Tuesday, March 31, 2009

I'm sick of bailouts

Has everyone lost their minds?

The #1 rule of marketing (and business) is that you must create value for somebody else. Not only create value, but create value such that others are willing to pay you for your offering because it is more valuable to them than the dollar amount of the price you are asking is to them.

For those who are not creating value that people are willing to pay for, the remedy of the market is for you to evolve, adapt or go away on your own terms. The worst thing that can happen is for somebody to come along and bail you out and give you false hope.

If you are not creating value for others such that they are willing to pay for it enough to keep you in business, then your demise is ensured and actually the best thing that can happen for all of us. Otherwise we are simply subsidizing products and services that we don't want enough to pay for--we're just doing it through higher taxes which is always less efficient than paying directly. If you don't want what I offer today at my price, why would you want the same thing tomorrow after a government markup?

I like you and all, but if I like what you offer I'll buy it directly, thank you very much. I don't want government bailouts that fool you into thinking I want what you are selling enough to pay for it. The latter is unfair to both of us, is just delaying your inevitable demise and simply enriching politicians who seek more power over you and me both.

Focus on your value proposition and we will all be OK.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Marketers adjusting plans due to recession

A new Dihedral Group (TDG) survey conducted on behalf of Aquent and the American Marketing Association shows that the current recession is fundamentally different from previous ones and reveals ways that marketers are finding pragmatic solutions to deal with the current environment in which they find themselves.

One of the main ways this recession is different from previous ones is the near ubiquitous presence of digital forms of communication due primarily to the widespread use and near total acceptance of the Internet as a valuable business communications channel when compared to previous recessions.

The study finds a few things that marketers may or may not find surprising such as:

  • 40% of all participants in the survey are in a hiring freeze and 45% cited that year-over-year revenue has declined

  • Companies are relying more on their agencies to do more with less and companies are choosing to use outside marketing consultants rather than hire, train and retain in-house talent

  • More and more marketers are trying to better leverage social media in 2009

  • In general, marketing managers are looking to expand and grow their efforts in digital marketing and online initiatives as a cost savings measure rather than conduct traditional marketing events such as trade exhibits

  • Hiring managers are looking for marketers with specific skill sets rather than industry experience

    In the study more than 68% of marketers indicated that their marketing initiatives have changed due to the current recession while almost half reported significant or very significant changes in their short-term plans. Many marketers did, thankfully, express their concern for long-term branding strategies and are being careful not to undermine them in exchange for short-term revenue capture.

    Maybe professional marketers are indeed capable of learning from the past.

    Here's a link to the study
  • Saturday, March 14, 2009

    Making sense of social media marketing



    Don't bother reading any books on this topic, just watch this 10 minute video from Perry Belcher. This is, perhaps, the most concise and easy-to-understand explanation of social media marketing that I've seen.

    Thursday, March 12, 2009

    15 Tips For Better Marketing That Will Revitalize Your Business

    By Andrew Ballenthin

    After reviewing over 200 business responses to Groups on LinkedIn we picked 15 of the strongest themes and boiled them down to the bare bones of inspiration that with some daring and leadership can change your business's future. Regardless of competition, the economy, your customers or your financial position it is possible to reinvent or reshape your business.

    1. Think Extra Gigantic - Instead of watching the numbers shrink or scraggily signal digit growth ask, "How can I reach 10x more customer than before?" There are customers out there but they may be further away. If you market to a city, talk to 10 cities, if you promote to a province/state talk to the country, if you talk to a country go global. Response rates are a percentage game, change the odds.

    2. Rip Up The Marketing/Business Plan - What your business model was 6 and 18 months ago may not be right for the next 18 months. If you are successful, rip it up anyways, there are gigantic changes going on in social, economic and industry structures. If you are struggling, step outside the box and ask who's doing better then you and find a way to imitate and do what they do even better.

    3. Find Your Suppliers Hidden Ace - Ask them how they can pull out all the stops to help your growth. It may be credit terms, price reductions, exclusivity on a new product line, or co-op advertising dollars. They probably have an ace up their sleeve you haven't capitalized on yet.

