Introduction
As the news continues to come in that we are slipping into a recession, company executives are preparing for the inevitable: tighter budgets,
higher levels of accountability, and a need for greater efficiency. Everyone from Fortune 500 companies to Small and Medium Enterprises echoed these
sentiments which heighten the importance of Sales and Marketing in this recession phase. The objective is clear and simple: “Focus on Accountable Marketing”.
Marketing executives that wish to thrive in this
environment must embrace the opportunity that a downtown represents and not
dwell on the doom and gloom of impending financial challenges.
I believe that the majority of organizations will enter
into an attrition mentality during the economic downturn, while the remainder
will use this as an opportunity to:
- Focus on Profitable Growth
- Increase in Market Share
- Emerge as Industry Leaders
Below I have provided four tips to help progressive
companies and individuals better position their products and services for
success in the recession.
#1: Measure: Metrics – The Science of Marketing
In recession corporations increase their scrutiny of all
spending, i.e. downsizing, costs, budgets, job cuts. Marketing must re-evaluate
not just what they are measuring but they are presenting it. It should have an
economic foundation and provide clear linkage to how marketing is contributing
to the company’s top line revenue goals. Present measurements that are clearly
linked to company success such as the number of qualified leads provided to
sales, sales pipeline coverage, sales funnel value for opportunities sourced by
marketing. Campaign analytics that demonstrate the efficiency of marketing
investments are a must in showing the value marketing is providing to the
organization.
#2: Lead Generation vs. Awareness
In a recent study published by IDV, lead generation is
the top priority for technology marketers this year. Marketers plan to allocate
52% of their marketing budget to demand generation, up from 48% in 2007.
My recommendation is to focus more of your budget dollars
on programs and marketing initiatives that generate qualified leads for your
sales force. Evaluate your tradeshow and conference calendar, and
consider what the attendance is likely to be in a down economy. Consider
trimming this part of the budget immediately if increased awareness is not your
number one marketing goal.
The ROI for shows where you "need to
have a presence" starts at zero too. We call these ‘ego shows’ because
some execs feel the company has to be seen there to be credible in the
marketplace. Most prospects will care less. Shifting budget from
awareness to lead generation is mortgaging the future to cover the costs of
near term growth. It is the right strategy to ensure you exit the recession
with growing revenues and deep enough pockets to repay this mortgage one or two
years hence.
#3: Efficiency: Marketing Automation
Time required to manage programs can be overwhelming for
many marketers. Add to that the need to aggregate multiple data sources like
web statistics, email campaign responses, form submissions, and CRM information
to provide “somewhat” accurate reports and you can easily need a small staff of
people just to manage these components of your marketing organization.
And in a recession the CEO wants you to
"do more with less". Enter marketing automation! Many analysts
predict that by 2010 over 80% of marketing organizations will be using
marketing automation technology. With the economic downturn, now is a
great opportunity for your organization to begin the process of evaluating,
adopting and integrating a marketing automation technology.
#4: Opportunity vs. Threat
Prior to the recession you may have been
driving to open up new market segments, or broaden the geographic reach of your
products and services. Naturally this requires significant marketing
investments that will not have the same short term return as investments in
your existing markets (unless they are saturated). In an economic
downturn even your prospects are going to scrutinize their purchasing decisions
more thoroughly. If your bread and butter markets aren’t saturated and you are
not the dominant player, it is best to re-trench and do a better job honing the
strength of your value proposition to the existing markets. This may postpone
the meteoric increase in revenues you were planning prior to the recession, but
it could also save you from losing market share in your existing markets, and
prepare you for market share increases. So perhaps the best investment is in
tools to help your sales team prove the strength of the economic value
proposition to prospects even in a down economy – ROI calculators, more case
studies with a focus on ROI etc.
By looking at this economic downturn as an
opportunity to get lean and fit, to focus and drive efficiencies, and not an
overwhelming challenge you will not only thrive in this environment but be even
better prepared when the economy starts to improve. Your marketing team
will be stronger and more focused as a result. It’s survival of the fittest and
the recession will weaken some competitors leaving more market share for the
strong. This is your opportunity to distance yourself from the competition.