10 Marketing Resolutions for 2010
Jan 03
2010
2010
It’s a new year and a new decade. No better time to take stock of your marketing commitments and make some serious resolutions. Here are 10 to consider for 2010.
- Commit to some marketing. Really, any marketing. Doing no marketing is called “going black.” Occasionally there are legitimate reasons to go black, but not now. The goal for 2010 is to get into the “Black” on your balance sheet and income statement, and that doesn’t happen by going black in marketing.
- Test something new. Same old, same old doesn’t work. It’s time to break out and try a new marketing vehicle, be it Twitter or a billboard. It doesn’t have to be a new fangled social media outlet, it just has to be something you haven’t tried before so you can test its effectiveness.
- Re-test something old. If you stopped doing print ads because they stopped pulling for you, reconsider the medium with a changed message in a different publication. For instance, move from a trade magazine ad to a consumer newspaper ad, or stop a newspaper ad and move to a biz journal ad. Don’t throw the baby out with bath water. Print ads may still work, just in a different pub or with a different message or creative treatment.
- Go social. Yes, it’s time to do something in the social media world. Create a personal Facebook page, create a Facebook business page, start a Twitter account on a topic of expertise, consider blogging. Don’t do it all, just get a toe-hold so you’re in the game and can talk the talk.
- Fish where the fish are. Take a fresh look at your intended audience or market. Where do they congregate? If your market is on Facebook, then that’s where you need to be, but if they are meeting regularly at a club hall or in the back of a restaurant every Tuesday, get old-fashioned and show your face at the real-live networking event.
- Rethink your audience. If sales are flat, is there a new audience out there for your old product? The classic example is Arm & Hammer’s baking soda being reintroduced as a refrigerator de-odorizer rather than just a baking ingredient. Does your product have a new audience waiting to discover it for their own special needs?
- Get back to benefits basics. Stop thinking about what your company or product does, and remember why it’s important to a customer. What do you really provide? If it’s tires, are you providing reliable safety or wheels that define a personality, rather than just rubber that hits the road? Remember Harley Davidson doesn’t sell motorcycles. They sell virility to men going through a mid-life crisis.
- Get help. Marketing takes talent. From writers to designers to media planners, don’t try to go it alone. You may need staff, but you likely just need an ongoing consultant, ad agency, or marketing service. Get the help you need at the price you can afford. You can always trade up to full-time staff, or a more creative agency later. It’s more important to get started and learn what works and what doesn’t than wait for the perfect help to come your way, or for the day you can afford the fancy agency.
- Start early. Marketing takes time. Brochures done on the spur of the moment rarely hit the mark. You want sustained sales not short-term sales. You don’t want to be a one-hit wonder. Give yourself and your team time to get the message and tone right. Start now, in January, but don’t look for results in February. Look for results by the half-year mark, year-end, and ever onward.
- Stay on strategy. Marketing is like exercise. It only works if you continually work at it with a goal in mind and a strategy for getting there. So don’t start marketing in January and quit by February. Marketing is not a treadmill. It ‘s a path to the future. You should never get off it.
If you want help with any step, feel free to call the strategists at Plaza Communications and Consulting Group (www.plazaconsultinggroup.com). We’d love to help you start the year off right! Happy New Year to all and Merry Marketing for a Prosperous New Year.
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