Posts Tagged ‘Business’

Logo Design: Don’t Try This at Home, Folks!

Saturday, July 11th, 2009

Once you understand the importance of a logo to your business and the qualities that constitute effective logo design, it’s time to talk about working with a design firm to create a logo of enduring value.

For many potential customers, your logo could be the FIRST point of contact with your business. Think of your logo as your company’s introductory handshake. Now, imagine (or recall) a bad handshake: one that is cold and sweaty (yuck!),  too rough or too hot, too weak or too strong. Each leaves a lasting impression. The same goes for a logo. A poorly executed logo can leave your potential customers with a persistent and damaging impression.

And, as the saying goes, “You never get a second chance to make a good first impression.” If your logo looks like junk, customers will associate that feeling with your products and services.

Good logos epitomize several qualities: simplicity in shape and color; legibility with carefully selected typefaces; the right size and scalability (including use of white space) for a range of applications; and, a style sheet that dictates appropriate use. Your logo should also be unique enough to differentiate you from your competitors. Most importantly, however, your logo should be MEMORABLE (in a good way, of course)!

Why You Should Hire a Design Firm

So, how do you get a logo that meets these criteria? Easy. You hire a professional design firm to help you create one. This is one of those “Don’t try this at home, folks” moments. A quality logo is not something you cook up internally unless your company has its own creative department. Even then, caution is advised. That’s because an outside perspective of your business and brand can be invaluable, helping you get past weaknesses and blind spots that your customers perceive but you don’t.

The price you pay for a bad logo will be high if you rely on half-baked, in-house skills or hire the cheapest design firm available. First, there is the cost in time and money of having to revise a bad logo or, worse, having to scrap the final product and start over. Second, if you roll out a logo in spite of misgivings, you risk creating multitudes of bad impressions that could result in lost business.

Logo Design:
Ingredients for Successful Collaboration

Instead, select a design firm to help create your logo, keeping a few things in mind when you do so:

  1. Prepare for the costs - A quality logo doesn’t come dirt cheap and it shouldn’t. This is one case where you should be comfortable with paying a little more, as your logo can be a powerful tool to create and sustain business. At the same time, be cautious about firms that want to charge what seem exorbitant rates. Sky-high design fees do not guarantee you’ll get a better logo. Instead, look at each prospective firm’s previous output and meet with their people. Is the quality high and can you work well with them?
  2. Prepare to collaborate (but don’t dictate!) – You will need to communicate clearly with your design firm. You know your business. Help them understand — and feel — what drives your vision. They’ve got to “get it” for the logo to be any good. Then get out of the way. The last thing a creative design team needs is micromanagement or the sense that someone is constantly looking over their metaphorical shoulder, analyzing every detail of the creative process.
  3. Prepare to be challenged (but don’t roll over) - Hire a firm that can challenge some of your assumptions about your logo and what it should be or could be. True, they need to understand your vision, but the external perspective brought to the table by an outside firm can be invaluable. Remember, you hired them for their skill set and experience. Now let them do what they do best. When the time comes for feedback, make sure your feedback is honest. Don’t acquiesce and settle for something that misses the mark.
  4. Prepare to have fun - The process of working with your design firm to create a logo should be enjoyable. Be open to ideas and toss them around. Welcome fresh concepts and explore them for merit. You might find the best concept comes from a synthesis of multiple ideas. Above all, don’t be dismissive, negative or hostile or you could put a debilitating kink in the creative process. Remember, good logos, good brands and good business are built on positive rather than negative foundations.

A successful collaboration with a design firm to create either a new logo or “renovate” an old one can pay enormous dividends for your business. Remember, don’t entrust your company’s first impression — your logo — with just anyone. Find a firm with a proven record of quality work, establish a good rapport and then let them do what they do best.

Written by Scott Wigton

Does Your Logo Measure Up?

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

A Strong Logo Embodies Your Brand and Leads to Sales

You’ll never get a second chance to make a good first impression and for many businesses that all-important first impression comes from a deceptively unassuming source — your business logo.
That’s right. That little item that adorns your letterhead, business correspondence, signage and advertising is absolutely crucial to shaping initial responses to your business. And, for existing customers, your logo symbolizes value and trust and serves as a reaffirmation of a good, ongoing relationship.

