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Marketing in a Downturn Making Money in a Recession

Making Money in a Recession

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Page 1: Making Money in a Recession

Marketing in a Downturn

Making Money in a Recession

Page 2: Making Money in a Recession

In a downturn, marketing budgets

often

get cut first ...

Page 3: Making Money in a Recession

It can often be a quick fix in times of crisis ...

Page 4: Making Money in a Recession

A Forrester Research survey of social marketers in 2008 for example showed that display ads, online video, game marketing and

widgets are the first to go in a downturn.

Page 5: Making Money in a Recession

Source: Forrester Research

Page 6: Making Money in a Recession

Especially when you

don’t know how long it’s going to

last.

Page 7: Making Money in a Recession

Source: WSJ Market Data Group; National Bureau of Economic Research (recessions)

Page 8: Making Money in a Recession

Yet there is clear and incontrovertible evidence proving that

increased marketing spend can actually increase market share

Page 9: Making Money in a Recession

In a 1979 survey

ABP/Meldrum & Fewsmith found that:

“Companies which did not cut marketing expenditures experienced higher sales and net income during those two years and in the two years following, than those companies which cut budgets in either or both recession years.”

Page 10: Making Money in a Recession

In 1981 – 1982

McGraw-Hill Research analysed over 1,000 in 16 different industries.

The findings showed that firms which

increased or maintained their marketing spend averaged significantly higher sales growth, both during the recession and for the following 3-5 years.

Page 11: Making Money in a Recession

During the 1990 – 1991

recession, Management Review asked AMA member firms about marketing spending.

“Fortune follows the brave”, it announced, noting that the data showed that most firms that raised their marketing budgets enjoyed significant gains in market share.

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“Brands that increase {marketing} during a recession when competitors are cutting back can improve market share and return on investment at lower cost than during good economic times.”

3 March 2008

Harvard Business Publishing

Page 13: Making Money in a Recession

If bigger retailers cut down on their marketing and visibility during a downturn, then smaller competitors can actually

gain market share because there is less competition.

Page 14: Making Money in a Recession

During the Great Depression in the 1930s many successful companies cut their marketing and advertising budgets and

some dropped off the

radar completely.

Page 15: Making Money in a Recession

As a result, customers felt abandoned by these companies and interpreted the cuts as meaning that the companies weren’t

good enough to survive.

Page 16: Making Money in a Recession

Customers gave their

custom to more visible competitors, those who continued to market and advertise aggressively.

Page 17: Making Money in a Recession

The companies who thrived were those who

continued to market themselves consistently and even increase their budgets.

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Even when there’s a downturn in the economy, there are always

opportunities out there

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There are two things to look at:

(1) opportunities for

business growth

Page 21: Making Money in a Recession

(2) marketing activities which give you ROI (Return on Investment)

Page 22: Making Money in a Recession

Examine every aspect of your marketing budget with a critical eye

What marketing activity leads to the highest income ?

What high ROI activities do you need to increase ?

What does each qualified lead cost?

Page 23: Making Money in a Recession

Source: http://blog.startwithalead.com

Page 24: Making Money in a Recession

(Low Figure vs High Figure)

Marketing Campaign Cost

Marketing Campaign Cost

divided by divided by(Number of Leads) (Number of Sales)Cost Per Lead Cost Per Sale

The ROI of every Campaign is Cost per Lead vs Cost per Sale

Page 25: Making Money in a Recession

Large Number of Leads

Large Number of Sales

The Most Important Key Indicator is the End Financial Performance

Small Number of Sales

Small Amount of Revenue

Large Amount of Revenue

Small Number of Sales

Page 26: Making Money in a Recession

Relative Value of Marketing Mediums (importance ratings & results vs budget allocations)

Source: PoliteMail Survey of marketing and sales executives

E-mail marketing

Search keyword advertising

Direct Mail

Online non-search advertising

Tradeshow

Telemarketing

Print

Radio

TV

Page 27: Making Money in a Recession

Business Growth

Flotation Local to National & National to International

Cash Flow

Private FundsProfits

LoansVenture CapitalLeasingEU Grants

InnovationCompetitive AdvantageMarketing

TakeoversMergersBuyouts

Management StructureOwnership Control Economies of ScaleChanging Roles

Business Growth Opportunities

Page 28: Making Money in a Recession

InnovationCompetitive AdvantageMarketing

- New Market Development- New Product Development- Customer Share Expansion-Acquisitive or Joint Venture Growth- New Skills Development or Acquisition

Page 29: Making Money in a Recession

Relationships with customers will strengthen during a recession because competitors will be hoping to capture them.

Improve your USP.

Page 30: Making Money in a Recession

Revisit your customers’

“pain points” – find out what keeps them awake at night and then work out how you can help them

Page 31: Making Money in a Recession

Sole traders and small businesses can take advantage of a downturn and grow because they can

charge less and are more flexible than multinationals

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Many successful companies

started up or came about during recessions ...

