Sunday, December 9, 2012

Help your Brand to Stand Out in a World of Sameness…By “Doing More with Less”




A review of the recent holiday circulars reveals dozens of stores selling similar products all promising savings if you shop their store vs. another.   When multiple store formats all sell the same type of products, convenience and price often win over brands.  In many cases, there is not a large difference in what you and your competitors sell.  But there is still a difference – and you need to get your target customers to notice, understand and buy your difference.  The challenge how to do that well in a world of limited marketing budgets, fragmented consumer media and continued integration of social and mobile media into the marketing mix.

Whether your business is consumer electronics, CPG, FMCG, fashion apparel, hand tools, automobiles, or a cup of coffee…or the store where they sell any of these products, you need to stand out and differentiate yourself.   Significantly outspending your competitors is one way to do that, but given you likely have a cap on your marketing budget, here are three ways you can be more effective by taking a “Do more with less” approach.

Stand for One Thing that Matters

It is hard to win category leadership and customer loyalty when you offer an average product at an OK price.  Your customers need a reason to buy your brand.  What do you stand for?  Are you the highest quality, the lowest cost, the strongest, the lightest, the most fashionable, the most consistent, the most innovative, the most environmentally friendly, the partner of a key charity, or the brand most likely to irritate parents? 

Beyond the base product or service what do they get from you?  When your shoppers are asked why they bought your product, do you want the answer to be, “it was on sale”?  If your product is not unique, how can your brand positioning betterdefine you?  If you do not stand for something, you stand for nothing.  Standing apart for something that matters to your customers will help define your brand and win sales.  Once you have identified what you stand for, stick with it and own it.  Communicating that message becomes more powerful and cost effective the longer you stay with it. 

Is this basic marketing?  Yes!  Does everyone do this well?  No.

Refine Your Experience

Once you stand for something, the customer experience with your product and brand need to deliver against it.  Your brand experience is not limited to the use of your product or service.  It also includes your marketing and customer interactions in both the retail and the social media space.  To customers, your brand is the emotional connection they make with you and the trust they put in you to deliver against expectations. 

If you want to earn loyal customers, refine how you are going to differentiate their experience based on the key brand dimensions you stand for.  Compare the customer experience described as “Dell Hell” customer service vs. getting help at an Apple store.  If you shop at Publix “Where Shopping is a Pleasure” and ask where a product is, that employee will stop what they are doing and walk you to that product.  Whether or not you like the coffee, Starbucks differentiates the coffee experience.  Tom’s combines fashion and social responsibility to differentiate the experience of buying shoes and eyewear.  A holiday kiosk with samples in a shopping mall turns a pound of Hickory Farms sausage into a special gift.

What is your experience?  What can/should it be based on your brand promise?  What can you do to simply, but effectively deliver it?

Focus Your Efforts

Many brands and marketing teams are less effective than they could be because they try to do too much with limited marketing dollars.  The budget is spread so thin across so many activities, it is hard to be effective in all of them.  The good news is some brands are getting more money to invest in social media and content creation, but dollars are still limited for overall brand building.

Here are a couple reminders of how a “do more with less” approach can actually make you more effective.

Say the same thing everywhere – taking an integrated marketing approach, where the same message and visual is used in all channels of communication, will make each consumer touch point work more effectively.  Multiple ad campaigns and creative executions take extra time and money and diminish your ability to simply communicate what you stand for.

Do less by focusing your time and money on the customer touch points that matter most.  Yes you may have had some marketing programs or partnerships for years, but they may not matter anymore.  Annually evaluate where your customers are spending their time with your brand.  Focus your time and money where your customers are.  Fish where the fish are today, not where you caught fish two years ago.

Work closely with your IT/CIO counterpart to combine budgets and efforts to make your social media and online efforts they most effective they can be.  Working closely with your IT team can make combined budgets go farther, speed up project development, and help you gain senior management support for new initiatives.

Be consistent and repeat – if you can focus your efforts behind just several key initiatives, do them well, deliver them consistently and then repeat them in the market, you can make yourself and your team more effective. 
The above three steps, executed together, will help you become more effective by doing more with less.  As you clearly communicate what you stand for, consistently deliver against it and focus your efforts around the select key programs and customer touch points that make a difference, you be more effective, free time from time wasting initiatives and focus your organization and budget in new ways to boost results and marketing ROI.  