But what if your logo isn’t all it could be? Or, worse, what if it’s just plain bad? If so, you run the risk of turning off potential customers and undermining your brand. A poorly designed logo slapped on letterhead, ads, billboards or on the sides of your company vehicles won’t entice anyone to become your customer. Rather, people are more likely to think: “Well, they’re too cheap or careless to come up with a good logo and that probably doesn’t bode well for the product/service they offer, either.”

Logo Power!
Let’s be clear. Your logo is NOT your brand. A logo is only a symbol or representation of your brand. Nevertheless, it has the power to reflect positively, or negatively, on your brand. In the minds of many clients and consumers, the mere sight of a well executed logo backed by a strong brand is enough to trigger a buying impulse.

That’s why it’s important your business have a strong logo. Think about all the great brands out there, the companies you buy from — almost without exception, they have strong logos designed to powerfully embody their brands. When you see them, a positive message is conveyed. And, even if you don’t care for that brand, you respect the authority represented by that logo.

Given the power of logos in the digital age when impressions — and business decisions — can be made in a matter of nanoseconds, it may behoove you to re-evaluate your own logo, and if you don’t have one (shame on you!) to get one. So, you might ask, what are some factors that make for a strong logo?

  • Strong logos normally have simple shapes. Shape is one thing that people immediately connect with visually. The more complicated the shape, the less appealing the logo generally. The shape may be dictated by a symbol or defined by letters and words or a combination of both. Whatever the case, simpler is better.
  • Strong logos make effective use of color, without overdoing it. Color can be powerful when used the right way in a logo. When excessive, color becomes cloying, possibly tasteless and proves distracting from the brand message you hope to convey. Colors must be carefully selected because each color, at a subliminal level, suggests feelings that will be associated with your brand. And, keep this in mind. If your logo is well designed, it will also work quite well in black and white.
  • Strong logos use fonts or typefaces that are carefully selected to reflect the brand proposition. If you’re a company that deals in high-tech, you don’t want an “old timey” typeface used in your logo. It sends a conflicting message.
  • Strong logos are the right size. Is your logo too big, or too small, for your letterhead and other applications? You don’t want people straining to see it because it was designed too awkwardly to fit appropriately in all your means of communication.
  • Strong logos are accompanied by style sheets. Do you have a style guide for the use of your logo? Is your logo legally protected? Do you slap it haphazardly on everything without regard to positioning and size, thereby watering down its affect? These are important considerations to make sure you get the most out of your logo.

Finally, before you abandon your logo, be sure to consider its existing value. Over the years, you have probably built up a large cache of credibility in your community with your logo. People recognize it and know what it stands for. Some say changing your logo is tantamount to divorce with your clients and customers. That is probably too extreme, but carefully mull over the heritage of your logo. Unless it has been a disaster or reflects a bygone era or your company and brand are due a total makeover, it may be that your logo needs only a little bit of tweaking to update it. A professional designer can help you with just the right flourishes.

Next month, we’ll explore that process of working with a design firm to create a strong logo for your company.

Written by Scott Wigton

How To Collaborate Effectively with Your Design Firm (Hint: Communication Is Key)

Sunday, May 10th, 2009

The old real estate adage is: Location! Location! Location!

When it comes to effective collaboration between a design agency and your business, an equally important axiom applies: Communication! Communication! Communication!

Good communication is the bedrock upon which trust is built, allowing creative projects between you and your design agency to flourish.

Remember, when working with a design firm, a successful collaboration requires carefully considered ideas so that a meeting of the minds can be achieved. Anything less will probably result in unwanted surprises, disappointment and a waste of time and resources. Lack of clarity about goals, poor preparation and lack of commitment could fatally undermine any collaboration between you and your design firm.

At the beginning of any collaborative process, it’s helpful to keep in mind the reason you need to work with a design firm. In short, you have a problem – a creative problem, and a design firm can help you solve it because they possess an invaluable skill — the ability to conceptualize. This means, or should mean, they are experts at identifying opportunities for your company and finding ways to fulfill those opportunities. Those opportunities might include things such as Web site design, marketing, company branding or rebranding, events, and various communications to connect you with your key audiences and customers.

Designers can help you navigate from being lost in the business wilderness with no idea how to proceed, to finding the path that will take your company to new levels of success.

When collaborating with a design firm, it’s essential to keep several things in mind. The following few tips will go a long way toward ensuring that you get the most out of your working relationship.

