From KWY News Radio 1060AM Philadelphia:
Billionaire, Warren Buffett pumped $5 billion into Goldman Sachs, and then followed that up with a $3 billion investment in General Electric.
In troubled times, Warren drives a hard bargain and ends up with extraordinary value. In other words, Warren buys low and then sells high. He is a contrarian.
While others go into the panic mode, Warren Buffett goes into the shopping mode. This same kind of thinking can be applied to marketing. While others are into a cut and run mode, the smart money looks for marketing opportunities.
Right now consumers are spending more time than ever before evaluating their daily product purchases and their long term brand loyalties. Now is not the time to cut and run out on your marketing budget…now is the time to seek out opportunities.
“A man who stops advertising to save money is like a man who stops a clock to save time.” Henry Ford
Here are some reasons why our current economic environment can spell opportunities for marketers:
Your competition is hiding. The landscape is not as crowded. That means your own marketing has a higher probability of getting noticed. In fact, in your product category, you may be the only guy out there who is in the face of the consumer! Normally we have to sit around and say “how the hell can we be different?” Now all we have to do is show up.
Now is the time you need the business! When the economy is weak, your business will only get weaker without marketing. It is a vicious cycle.
Out of sight…out of mind, and out of mind can mean out of business. If your competition is hiding, right now you can have a larger share of mind. Familiarity breed preference, and preference leads to long term customer loyalty.
Customers are hunting. When the economy dips and consumers move into a state of fear, product purchases are scrutinized, and loyalties are challenged. That means you can position your product as a need….not just a want. People are looking for value and meaning. Now is the time to be very pragmatic and honest with your marketing. People are looking for products and services they can trust. That means while they are hunting and evaluating, you need to be out there marketing and not hiding behind your desk.
Attitudes are shifting. What was important yesterday may not be so important in today’s environment. That can spell new opportunities for your product or service. Take a survey…do some focus groups…find out what is driving the emotional needs of your core customer. How has it changed? Where are the new opportunities? How must your message change?
How can you reposition the competition and make your brand more relevant for the next 12 months of economic hardship?
Marketing Never Stops. If you stop your marketing, you are wasting the brand equity you have built so far. This is not a start and then stop process.
Your customers need evidence of product performance, and a reason why your product is absolutely positively the best in the category. When a consumer makes a budget cut…you don’t want to end up on the cutting room floor. That’s why marketing doesn’t stop because the economy is bad. It is exactly the time you need to turn up the volume.
These are tough times, and they may be some of the most creative and opportunistic times in years. Put on your Warren Buffett hat and look for the bargains. Create new demands. Stay close to your core customer.
Dig deeper and look for the essential ties to your customers. And never ever stop fishing for new customers
5 Comments
I wish AFFTA looked at this. They need to spend there efforts to promote the sport outside of the industry norm. We need new blood and excitement to run this business. Local shops need to do their part but AFFTA has the means to venture outside. Stay focused and keep promoting the sport. The bad times will end at some point and we need to be ready when it becomes positive again.
Many people have attributed the advertising quote to Henry Ford. I can not reference this quote to him. Can you provide your reference? Thanks.
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I had it as Ben Franklin, who is the correct person
“The man who stops advertising to save money, is like the man who stops the clock to save time.”
Thomas Jefferson
Very apt. I’ve noticed that when times get tough, the first thing companies like to cut is their marketing and advertising budgets…which, as your article explained, is the exact opposite of what they should do. The question is, how do we get people to realize this? Or would we rather keep it a secret?