When Times Get Tough... or When to Really Advertise
The Pundits say the economy is slowly, but surely, recovering.
Maybe not at the rate of the mid-90s stock boom, but recovering
nonetheless.
It must be true, because ad agencies are running Help Wanted
ads. So, ad budgets are getting bigger. Tsk tsk. They have been
missing out. Actually, for maverick thinkers like you, that
should be good news.
When the Pundits say, "Times are getting tougher," usually the
first thing to get axed in business are ad and marketing
budgets. This makes nearly no sense. But, to your competition,
you should say, "Tighten that belt another couple of notches!"
Because that's when you go for the kill.
So-called "tough economic times" should be a boon to your
marketing. It's then that your competition will pull back their
advertising efforts. And you should increase yours. Your
competition is purposely weakening its position. It is the
perfect time to fortify yours.
Since most others are cutting back on their ad spending, media
becomes more negotiable, if not altogether cheaper. Your
messaging can become more visible with less clutter.
Your message also needn't be more hard sell in this type of
environment. Traditional notion dictates hard sell is the way to
go. But proper strategy, creatively executed, will nearly always
win over a hard sell approach. Creative ads always get noticed,
and often garner free publicity.
Of course, you don't want to confuse "Bad Taste" with
"Creative." If you have the proper strategy, that shouldn't be
much of a concern. If you are presented ad concepts that bother
you on a deeper level (more than the placement and size of your
logo or other such trifles), maybe it's time to address the
strategy as much as the concepts.
The big payoff really comes when bad economic times rebound into
good. When people have more money to spend, your business will
have a higher, better mind share than the folks who chose not to
advertise. Higher mind share leads to higher market share when
the public starts buying again.
There's the story of a brand of peanut butter that, due to
government-mandated conversion of its factory for the effort
during World War II, was not even commercially available. Yet,
the brand was consistently advertised. When the war was over,
guess which brand had higher market share?
And it's in this atmosphere of free spending that market share
is hardest to hold onto. More dollars to throw around, more
choices, the market gets diluted. Why not go into that phase the
leader, or the biggest gainer?
So, when your competition rolls back their ad spending, pump
yours up. You stand only to benefit from the less-competitive
atmosphere. Still a little unsure? Then set up a dollar cost
averaging system for marketing. Spend the same amount every
week, every month, every quarter. You might be surprised you get
more results in "down turned" markets.
Marketing is everything. If it weren't, your company would only
subsist on word of mouth and chance.~