Valley View Spartans Football by Dayton Sports Photographer Vincent Rush
Marketing is often misconstrued as little more than advertising – lots of
brands jumping up and down and shouting as they try to grab potential
customers’ attention. Done right however, marketing will cover every touch
point of your business from raising brand awareness (where advertising is often
a good tool), to activities that develop trust, drive trial, encourage repeat
sales and incentivize them to tell their friends about you.
The key is to create a strong marketing strategy, and the starting point for
building such a strategy is to challenge the way you might think of marketing
and develop a marketing mindset as part of your business culture.
Think of marketing as everything that touches your customer
One of the biggest challenges facing any CEO wanting to use marketing to
grow their business is the fragmentation within the industry, which makes it
difficult to navigate successfully, especially with limited budgets. As a
result, marketing often ends up consigned to pockets of unaligned activities
that fail to deliver their full potential.
Instead as a founder, business owner or appointed marketing person you need
to become the linchpin that holds it all together. PR, branding,
advertising, social media, content marketing… they are all just some in a
long list of potential marketing activities that can be implemented to your
advantage. But it is vital to think of them as being under one umbrella of
‘marketing’ so that everything talks to your customer in the same way; if you
don’t the messages gets confused and diluted.
The most successful customer–centric businesses broaden this principle even
further and look at every part of the business that comes into contact with
their customer.
The passion and knowledge (or lack thereof) which your staff shows for your
business and brand are often the customers first in-person interaction and form
the front line of your marketing strategy- first impressions really do count!
By thinking of these areas as being under the same marketing umbrella it
will make it easier for you to define what should be done and said to customers
at every touch point. If you want some inspiration, think Virgin Atlantic,
think Zappos, think Apple– they work to make every contact with the customer a
good one and the result is loyalty.
Make every business decision with your customer in mind
Those founders, CEOs and managers who actively encourage and embrace a
marketing mindset within their teams have the ability to not only understand
their customers but also identify new opportunities to grow their business and
achieve that all important 20% year on year growth that is the hallmark of a
high growth business.
To have a truly customer-centric business mindset there first needs to be a
very clear picture of exactly who you are talking to. How succinctly can you
describe your customer? Where do they live? Where do they shop? What do they
do? What do they read and watch? Who influences them? Can you get a clear
mental picture of them as one person? Build your customer profile and that
picture can be used to guide the fundamental decisions in your business.
A great example of this customer-centric business approach is five year
old Moma breakfasts – founded by Tom Mercer. Tom knew that the fundamental business
decision he faced was in understanding where to sell his healthy on-the-go
breakfasts and that to do this he needed to get in the mind of his target
customers. He was clear that his new product was all about solving the
hunger pains of busy rushed commuters – so he refused to launch the brand until
he got his first stall at the end of the platform concourse at Waterloo station – exactly where his hungry
commuters were.
Be bold about your brand
Every successful business will get copied in one form or another. That is
why business leaders with a strong marketing mindset create brands – not just
products. If you create a brand that means something to people…with values, and
an identity…competitors will be deterred from copying you and customers will
have a reason to stay with you.
Innocent drinks for instance have seen a multitude of competitors entering
their market, including many lower priced supermarket versions. But they
continue to grow – both in the UK
and by expanding into new international markets. Fundamentally, this is down to
that brand personality that lives on those little bottles and in everything
they do which drives an emotional attraction in that three second decision at
the chiller.
The reality is that a brand is so much more than a logo. The most powerful
brands mean something to people; they have values and are emotionally
attractive to their target audiences. This first starts by identifying what you
want your brand to stand for, and what it should stand for to be compelling to
your target customers. These questions begin to force decisions about what you
want to mean to your target audience. Once you are clear on what you want to
mean – you can build a marketing plan to start saying it.
Remain wholeheartedly focused on the end goal
One of the biggest challenges of managing marketing in an ambitious business
is the wealth of options open to you – and the confusion they cause. Plus when
faced with exciting marketing ideas, new technologies, and a limited budget, it
is easy to become distracted and want to try everything. This is when
businesses into the trap of being execution led – rather than objectives led –
leading to stretched resource, wasted money and sometimes disappointing
results.
Starting out with a clear idea of what you want to achieve is key to
avoiding these pitfalls. So, before you do anything, first assess what you want
to achieve, or where you want to get to: If you want more people to know about
you, that is about driving awareness; if you want people to try you out, that
is driving trial; or if you want your current customers to buy more, it is all
about driving frequency. But only by creating a business culture where
all the business leaders are constantly reviewing actions and progress versus
what you want to achieve with your marketing can you keep the business on track
to deliver results.
Spot your growth opportunities with a marketing mindset
Any business can look across at the competition and copy what they are doing
well. Far fewer have the skill to see the competitions’ weaknesses, understand
what customers truly want, and deliver a compelling solution. This ability to recognize
opportunity is a key trait of a growth business and of a leader with a
strategic vision. The success of the likes of Steve Jobs or Michael Dell rests
in their fundamental belief that the purpose of business is to better serve
your customer –the very essence of a marketing mindset.
Posted by Monroe Ohio photographer Vincent Rush,
Cincinnati Sports Photography and
Dayton Sports Photography of Monroe Ohio. Vince Rush can be contacted by phone at (877) 858-6295 or by email at vrush@rushintl.com or visit http://CincinnatiSportsPhotography.com
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