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Marketing in a downturn economy


Damon SegalWhy should we keep marketing if no one is buying anything? Because even the best brands must carrying on catching the public's eye. Allow me to explain...

You're likely to be sitting in one of three camps.

Camp one: you have a fantastic brand and feel you can make sweeping marketing cutbacks as the brand is strong enough to sell itself even through the downturn.

Camp two: you are a midsize company and are concerned that if you don't make cutbacks, or find a marketing newssolution that works, your business is going to suffer.

Camp three: you have a small business and have no choice but to find ways to save money and marketing seems like the simplest place to start.

All three ways of thinking are wrong. I know you're thinking I'm a marketer so I would say that, so here's why.

If marketing budgets are cut all that really happens is this money is reallocated elsewhere. It then becomes a huge challenge to try to get your budgets increased again later.

Even big brands require marketing through a downturn. It's a basic marketing principle, if people are not told that your service or your product are there, the chances are they will be told about someone else's. Then you will happen lose market share and that's the worst thing to lose right now.

A downturn is the time to refocus your marketing budgets, not cut them. In a survey carried out by MarketingSherpa, 39% of large companies in the US had made cutbacks in marketing by March 08 whilst only 6% of small business had made a cut. In fact, 20% of small businesses had increased their marketing budget.

There was a 36% reduction in traditional marketing against a 17% reduction in online marketing. You may be surprised (I'm not) that 83% of businesses maintained or increased their online marketing.

The reason for this is that internet marketing is far more cost efficient than traditional methods and it is far easier to measure your return on investment. The biggest increases are in mass emailing the in-house customer lists, paid search e.g. Google adwords and Social Media Optimisation.

Other things like running virtual events, webcasts and interactive training will also greatly reduce strain on marketing budgets. Rather than inviting 100 of your clients to a venue to see your latest product, you can show them on an interactive webcast. Saving all the costs associated with the live event, food, venue hire, accommodation etc.

By ensuring your website is well designed not only visually but from an intelligent operating point of view, you can manage visitors through the site to your end goal. Then by driving traffic to the site, it can only go to increase awareness and ultimately sales.

At AGI we recently optimised and redesigned a site that eight weeks later had a 97% increase in organic search traffic with people spending 58% more time on the site! By tracking the revenue generated from online marketing carefully, our client has had an increase in revenue of over 500%!

The only reason marketing budgets get cut is because ROI is not measured properly and CFOs can not see the value in marketing. Show a CFO results like this and it becomes a no brainer.

To compare the value of traditional marketing vs online I have prepared some figures below:

A quarter page advert in HELLO magazine is £6,435 vs a full SMO (Social Media Optimisation) campaign, reaching 15 social sites, 12 forums, 2 press releases, 100 social bookmarks, all posts, profile management and reporting which can be done for about £5,500 per month.

Four Billboards for one month cost £3,200 vs £3,200 per month to fund a small Pay Per Click campaign, Search Engine Optimiation and Link building campaign.

A full page - firm day in The Sun is £55,502, read by 8 million readers a day, possibly leading to 1-2% traffic to a site vs £55,000 in a Pay Per Click campaign at £1 per click which will give you 55,000 visits.

100,000 postcards printed and posted cost approx £30,000 vs 100,000 direct e-mails for less than £10,000

As you can see online marketing gives you more bang for your bucks. It will also keep your visibility at a higher level. The traditional marketing methods are often short lived - for example the advert in the Sun is simply for one day!

In Summary

Cutting marketing budgets is bad. If you can't up them, then at least sustain them and get them focused on some investment-returning activity.

In this unfortunate economy this is the time to grab market share. This way when the market does start to pick up your business will clearly be ahead of the curve, rather than in a position of having to ramp up marketing and fight to reclaim what was lost.

Don't be a lemming and jump into cutbacks just because you see your competitors doing so. Look at Steve Jobs and Apple: in an interview with Fortune magazine, Jobs stressed his determination to continue to invest through the economic downturn. He said: "We`ve had one of these before, when the dot-com bubble burst.

What I told our company then was that we were just going to invest our way through the downturn, that we weren't going to lay off people, that we'd taken a tremendous effort to get them into Apple in the first place."

Jobs added: "In fact, we were going to up our R&D budget so that we would be ahead of our competitors when the downturn was over. And that's exactly what we did. And it worked. And that`s exactly what we'll do this time.

The result of that R&D was of course the iPod and the iPhone. Judge for yourself if Jobs made the right decision.

To see my presentation slides visit www.damonsegal.co.uk

Why not sign up to our small business newsletter and learn more?

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By Damon Segal  on   Nov 17,2008

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Keywords

marketing    online marketing    digital marketing    google    facebook   

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