  1. Build trust through respectful communication — Often, as a company owner or decision maker, you may not be able to see things as an outsider (i.e. customer) would. That’s why a design firm can be invaluable at the start. They bring an external perspective that will enable you to view things in a fresh light. This in turn can unleash powerful creative opportunities.
  2. Define the problem and define your goals — Try to be as specific as possible when identifying the problem, as well as your goals, and communicate these clearly and concisely to your design agency. Vagueness here could result in disappointment because design solutions might end up being too general or plain. Make your objectives clear and what it is you want to be accomplished. Don’t leave out the details! What do you want your audiences, your customers to feel and what action do you want them to take?
  3. Clarify strategy and the roles of team members — You’ll need a big picture roadmap for you and your design agency to work from. Make sure everyone has this roadmap and, importantly, knows what they are responsible for and when. This should eliminate redundant efforts. Make sure you have the support of key decision makers in the chain of command. You don’t want a project delayed or stopped entirely because someone important was left out of the loop.
  4. Provide a budget range — This will really help define the scope of what your design firm proposes to you. Leaving this up in the air is not a good idea as the design agency may return to you with a dazzling proposal that is way beyond what you can afford, making the effort an expensive time waster. Additionally, if your budget is extremely limited, don’t expect champagne proposals, but rather more modest, though serviceable ones.
  5. Work through problems together — Again, clear, direct and honest communication is key to overcoming the inevitable bumps in the road to the project’s completion. If you have concerns, bring them out into the open rather than working on them without your design agency’s knowledge or input. It may take some time for your design agency to fully grasp your company’s brand proposition, for example, but this is normal. Don’t always expect instant gratification. Be willing to wait until the final product has been refined and unveiled. And, finally…
  6. Perform a project review — Sit down with your design agency representatives and study what worked and what could have gone better with the project. This will help both parties avoid making the same mistakes again and lead to successful future collaborations.

Written by Scott Wigton

Cultivating Your ‘Green’ Marketing Thumb | Part II

Saturday, April 11th, 2009

Want to Stay in the Black? Try Going Green

Consumer Preferences Steadily Shift To Earth Friendly Businesses

Until recently, most American businesses had just one motive: to make a profit, preferably a big one. If that meant wasteful manufacturing processes, superfluous packaging and other practices that led to deforestation, toxic waste, and excessive greenhouse gas emissions, then so be it. Consumers didn’t seem to care as long as they got the product or service they needed.

That business paradigm, however, is changing quickly. And if you haven’t felt its effects yet, you soon will.

That’s because as concern for the environment and sustainable living continues to grow, consumers are showing significant changes in attitudes and buying preferences. Businesses would be well advised to adapt their practices swiftly or risk being left behind.

The Right Thing to Do?
In other words, GOING GREEN, is going to become central to a business’s profitability in the coming years. Why? Customers are starting to demand it. Recent polling shows 80% of American adults expect that businesses should be mindful of their environmental impact in the products and services they offer.

Forty-four percent surveyed believe damage to the environment caused by business practices is a very important issue and 18% think it’s extremely important. In all likelihood, for a growing number of your customers, living green and buying green is now the RIGHT thing to do.

Obviously, simply offering your product or service isn’t going to be good enough anymore, especially if you’re perceived as being indifferent to, or worse, as harming the environment and collective societal health in the process.  If your business isn’t as green as it could or should be in just a few years time, then even the most vigorous “only profit matters” mentality isn’t going to save you.

Rewards Growing for Greenies
On the other hand, the rewards for making your business greener and more sustainable will be increasing. The market for green products and services is estimated now at $209 billion. That figure will only continue to grow as environmentally astute consumers seek out businesses that share their values. By gradually becoming a greener business, you eventually will sell more products, add more value and enhance your reputation over competitors who reject a more sustainable approach to doing business.

Surveys indicate that many consumers already are willing to pay a premium for greener products. Yet even large discounters such as Wal-Mart are getting on board with green practices. In its relentless efforts to cut costs, Wal-Mart has insisted on a more efficient, sustainable supply chain, thus reducing energy and transportation costs. Aveda, which makes a range of hair and skin care products, has gone to greener packaging (using recyclables) and biodegradable materials, and incorporates organic ingredients into its product lines.

So what can you do to begin the process of greening up your business?