A great result for any brand!

This blog was originally posted by GrowthSpring Group on the MENG Blend website.

GrowthSpring Group is a marketing strategy, market research, and innovation firm focused on accelerating your sales and profit growth. We help you identify new business growth insights & opportunities and execute winning strategies & plans. www.GrowthSpringGroup.com

Monday, October 15, 2012

Is your brand speaking with one voice?



Building a strong brand is demanding work.  Brand teams are tasked with growing businesses with limited staff and small budgets.  In a world of multichannel communication and multichannel points of purchase, creating and maintaining a consistent brand experience can be challenging.

Building and maintaining a strong brand can be even harder when there are many people involved in brand communication.  Think about 5 or 10 different people reporting on the news story for different news media.  They will all tell the story a little differently.  When it comes to communicating your brand message, the more people you have writing copy or posting on social media, the risk of creating different versions of your brand message increases.  Each consumer touch point becomes an opportunity for brand building…or brand confusion.

From just observing the brand communications of many leading brands, you can tell when there are too many authors speaking for a brand without good control over the brand message.  I have also observed brands with poor control over their iconography with up to six different versions of their brand logo in the market across packaging and marketing materials.

Many of the most effective brands have simple, consistent messages that are delivered across all mediums.  Consumers trust brands that consistently deliver against their brand promise.  Part of the strength of brand building is keeping your brand promise and messaging consistent.  It becomes harder to connect with a brand that has a different voice in different consumer touch points.

When there is not good control over your brand voice, your brand may suffer from one of these symptoms:

  • Multiple personality disorder—your brand communication has several distinctive different messages and/or author styles in the market.  While each author works to add their own individual value-added touch, they inject a different spin into the messaging.  This split personality can sometimes be seen in the communication prepared by your agency vs. your brand team. 
  • Committee speak / designed by committee—it has been said that “a camel is a horse designed by a committee.”  You can recognize brand communication that had too many inputs and crams too many different message points into an ad – the final result often does not match the creative brief.
  • Communication of the week/weaksome brand leaders just lack the discipline to define and remain loyal to a chosen brand communication platform.  Their messaging is constantly changing, making it difficult to know and connect with the brand value proposition.
  • Communication of the novicesome brand work is delegated to younger members of the brand team and is not reviewed before going to market.  This group is less likely to be trained in the brand character and brand standards and may communicate in a less formal way that does not fit the brand.  This is often observed on Facebook and other social media.  Brand leaders that give their intern responsibility for Facebook communication because they actively use social media, can risk introducing a new, very casual voice to their brand.


The addition of social media to the marketing mix can often lead to multiple voice communication if there is not a clear strategy and a limited group that is trained to speak for the brand.If your team has multiple people creating multiple messages, consider:
  • Setting guidelines such as a brand standards manual and communications platform for how to communicate imagery and message points for the brand.
  • Limiting the number of people creating communication on your behalf
  • Having one person who reviews and approves all brand communication

When your marketing plan includes a multi-channel media approach, the need for consistent, integrated brand communication increases.  Review your current communications and identify the steps needed to have the same message, imagery and branding in market at the same time.  This includes product packaging, point of purchase communication, advertising, PR, B2B sales collateral, social media, website, event banners and more.

Often with a tight budget, it is tempting to continue use of some materials while new brand communication is introduced in different channels.  This may be cheaper, but it is much more effective to achieve the impact and alignment of integrated brand marketing by introducing a new campaign across all touch points.  The big challenge is to avoid having remnants of several campaigns as you launch new ones.  A regular audit to identify and update out of date materials can help you stay current and aligned. 

In the time pressured world of trying to do more with smaller budgets and fewer people, it can be easy to let brand consistency slip as communication is rushed to market.  Don’t let your brand become the victim of rushing work to market without the appropriate brand review.  It is better to have fewer points of communication that are consistently on brand than a mass of content that speaks with many voices.  While this can appear to add work at first, over time your entire team will be more aligned and your brand communication will be more effective in the marketplace.

