That’s where measurability has to be part of your marketing budget planning. Not just ‘how much will we allocate to which media’, but ‘for $X spent we expect $X multipled by 1.7 in increased revenue.’ The trick is to find data to support these kind of statements. That’s why tracking and evaluating your marketing efforts throughout the year (not just at crunch time) is so important.

Make having a continual Cost vs. Benefit analysis of your marketing efforts a resolution for 2010!

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What Does It Take to Succeed?

Monday, October 19th, 2009

Wondering what it takes to succeed from a marketing perspective in the coming year? Then we highly recommend reading this:

http://www.boozallen.com/media/file/HD_Marketing_2010.pdf

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