Marketing in an Age of Turbulence
(2013-02-02 22:56:03)Marketers should always be ready to activate automatic responses
when turbulence whips up and
chaos reigns in. They recommend marketers keep these eight factors
in mind as they create “chaotics marketing strategies.”
1. Secure your market share from core customer
segments.
This is not a time to get greedy, so get your core customer
segments
firmly secured, and be prepared to ward off attacks from
competitors
seeking your most profitable and loyal customers.
2. Push aggressively for greater market share from
competitors.
All companies fight for market share, and in turbulent and
chaotic times,
many have been weakened. Slashing marketing budgets and sales
travel expenses is a sure sign a competitor is buckling under
pressure.
Push aggressively to add to your core customer segments at
the
expense of your weakened competitors.
3. Research customers more now, because their needs
and
wants are in flux. Everyone is under pressure during times
of turbulence
and chaos, and all customers—even those in your core
segments whom you know so well—are changing. Stay close to
them as never before. Research them more than ever. Don’t
find
yourself using old, tried-and-true marketing messages that no
longer resonate with them.
4. Minimally maintain, but seek to increase, your
marketing
budget. With your competitors aggressively marketing to
your
core customers, this is the worst time to think about cutting
anything
in your marketing budget that targets them. In fact, you need
to add to it, or take money away from forays into totally new
customer
segments. It’s time to secure the home front.
5. Focus on all that’s safe and emphasize core
values.
When turbulence is scaring everyone in the market, most
customers flee to
higher ground. They need to feel the safety and security of
your
company and your products and services. Do everything
possible
to tell them that continuing to do business with you is safe, and
to
sell them products and services that keep making them feel
safe.
6. Drop programs that aren’t working for you
quickly.
Your marketing budgets will always be scrutinized, in good times
and bad
times. If anyone is to cut one of your programs, let it be you,
before
anyone else spots any ineffective ones. If you’re not watching,
rest
assured someone else is, including your peers whose budgets
couldn’t be protected from the axe.
7. Don’t discount your best brands. Discounting
your established
and most successful brands tells the market two things: your
prices were too high before, and your products won’t be worth
the
price in the future once the discounts are gone. If you want to
appeal
to more frugal customers, create a new brand with lower
prices. This lets value-conscious customers stay close to you,
without
alienating those still willing to pay for your higher-priced
brands. Once the turbulence subsides, you may consider
discontinuing
the value product line—or not.
8. Save the strong; lose the weak. In turbulent
markets, your
strongest brands and products must become even stronger.
There’s
no time or money to be wasted on marginal brands or products
that
lack strong value propositions and a solid customer base. Appeal
to
safety and value to reinforce strong brands and product and
service
offerings. Remember, your brands can never be strong enough,
especially
against the waves of a turbulent economy.
Source: Based on Philip Kotler and John A. Caslione, Chaotics:
The Business and
Marketing in the Age of Turbulence (New York: AMACOM, 2009) pp.
151–153.