Sunday, November 16, 2008

Spend to Make Money

Instead of scrimping for marketing, entrepreneurs are encouraged to spend money wisely based on a clear, well-tailored plan to generate profits

One of the most important things an entrepreneur has to do is to decide on how much money to allocate for marketing and operations. Although the answer can vary widely depending on business and industry size, the most important factor is how much you want to grow the business and how fast—not only in terms of sales revenues but in terms of profitability as well. Indeed, most entrepreneurs underspend for marketing in the belief that this will generate savings for them. They are wrong, of course, for the simple reason that a business has to spend enough money to make money. The trick, though, is to spend your money wisely based on a clear, well-tailored marketing plan that's specifically aimed at fulfilling your business goals.

Jay Conrad Levinson, well-known as the "Father of Guerrilla Marketing," talked about the principles of guerrilla entrepreneur attacks during his recent visit to Manila for the "The Guerrilla Marketing Conference 2007–Jay Conrad Levinson Live!" event last July 27. His advice: "When you don't have a lot of money to spend on your marketing, invest your time, energy, knowledge, and imagination to the business."

He then presented to entrepreneurs various ways of economizing on marketing and operations the guerrilla way:

Show that you care for your customers

Levinson says that you need to clearly recognize that your customers have specific needs and expectations, and that you need to always meet those needs as well as exceed those expectations. It's very easy to say that you care for your customers, he says, "but unless you take steps to show them that you really do care, they might be wooed away by a competitor. Your marketing can say all the right words and tell customers how important they are to you, but you've got to prove your dedication to your customers—and your prospects—by taking concrete steps beyond mere words."

Averell Gaspar, head of marketing and sales of Getz Pharmaceutical Inc., fully agrees with Levinson's approach. He says that delighting your customers is indeed the very first act in winning trust. In his job, therefore, he focuses on customer experience and interaction to fast-track market penetration, giving particularly strong emphasis to the following customer service goals: attention, reliability, promptness, and competence. "From a loyalty standpoint, customers rate their quality of interactions with your company equally important with the quality of your products," he says. "Well-trained and customer-centric employees are therefore the top attribute of companies that consistently provide excellent experiences to the customer."

To continuously improve the quality of your service, Gaspar suggests instituting a feedback mechanism that would encourage customers to share their views on how you should conduct your relationship-building with them as well as on how you should fix identified trouble areas.

Market your marketing

Levinson says that you are not really promoting your business unless you are cross-promoting it. "Your trade show booth will be far more valuable to you if you promote it in trade magazines and if you put fliers under the doors of hotels near the trade show," he explains.

Due to the changing nature of markets, particularly with increasing competition and the growing availability of both local and global brands, businesses are becoming more and more dependent on several media to motivate a purchase. Simply coming up with an attractive promotion is thus no longer enough; you also need to market your promotion to make it really work. For instance, you need to make a big-bang announcement every time you come up with value offers, sampling, or freebies.

"It doesn't mean that you have to come up with an additional budget for your promotional announcements," Gaspar says. "You just have to maximize your existing communication vehicles." He says that when you develop a brochure or flyer, for instance, you need to make sure to include your hotline number and website address for easy access by customers needing to clarify information. You can even use the back of your card as a promotional bulletin board by listing your services or promotions there.

"And never forget your exit strategy," he adds. "Bounce-back coupons, for instance, are an excellent way to encourage customers to keep on coming back. Through these coupons, you can offer them time-limited discounts on the customer's next purchase. You motivate them to come back to you by using precisely the same promotional materials, thus avoiding any extra expense."

Explore fusion marketing

Levinson says: "The guerrilla entrepreneur is dependent upon many people. He knows that the age of the lone wolf entrepreneur, independent and proud of it, has passed; thus, he is now very dependent upon his fusion business partners."

For this reason, he says, the entrepreneur need to identify potential partners for doing fusion marketing or co-marketing promotions. Fusion marketing can take your brand to an entirely new audience by associating it with another brand. It works by strengthening preference or purchase intention for your brand at minimal expense.

Gaspar elaborates on this idea: "Because the customer has too many choices and because there are so many companies providing many similar products or services, you need to spend extra to differentiate your brand from the rest of the field." But he says that companies need not splurge to achieve this. They can actually economize on this extra expense and get better results by sharing it with another brand that targets the same customers, thus combining the effort into just one synergistic move. "You can increase your marketing reach and reduce cost by combining your marketing efforts, concepts, production skills, customer information, and just about anything else," he says.

For instance, he says, such products as Pizza Hut and Pepsi as well as Krispy Kreme and Hershey's often merge their marketing forces to create a single campaign for their brands—a campaign that targets just one segmented audience.

Building your brand, Levinson says, is similar to building a cathedral or making a movie—it takes hundreds of collaborators. Indeed, in fusion marketing, collaboration with your partners is the key. As he advises in very down-to-earth terms, "You scratch my back and I'll scratch yours."

Nurture the ones you already have

According to Levinson, the most common method of economizing—that of marketing to existing customers—is also one of the most overlooked. He points out that customer acquisition will cost you six times more that customer retention. The price of discovering and convincing likely customers, he explains, is astronomical when compared to the price of doing the same with current customers.

A common misconception among most entrepreneurs, he says, is that customer relationship management is expensive. But he explains that all that needs to be done to develop a database marketing capability is simply to update and accurately maintain your customer information bank. When this is done, the information becomes very handy and useful for prospecting purposes, customer segmentation, sales forecasting, and determining who your real customers are and what their buying habits might be. Communicating with them thus becomes more effective, particularly if it is done frequently enough.

But Gaspar says that customer-nurturing programs can't be measured simply on the basis of how your membership cards look or how much in rewards you give to your loyal customers—instead, it is on how well you know your customers on a personal basis. He thus suggests making it a point to remember their names and such important personal milestones as their birthdays and anniversaries. "You can even surprise them by giving them a small token unexpectedly, with no particular occasion in mind," he says.

Gaspar then suggests two other very practical and cost-effective communication vehicles for strengthening your customer relationship-building: e-mail and SMS message blasts. He says this can be done simply by developing a simple HTML catalogue-type e-mail—one without attachments—that can be sent to all of your Internet-using customers. Still another idea, he says, is taking advantage of the unlimited text offers of the major telecommunication companies to broadcast your new products and services at hardly any cost.

Indeed, as Levinson says, the philosophy of frugality and thrift in guerilla marketing is not about cutting and limiting your marketing expenditures. Instead, it is the art of stretching your marketing budget to effectively reach your target market through multiple channels, then delivering your marketing message clearly and forcefully. Very often, he says, a guerrilla entrepreneur's attacks will prosper despite the lack of resources precisely because the situation makes the guerilla entrepreneur more willing to try new and innovative ideas.


By Justine P. Castellon

4 comments:

kayenz said...

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Joseph said...

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PMTier, Jared

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