    4. Ruthlessly Look For What Customers Want - Your customer's know what they want and what will motivate them to take action. Interview one-on-one, hold group discussions, survey, throw a social, run a contest. Your next biggest successes are in your customer's needs not met yet. Don't stop searching until you get a powerful breakthrough. If you can't find it you're not looking hard enough.

    5. Demand to Know Why Prospects Aren't Buying - Within this simple and obvious search an astounding revelation will emerge about what they are looking to buy and from who if not with you. Do not stop until the pattern emerges. When it shows up find a way to give them what they want know matter what you have to do.

    6. Mimic Another Industry - A lot of companies get stuck in, "but that's what our industry does". A close study of an industry that is healthy will reveal different ways to market, brand, sell products/services, manage financials, handle inventory, etc. Or look at a very successful business similar to yours in another country and bring those ideas back home.

    7. Create Mega Contact Databases - With so many advertising budget cuts there are a lot of businesses that compliment what you sell and will be open to co-promoting to your database in return for you talking to there's. With 3 or more companies working together your reach expands exponentially.

    8. Throw Out Everything You Know About Traditional Advertising - A number of major media channels are seeing up to a 40% drop in ad spend and yet customers are still buying. Fearlessly consider any media you may have overlooked. Online spending of every type is steadily increasing. Don't let your competition gain dominance that you can't afford to compete with later.

    9. Create A Ruckus People Will Talk About - Break out of what was safe advertising before, chances are you are nearly invisible by doing what you did 18 months ago. A huge amount of business is circulating by word of mouth. Swallow the fear and try something dramatic so people talk.

    10. Mercilessly Rip Apart Your Product/Services - Part of what is stopping your success is lethargic lines. If your customers are happily buying or occasionally buying, get rid of those services. Do whatever you have to do find out what your customer's are demanding and watch sales take off.

    11. Learn How To Do Right Brain Marketing - This is a new term we've coined to help all the traditional marketers look at the world differently. An undeniable social trend is emerging for mass micro marketing where customers want real time transparent, human, non-selling relationships. This online relationship defies the old rules but pays off by gaining interactive brand loyalty.

    12. Become Crazily Visible - As competition cuts back on advertising spend customers hold off on spending as everyone says "these are bad times". Don't pay attention. Find every way to be visible more often, in more places, with more interesting things to follow than anyone in your industry. If budgets are tight there spectacular ways to go online and get exposure to millions of customers without spending a penny in cash, but it will get spent in time building a "cashfree" visibility.

    13. Do A Shiny Brand Makeover - It's possible your customer's don't see you because they literally don't see you. As your customers revaluate who they want to buy from they may have crossed you off the list. But... if you simply repackage with a bright new shiny look (appropriate to your market) you may change their perception of who you are and give you another chance.

    14. Get A PHD in Basics - A spectacular number of businesses are going back to good old selling relationships, retraining, CRM (customer relationship management), financials, cost management, etc. Guess what - they're actually kicking but and making money with really simple ideas.

    15. Give Bad News the Boot - Ever notice that when you want to see a silver car it suddenly seems like everyone is driving one? We are our own worst enemy at seeing with the wrong perspective. Ask yourself repeatedly "where are the big wins?" Ask everyone around you; ask staff, customers, and other companies. Literally within days a totally different picture will start emerging.

    Article by Andrew Ballenthin, President of Sol Solutions. When you need to stand apart from your competition talk to Sol Solutions for your competitive branding, advertising and marketing strategies. For more information go to our blog http://www.communitymarketing.typepad.com or follow us on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/solsolutions.

    My passion has been driven by the enjoyment of blending creative with need for practical application and results orientation. Having worked with international corporations, national businesses and entrepreneurs it's easy to switch hats and scale for the vision and budget of the organization.

    Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Andrew_Ballenthin http://EzineArticles.com/?15-Tips-For-Better-Marketing-That-Will-Revitalize-Your-Business&id=2070038