Tips on Smart Marketing in a Down Economy

Posted by Brian Schwartz in Advertising / Marketing on Tuesday, June 9th, 2009.

Update 6/11/2009: The video from KSDK appears at the bottom of this post

Dan was featured on “Today in St. Louis” on KSDK, St. Louis’ NBC Affiliate. Here are tips Dan shared for smart marketing in a bad economy:

  1. Don’t stop marketing! Invest in marketing and grow market share.
    Most businesses are looking for ways to cut costs and the marketing budget is an easy short term target; don’t do it!  Invest wisely for the long term.

    1. Chances are your competitors are cutting their budgets, so it will be easier to stand out from the crowd.
    2. If print, TV and radio are your usual channels, this media has never been cheaper and today you can get greater reach with the same budget. Utilize this to again stand out from the crowd.
  2. Know your customers. Listen to them and speak directly to them.Most large brands have a ‘mass media mindset’ and the giant budgets that go with it. This is great if you’re a big brand, but most likely you aren’t and you don’t have the budget to reach everyone, so you will need to focus on targeted marketing.If you looked around a room of 100 people chances are there are 2 or 3 qualified prospects that you need to reach. It would be much cheaper to talk to those 2 or 3 people directly than blast a general message to everyone and hope it finds the few people who care. Get to know who these potential clients are and deliver a message that is relevant to them.
  3. It’s all about word of mouth. Especially in St. Louis.It seems everyone in St. Louis is connected by 1 or 2 degrees of separation. Word of mouth is the most authentic and affordable way for a person to learn about your business, but you need to make it easy for people to tell your story. I always use the line: ‘You haven’t told your story until someone else can tell it’.  To do this you need to learn to make your story unique, memorable and specific.It also helps to tell your story in several different ways – speak at events, write on a blog and use other social media (facebook, twitter, linkedin, etc) as ways to share stories with others.  For example, I was at newly re-opened Chuy’s restaurant and posted on Facebook: “I’m sitting on the patio at Chuy’s enjoying fajitas and a margarita”. Within a half hour there was 10 unsolicited comments. This is a great example of word of mouth.
  4. Everyone is online – but are they doing it right? Online marketing doesn’t just mean just having a website anymore, it means using it right – using search engine optimization, pay-per-click, blogs, twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and more. These can be inexpensive, but they can also be time consuming and confusing.Business owners think they have to do it all at the same time, we like to tell our clients it’s better to do one thing right than do them all wrong.  You should focus, pick a tactic / strategy, master it and then move on to the next tactic.
  5. This thing called guerrilla marketing Guerrilla marketing is the use of unconventional and unexpected tactics. To do them, you have to think differently. Take it to the street, right where your buyers will be. For example, our client ANY LAB TEST NOW does STD testing, they hire attractive women to go into night clubs handing out risque messages, promoting their STD testing services. And in this case they are reaching their buyers with a memorable (and inexpensive) message.
  6. Have a plan
    Don’t go blindly into marketing. The typical business owner’s next tactic is often dictated by the last sales person that walk in their door.  We all know plans change, but going through the discipline of creating one makes it more likely to be followed.When you create a plan, create it with the thought the plan itself is a marketing tactic (this will help you actually finish it) and if you need a loan or are trying to raise money, a marketing plan will help show the decision makers how the money will be spent.

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