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Adapting to Industry TurbulenceHow to be a Lean Marketer in Any Environment
What counts as turbulence for marketers?
Image by:Tim Sackton, Flickr
Shifting audience needsand behaviors
Example:Your client traditionally sponsors a big industry conference every year, but due to market conditions, their customers have cut conference attendance from their budgets.
Image by: Dave Dugdale, Flickr
Inconsistencies in brand messaging and customer
promises
Example:Your website messaging is all about oil exploration, but due to the industry downturn, you have halted exploration activities.
Image by: Ross Huggett, Flickr
Skewed perception of cost and value
Example:Before turbulence hit, your client had planned a large marketing campaign launch. In light of recent layoffs, many employees are now grumbling about the expense of the campaign.
Image by: Leap Kye, Flickr
Image by: Mitchell Kohley, Flickr
How does it affect me and my role?
Decreased marketing budget What do I have to sacrifice?
How can I reprioritize my initiatives to get the most impact?
Will I have enough people to get things done?
How can we expect to see an impact without my or my clients’ full budget?
Reduced teamHow do I move forward when resources I need are no longer available to me?
How do I regain momentum?
All my advocates are gone or busy...who’s left to fight my cause?
What if my main client contact is no longer there?
Increased need to prove your value/ROI of your job
How do I keep proving marketing is worthwhile?
How do I move the needle?
What metrics can I track all by myself?
What is the most important ROI to track in this difficult time?
Am I next?
Image by: cjuneau, Flickr
Get back on track.
Image by: Leonid Mamchenkov, Flickr
Identify roadblocksWrite down your biggest obstacles to success
• Brainstorm what you need to overcome these challenges
• Consider how you can modify your plan or process to work around them
• Ex. Do you need to remove people from the process who muddy the waters?
Image by: Myrtle Beach TheDigitel, Flickr
Determine what needs to happen to move forward• Refine your marketing goals if necessary
• Don’t be afraid to scrap projects if the conditions have changed and you need to reset — but give yourself time to think about all the consequences if you do
Take a realistic inventory of your resources
• Determine which resources are still available to you
• Consider budget, people and time
• Identify remaining advocates for your marketing plan (mentors, supervisors or project managers, etc.)
Learn to work more efficiently• Investigate tools to bolster your efforts or crowdsource projects
• Turn to social media to leverage user-generated content
• Experiment with online tools to see if you can work more efficiently
• If possible, break larger projects down into more accomplishable phases to reduce the strain on your resources
• Make progress while mapping out your plan for the next stage
Prioritize based on impact and long term payoff• Be careful not to cut back on small projects that seem like
distractions. They may impact the success of key initiatives
• Don’t make reactive choices based on short term resource issues
• Recognize areas where it would be more efficient to outsource
• Try to get the most life out of a single deliverable: Brainstorm how can you repurpose, re-promote or templatize projects.
Examples • Can you build just one landing page template that
will work for all your campaigns with only minor copy and image changes?
• Instead of producing two blog posts a month, can you cut back to one and focus more heavily on content promotion?
Build buy-in for your initiatives.
Image by: popofatticus, Flickr
Trace the ROI of your Marketing Plan
Business Objective
Marketing Strategy
Tactic
Take over the marketing world!
Build a visibility program
Start a breakfast event series
Formula Example
Business Objective
Marketing Strategy
Tactic
Take over the marketing world!
Build a visibility program
Start a breakfast event series
Formula Example
Build a measurement planKPIs for an example breakfast event series:
• # of attendees
• Event-specific social media impressions and engagement
• Various pre- and post-event email marketing metrics, if applicable
• # of qualified leads
Report on your progress• Create a reporting structure to stay accountable
and in touch with your boss
• Example: Schedule a monthly reporting meeting
• Discuss next steps and recommendations, not just metrics
Recruit advocates• Add more resources to team
• Added legitimacy and a bigger cohort/core team
• More power to shift attitudes internally
• Easier to communicate how marketing is a shared business goals
Stay on the same page as Project Leads• Check in with your team lead or client contact on
any changing priorities
• Be mindful of what your client is going through: have empathy
• Manage up: understand how you can make your boss’ job easier
• Show that you’re willing to learn new skills and wear more hats
“As marketers, we are are often so focused on our external audience (our prospects and customers) — but we need to
keep our internal audience (our management and co-workers) in mind as well. How are you communicating
what you do and what value you offer to the organization — in terms that are important to the people you work
with?”
Michele Linn - VP of Content, Contently @michelelinn
Avoid traps.
Image by: royalty free, Flickr
Trap #1
During a turbulent period, you(or your boss) may be tempted to “lay low until the storm passes”
THIS IS THE TIME FOR INCREASED COMMUNICATION, NOT LESS!
Image by: Evan Forester, Flickr
If you’re silent, clients and internal audiences will look for information elsewhere.
You don’t want to look responsible forlost sales or reduced confidence in your company
because you weren’t communicating.
Example: A news outlet reports rumors that your
company is in a downward spiral. If you’ve gone silent and have not communicated
assurance to prospective clients, they may choose to partner with a competitor who
appears more stable.
Instead: Emphasize the importance of remaining
pro-active with marketing.
Don’t let negative press or widespread rumors fester.
Trap #2
Due to turbulence, you feel pressure to make a change for the sake of change.
REFINE GOALS OR ADJUST METHODS, BUT DON’T LOSE SIGHT OF YOUR OVERALL BUSINESS STRATEGY!
Image by: sittered, Flickr
Instead: Look for opportunities, but don’t destroy processes that still work just because you
panicked.
Beware changes not based on strategy: If there’s no pay off towards your business objectives, you’re just creating more work.
And remember…
THERE’S NO CRYING IN BASEBALL.
Image by: TMAB2003, Flickr
“I have always been told to hope for the best, plan for the worst, and always keep moving forward. Sometimes we
have to recognize that our projects might not be recoverable, our boss might leave and you've lost your
internal advocate, or the business you are working for just isn't working, and you get laid off. ”
John Doherty - Founder, Credo @dohertyjf
“One of the best things young professionals can do is to have side projects. I have talked to many hiring managers
who look for people who have outside passions to which they can apply their marketing skills, such as writing a blog, creating a video series and building an audience. You are more valuable to your organization when they
know you have this kind of energy and skills.”
Michele Linn - VP of Content, Contently @michelelinn
Further Reading • The Role of Brand in a Downturn: Spotlight on
the Oil Industry
• How to Build ROI and Accountability into Your Marketing Plan
Thank you.If you want to learn more about Cynthia, Laura, and Caitlin,
or BrandExtract, visit us at BrandExtract.com
Twitter: @BrandExtract