This blog was originally posted by GrowthSpring Group on the MENG Blend website.

GrowthSpring Group is a marketing strategy, market research, and innovation firm focused on accelerating your sales and profit growth. We help you identify new business growth insights & opportunities and execute winning strategies & plans. www.GrowthSpringGroup.com


Monday, September 3, 2012

Why STEM should be a priority for Marketing Leaders


 
I am directing this blog to leaders in the marketing community.  You have an opportunity to make a difference in a way that can strengthen both your company and the marketing community.

What is STEM?

You may be aware of STEM initiatives in your local school or in your community.  Your company may even be involved with a STEM program.  What is STEM?  It stands for Science, Technology, Engineering and Math.  These are four critical areas where U.S. students lag behind many countries around the globe. 
 
Improving our STEM capabilities has been identified by the U.S. Government as a key step to boost our long-term competitiveness in global business.  Many academic and community programs have been launched to engage and educate U.S.  youth in STEM education.  Time Warner and the Boy Scouts of America are two organizations that have recently launched STEM initiatives.
 
Some of you may be involved in promoting STEM initiatives that have been launched in your company but these are often run by other departments. 
 
Why is this important to marketing leadership?
 
It is obvious why efforts to build STEM skills should be important to engineers and scientists.  The direct connection to marketing is less obvious.  In short, CMO’s and other marketing leaders need new and current marketing employees to be strong in STEM.  There are many marketing managers in the workforce today who are not strong in the marketing application of these skills.
 
Let’s look at how that makes a difference in successful marketing.  Where can STEM be applied in your marketing initiatives and team?  Here is a sample list of STEM related marketing skills:

Science

·         Product improvements
 
·         Product formulation development
 
·         Product testing
 
·         Trend identification
 
·         Market research design and execution
 
·         A/B testing

Technology

·         CIO – CMO Partnerships
 
·         Identifying and leveraging the insights of “Big Data”
 
·         Web marketing, social media, ecommerce
 
·         Database marketing, category management
 
·         Real-time mobile marketing, mobile apps & geo-targeting
 
·         NFC and mobile ecommerce
 
·         Breakthrough new product technologies
 
·         3D design and printing technologies

Engineering

·         New product design, development and manufacturing
 
·         Applied materials for new product capabilities & claims
 
·         Packaging improvements / 3D structural design
 
·         Fixture design and development
 
·         Trade show booth design and development

Math

·         CFO – CMO Partnerships
 
·         Statistical analysis and business projections / forecasting
 
·         Trend identification
 
·         Developing financial models in Excel
 
·         Pre and Post program analysis
 
·         Retail sales analysis
 
·         KPI / ROI measurement
 
·         Budget planning and management

Not only are these valuable skills for any marketing team, but many of these skills can help differentiate a brand or company in the marketplace.  Enhancing your team’s skill sets in these areas can help accelerate success in your company – and enhance your workforce overall.

What can/should the marketing leadership community do?

As marketing leaders, we can enhance our own workforce and strengthen the skills of the U.S. Marketing community over time.  There are many ways you can help create new opportunities or lead your company in adopting new STEM focused initiatives.

Education

·         Educate new employees in relevant marketing STEM skills to make them more productive and effective
 
·         Offer tuition reimbursement for employees that take STEM related marketing training courses online or at local schools
 
·         Offer College and Grad School internships with a focus on sharing learning in both directions Offer employee training on STEM related skills such as those on the list above
 
·         Provide mentoring/instruction for local high school students – support high school tech centers and marketing programs such as DECA and FBLA
 
·         Provide education tools for classrooms that provide real world examples of how STEM makes a difference in your industry and company.  Share these with educators and put them on your website.

Community support

·         Support your company’s sponsorship of community organizations and programs that teach STEM skills to youth
 
·         Encourage employee involvement with local schools and non-profits
 
·         Develop your own community focused STEM programs

Communication

·         Develop new online content for your website and social media efforts that educate the community on your STEM related initiatives and/or how STEM makes a difference in your business
 
·         Work with community leaders to communicate the importance of STEM in your company communications and PR
 
·         Talk about the importance of STEM skills and how to develop them in the marketing organizations when you are a member. 

