Posts tagged media spend
More marketing for less: Think inside the box.
May 26th
Constant innovation should be a central part of your business strategy but when the budgets get crunched, there is still plenty of value in the “old-school” marketing basics.
Bargains in traditional media. Marketing dollars are moving toward Internet marketing, but there is still a place for TV, radio and newspaper — and the value has NEVER BEEN BETTER! Newspaper ad sales were down 38% in 2008 – it’s a buyer’s market. More than 90% of Americans spend an average of 236 minutes a day with TV. I recently worked with a customer who was paying $9 for a 30-second commercial on a targeted cable TV demographic.
Focus on existing customers. Up-sell, cross-sell and micro-market to your existing customers. It’s 80 percent less expensive to sell more to existing clients than attracting new ones. How have their needs changed during the recession? There are probably new product and service niches being created with your valued customers. Go find them before the other guy!
Is your website alive? You’ve probably already invested in the website infrastructure and this is a highly cost-effective way to attract new customers. Is your site aligned with current customer needs? Does it have fresh, compelling content? A bold call to action? How is it differentiated from competitors?
Service essentials. Follow up on every lead quickly. 88 percent of people are happy to hear from a vendor after download within 24 hours. Waiting 96 hours drops that number by half. And think about using personal, hand-written notes to cut through the clutter and really delight your customers. Writing a letter … now that is REALLY old school!
Destroy complacency. I see so many customers spending money on advertising channels simply because this is what they have always done. Are your channels still relevant and targeted? Have your customers shifted to another gathering place? Here’s a more detailed article on this topic: http://tiny.cc/9VYRI
Measure what you treasure. It takes no capital investment to make sure the way you measure your success is still appropriate and driving the right actions in your business. Is your marketing plan integrated and measurable?
Re-discover email marketing. This can be an easy and inexpensive way to stay in front of customers, especially if you have a built-in mailing list. This is a tricky channel, but done right, can be highly effective.
Recession Essentials Part 2: Defend your marketshare
Apr 28th

This is part two of a series providing the essential marketing strategies you MUST drive during this economic downturn.
Like a hungry wolf circling the weakest lamb, the recession will cull the weakest competitors in any industry. When you get to the other side, will you be gasping for life or positioned to be the leader of the pack for the long-term? That is the idea behind imperative number two: DEFEND YOUR MARKETSHARE.
First, a caveat. If you’re burning the furniture to heat the office, you’re excluded from this conversation. I understand that desperate times call for desperate measures. But as I look out for you, gentle reader, I want to assure that you have the best marketing wind (hot air?) filling your sail and puffing you toward a profitable future. And in that case, we need to talk about your budget.
At this point in the economic downturn, the pressure is really on. Accounting wants you to cut across the board. Manufacturing is pressuring you to do anything to increase short-term sales and reduce inventories. As a marketing professional, you are sworn to look-out for the long-term interests of the company. So before you take a hatchet to the budget, please lodge a management appeal for sanity, armed with your quiver of marketing fundamentals.
Here’s the first fundamental. Cutting your budget without a view of your competitor’s marketing activity is foolish. If competitors are INCREASING their ad spend while you cut, you will certainly lose customers, and maybe lose big. Remember, we’re trying to be the wolf, not the lamb by the end of this recession.
Second, what do you know about the economic health of your competitors? Do you need to simply OUTLAST them? I recently met with a metals industry executive who had returned from a customer visit. The customer told him that that his major competitor was on the ropes. Although my friend had lost 60% of his business in 12 months, he decided to INCREASE his spend on sales and marketing activities rather than let his competitor come up for air. Now that is the wolf thing to do.
Third, don’t cut your budget by an equal proportion across the board. Not all products and not all customers are equally profitable. Cut from the bottom and keep spending where you can maintain or even grow share.
Fourth, adjust your budget to focus on short-term activities aimed at driving marketshare. Here are some ideas:
- Focus on selling more to existing customers. Acquiring new customers is time-consuming and expensive.
- Pause marketing campaigns aimed at “feel good” values like green and sustainability and focus on projects that deliver short-term value to your customers. I’m not here to help you be PC. I’m here to help you stay employed!
- Consider spending ad dollars on couponing and specials. Coupon use is up more than 40% in 12 months.
- Re-negotiate your advertising contracts. It’s a buyer’s market. Plow those savings into customer retention.
- Use small incremental spends to improve web sales and eCommerce. If you already have a website, optimizing is almost always the cheapest way to acquire new customers.
Finally, I want to address social media as a part of a recession marketing plan. It’s free, and that is a good thing. It’s getting more buzz than Britney Spears on the town with Paris Hilton. So I know it’s calling you, calling you … like the mythological siren’s irresistible song, luring mariners to their destruction on the rocky islands.
Keep an open mind in this area. Keep experimenting and learning. But be cautious where you spend your precious time and resources. The potential of the social media platforms is undeniably vast and we are starting to see some interesting lead-generating applications. But no company in the throes of a meltdown is going to Twitter its way to profitability unless they are, well, Twitter. Prepare to be flogged and shown the door if you hand your boss a recession marketing plan built around Facebook.
OK, you’re prepared now. Go forth, prey on your weak competitors, and don’t give an inch of marketshare!






You’re in marketing for one reason: Grow.
Grow your company, reputation, customers, impact, profits. Grow yourself. This is a community that will help. It will stretch your mind, connect you to fascinating people, and provide some fun along the way. I am so glad you’re here.
-Mark Schaefer