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Microsoft, the number one computer technology company, was created by Bill Gates and Paul Allen in 1975, just after the oil crisis in the Middle East hit global markets. Various strategies enabled Microsoft to achieve remarkable growth in the competition-laden computer industry including product innovation, brand extension, heavy advertising, competitive toughness, and product expansion.

Page 34: Making Money in a Recession

Fortune, the world-famous global business magazine, was founded by Time co-founder Henry Booth Luce in February 1930, just four months after the Wall Street Crash of 1929 that marked the start of the Great Depression. It initially targetted wealthy tycoons, but later was marketed as an intellectual vehicle for visionary leaders in the business world.

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A recession is a good time to acquire competitors at reduced rates ... or (put another way) go into partnership with competitors

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Twentieth Century Fox was founded in the Great Depression of 1935, as the result of a merger of Fox Film Corporation (founded by William Fox in 1915), and Twentieth Century Pictures (founded in 1933 by Darryl F Zanuck, Joseph Schenk, Raymond Griffith and William Goetz) when Fox was about to be into receivership.

Page 37: Making Money in a Recession

Unilever was created in 1930 from the merger of British soap maker Lever Brothers and the Dutch margarine producer Margarine Unie - a logical merger as palm oil was a major raw material for both margarines and soaps and could be imported in bulk more cheaply.

Page 38: Making Money in a Recession

Then think of new and imaginative ways to market yourself or your products and services.

Have you fully considered what your potential

customers want? Is there a social trend which suggests a new

direction for your business?

Is there an unusual way of packaging your communications or proposal in a way that might

make it stand out?

Are there any aspects of your business that represent value

that could offer to bring in additional value?

Is there a market niche you are overlooking because you felt it was dominated

by bigger competitors?

If you were to be more aggressive about seeking

opportunities, who could you approach?

Is there a way you can help your potential customers to visualise the impact of your service?

Page 39: Making Money in a Recession

Here are a few real life examples ...

Page 40: Making Money in a Recession

The monks in the Benedictine monastery , Worth Abbey in Sussex, needed to find a way to support

themselves.

Abbot Christopher Jamison and Roger Steare, a London-based business consultant founded The

Soul Gym which offers a series of business ethics courses aimed at industry leaders.

Page 41: Making Money in a Recession

An advertising agency was on the verge of going out of business in its first year, so the owner decided to spend his last few thousand dollars on a party for

clients, potential clients and journalists to say “goodbye” in style.

The party had an unexpected effect. Wanting to be part of such an obviously successful new venture,

several new clients signed up immediately and for the first time the firm started making a profit.

Page 42: Making Money in a Recession

Sir Cameron Mackintosh wanted to transfer his musical “Five Guys Named Moe” from a small fringe

theatre to the more formal West End of London without it losing the fun atmosphere that made it

such a success.

He hired a “meeter and greeter” at the new theatre to joke with the audience as they came in and the

cast led a conga to the bar at the interval. The show had excellent word-of-mouth success, and ran for

four years.

Page 43: Making Money in a Recession

In 1928, Ward Cosgrove, who worked for the Minnesota Valley Canning Company, wanted to

market a new and unusually large variety of pea called the "Green Giant" which he had found in

Europe.

His agency thought up the “Jolly Green Giant” character and by the 1950s, it had become so

popular that the company had changed its name to the “Green Giant Company”.

Page 44: Making Money in a Recession

David Musselwhite, a 63 year old lawyer in Dallas, Texas wanted to turn the business of law into a “pleasurable experience” which wouldn’t scare

away any potential clients. So he set up the “Legal Grounds Cafe” as part of his office space so that he could help solve people's legal problems in a non-

threatening environment.

Page 45: Making Money in a Recession

In 1994 Unilever launched the Everyman Project which sold very cheap soap powder to women

doing their washing in the Ganges. It then started to promote low cost powder and

shampoo in Brazil.

The project gave Unilever a presence in areas usually ignored by other multinational

companies and it has become a trusted name in those areas with huge potential growth in the

future.

Page 46: Making Money in a Recession

Jim Kirchmeier, owner of the Classic Driving School in Texas, wanted to attract more

teenagers and students to his driving school.

He bought a fleet of Porsches to make his company stand out from the competition. It had

the desired effect. Within a year he had doubled his income.

Page 47: Making Money in a Recession

An example of using product line extensions to evolve a brand was McDonald’s healthy choices

value menu created in 2004.  McDonalds reported a 14% growth in profit worldwide when

some businesses were struggling to preserve their market share.

Page 48: Making Money in a Recession

Louis Cocozza, who worked for the Harty Press, wanted to find a way to reach five potential

customers who would never return his ‘phone calls. He bought a “message in a bottle” kit and wrote

each one a note saying: “I’ve been trying to reach you for such a long time, this is my very last hope”.

The next time he rang, four out of the five customers took his call. Three agreed to see him

and later became good customers.

Page 49: Making Money in a Recession

Thank youMerciGraziaDankeGracias

Page 50: Making Money in a Recession

Sara PaineVerona PR & Marketing

T: + 44(0)1474 361008E: [email protected] www.verona-pr.com