Change will not come overnight, but if we if we work together as a community, we can and will develop an even better educated, better trained marketing workforce that will help boost U.S competitiveness in our marketplace and around the globe.  You will benefit from the employees and youth that you help develop.  You will also benefit when you hire a new employee that was trained in STEM skills by another marketing leader.
 
With your involvement, and continued progress, we can better leverage STEM at the point of commerce.  Let’s add marketing leadership to the list of corporate leaders who are actively working to boost our STEM skills in the workforce – for better results for this year and for many years to come.
 
This blog was originally posted by GrowthSpring Group on the MENG Blend website.
 
GrowthSpring Group is a marketing strategy, market research, and innovation firm focused on accelerating your sales and profit growth. We help you identify new business growth insights & opportunities and execute winning strategies & plans. www.GrowthSpringGroup.com

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

9 Ways to Improve Your Facebook Engagement and ROI



If you are a B2C company, at this point, you most likely have a Facebook page.  A question many ask after launching a Facebook page is “how active do we need to be and what should we do on Facebook to turn our activity into ROI?”  Some companies are more active than others on Facebook.  Your level of activity likely depends on:

·         Your budget for social media

·         Your staffing to support social media

·         Your belief that you can effectively reach and engage target customers and prospects using Facebook.

If Facebook is part of your marketing plan (and it should be for B2C companies with loyal shoppers), here are 9 ways you can boost your effectiveness.  You are likely doing some of these already.  These recommendations are different ways to help build a robust community of loyal followers who want to stay connected to your brand on a daily basis.  Building a strong Facebook community helps you cost effectively share news on your brand, promote your product or services and get consumer feedback about issues that are important to your customers.  It can also help your followers to stay brand loyal and in return buy more of your product. 

The following list is intended to give you reminders of what you should be doing on Facebook and perhaps some new ideas to try.  These tactics work because they focus on engaging and delivering information and value to your followers.

1.       Leverage Facebook’s capabilities to build a strong online community.  There is big difference between having a Facebook page and building a strong community on Facebook.  Having a community manager who adds relevant content and provides stimulus for followers to interact daily helps build a community that fans want to join.

2.       Engage your community by asking them questions about what is important to them.  In any conversation, it is powerful to listen.  Ask relevant questions and listen to your follower’s answers.  Thank them for their input.

3.       Let followers ask questions on Facebook to be answered by your company’s experts.  It is likely that many consumers will have the same question, by providing answers, you educate the entire community.  Over time, you may see other consumers serving as experts to answer questions from others in the community.

4.       Ask followers to give product feedback on Facebook.  Most followers are likely users and fans of your products.  They are likely to share positive feedback for others to see.  Provide them opportunities to talk about your products.  Reward them when they share great information – See #8.

5.       Take negative consumers offline to resolve their problems quickly.  Unhappy customers can be noisy and disruptive to a community if they are left unresolved.  Contact them and ask to talk offline so you can quickly understand and resolve their issues.  Once you have, ask them to talk about what you did on Facebook.  If handled well, many detractors become advocates for your brand.

6.       Use Facebook to communicate your new news and introduce new products.  Your followers are more interested than most consumers in news about your products and brand.  They will likely be early adopters and advocates that can help build word of mouth BUZZ about your new products.  Share news on Facebook – it keeps fans engaged and rewards them for following you.  If budgets allow, regularly add new video of your products and other news.

7.       Crosslink your Facebook page with other relevant web and social media pages.  You can add value by communicating links to relevant web content including upcoming brand events and promotions.  Links to promotion partners or brand charity partners also add information and interest.

8.       Create “Random Acts of Kindness.”   Give away your product to followers on random days without condition.  Surprising selected followers with a gift for a good answer to a question or helping another fan with an issue will delight your fans.  Giving away samples of your new products gets your fans talking and helps create early vocal advocates for the new product on Facebook.

9.       Leverage your offline and online marketing to build your Facebook community.  Communicate your Facebook page and give consumers reasons to go there.  Consistently communicating your Facebook page in your consumer communication will help drive traffic and build your community.

If some of these approaches are new to you, test them for your brand.  Executing these tactics can enlarge membership your Facebook community, strengthen the frequency and level of interaction with your brand, and boost sales in stores and online.

This blog was originally posted by GrowthSpring Group on the MENG Blend website.

GrowthSpring Group is a marketing strategy, market research, and innovation firm focused on accelerating your sales and profit growth. We help you identify new business growth insights & opportunities and execute winning strategies & plans. www.GrowthSpringGroup.com

Monday, June 11, 2012

How to Sell More: Pursue All Four Ways to Grow Your Sales - Part 2


That is the big question in business.  On a daily, monthly and annual basis, we ask, how can we grow our sales?  This blog post will focus on four ways to sell more to your existing customers.  Part 1 covered planned and impulse purchases.  Part 2 will cover upselling and cross selling.  We will save the topic of attracting new customers for another day.

Upselling – the opportunity to sell a better solution

Upselling occurs when you introduce a customer to a better version of their planned purchase and you move them up to a higher value purchase.  An example of this is moving a customer up to the luxury model of a car vs. the base model.  For your customer, the upsell solution and sales approach needs to offer value and be a better choice—but at a higher price. 

Is your team trained on how to do this and do they apply this approach daily? Upselling is a skill to learn and it can be taught.

Successful upselling often comes from an appeal to the emotions, self-image and/or senses to move a customer from the planned purchase to an upsell alternative.  Letting your customer see, touch and experience the upsell alternative will help you engage your customer in envisioning the purchase and use of this new option.  Getting a customer to sit in the luxury model car helps them experience and envision themselves with that choice.  Just showing a brochure with different car models would be much less effective.  Does your sales team help customers envision the difference the better product will deliver?

Does your team know your customers well enough to suggest the relevant upsell products that will resonate?  Presenting an alternative that is not relevant or does not offer more of what your customers value will indicate you do not understand or value your customer’s needs.

Upselling works when executed well as it is seen as a win-win.  A recent survey of hospitality businesses by Caterer and Hotelkeeper magazine showed that 87% found that upselling was either a “fairly effective” or “very effective” part of their business strategy and did not turn customers off.

Cross selling – the opportunity to enhance the experience

“Would you like fries with that?” is one of the most well-known and effective cross selling questions.  Does your team ask the right questions when closing a sale to add to the size of the purchase?  Cross selling is getting your customer to add related products or services that will enhance their experience with their planned purchase.  If you are selling a fishing rod and reel, you will want to cross sell fishing line, bait, fishing tools, etc.

Effective cross selling requires a solid understanding of your customer’s needs.  Why are they buying your product?  How and where will they use it?   Research on your customers’ purchase decision criteria, product use or at least an analysis of buying patterns will help you identify what items to cross sell with each other.  Even capturing insights from customer conversations can help provide insights.

Are your cross sell suggestions relevant and do they add value to the use of the planned purchase?   A well-chosen recommendation can result in a sale or at least a belief that you are working to provide value to them and just not sell them more. 

Two ways to help close a cross sell include:  offering three choices at different price points.  With choices at different prices, customers can chose a solution that is most right for them.  If the middle solution is on target for your customer’s needs, it will often be chosen.  The second approach is to communicate that there is a rational need to make the choice today—communicating a short-term sale price or limited inventory can create a sense of urgency to close the sale rather than having it deferred to another day.

Training your team to anticipate and execute cross selling is a good way to sell more every day.  Providing your team with research insights on what to cross sell with different products will make them even more effective.

All leading to the Future Sell

If you develop and practice each of these selling techniques in your business, you will not only increase your likelihood of selling more on each transaction, you will create one more selling opportunity—the future sell—based on the good will and trust that you gain from your customers by understanding and satisfying their needs.  Good selling!

This blog was originally posted by GrowthSpring Group on the MENG Blend website.

GrowthSpring Group is a marketing strategy, market research, and innovation firm focused on accelerating your sales and profit growth. We help you identify new business growth insights & opportunities and execute winning strategies & plans. www.GrowthSpringGroup.com