  1. Commit your business to sustainability
    Get educated on the issues and opportunities. If you’re starting a business, design it from the beginning with sustainable elements and products in mind. When it’s time for a renovation, introduce sustainable elements and practices. Use recycled materials, increase natural and low energy lighting as well as low VOC paints and carpets and solar power if possible. Reduce your waste, water consumption and overall energy use. If you operate vehicles, introduce hybrids or alternative energy units (compressed natural gas) to your fleet. All these things will increase your credibility with customers. Not only that, you may actually cut costs by adopting greener practices.
  2. Offer greener products and services
    Look for a “green need” in the marketplace and fill it. Make sure your offerings are truly green, made with environmentally friendly materials and packaged in like manner. But make sure your products work and are competitive with alternatives. You may have to educate your customers about the value of your sustainable products and services. If you’re charging a higher price, the customer must feel that it’s worth it. Also, do some local market research and see who’s on board and who’s missing the boat when it comes to sustainability.
  3. Get the word out
    Once you’ve introduced greener products, services and business practices, tell your customers and your community about it. Highlight your sustainability on a WEBSITE, create a blog, issue press releases, get involved with or even sponsor “green” community events. It’s important to show that you are not only offering quality products and services that customers value, but that you are being environmentally responsible and helping solve a problem that affects us all.

Written by Scott Wigton

Cultivating Your ‘Green’ Marketing Thumb

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009

As the Globe Goes ‘Green’ Opportunities Grow Bigger

More and more, we’re told, our future will be a green one, replete with green cars, green homes, green manufacturing, green products and green jobs.


Why? Our livelihoods — not to mention our survival — may depend upon it. With alarm bells ringing on about melting ice caps, homeless polar bears, rising temperatures, rising seas, droughts and disasters unless we change our wasteful ways, it’s clear there’s plenty of momentum for the creation of a wide range of green products.

The question then becomes: How do you market them?

Expanding today’s $209 billion “green” market, represents a tremendous opportunity, yet also a frustrating conundrum. Experts are still debating the most effective marketing strategies for green products. How, exactly, do you turn growing environmental concern and awareness among consumers into sales, especially given that many green products carry inherent price premiums?

The obvious assumption is that green products are seen by many as a benefit, but in what way? Do people purchase green products strictly for altruistic reasons or for more self-interested reasons because “buying green” aligns with their values, saves them money (at least over the long term) or confers upon them an “elite” status.

Self Interest and Environmental Vanity

It’s instructive to look at some examples. In the early 1990s when the green movement first got going, manufacturers brought the now famous compact fluorescent light bulbs (CFLs) to market, touting them as “earth friendly.” Consumers, however, snubbed the expensive products until they were repackaged and re-launched as a longer life bulb that would save money over the long term versus compared to standard incandescent bulbs.
The outcome for the first chlorofluorocarbon (CFC) free refrigerator, marketed by Whirlpool, also challenged assumptions that consumers would choose an environmentally friendly product on this merit alone. As it turned out, this award winning, first-in-class refrigerator fizzled because people didn’t feel like paying the extra $150 premium in spite of its environmental benefit.

But some marketers have learned that vanity often is a bigger motivator than altruism (or even long-term savings) when it comes to green products. Say what you will about the Toyota Prius — its, um, distinctive styling, and premium price for a midsize car, but one thing is certain. It’s been a mean, super-selling “green” machine. Since its introduction in North America in late 2000, nearly one million have been sold. Hundreds of thousands more have been sold on the worldwide market.

And while that amounts to a drop in the bucket of overall auto sales, it’s one very significant drop, making the Prius the world’s first green vehicle to achieve real marketplace success. Designed to be environmentally friendly and get excellent fuel economy, this gas-electric hybrid demonstrates a key green marketing concept: It has identified its core audience and delivered on its promises. Perhaps most importantly, it has empowered its market — people who feel so deeply about “living green” and being seen as “green” that they are willing to pony up the extra cash to do so. In fact, a July 2007 New York Times article using data from CNW Marketing Research found that 57% of Prius purchasers bought their vehicles because it “makes a statement about me.” Interestingly, just 36% cited improved fuel economy as the reason for their purchase.

Basic Principles of Green Marketing

While “Green Marketing” continues to be defined, there is little doubt it offers tremendous potential in coming years. Purveyors of green products would be wise to apply the following three marketing principles.

  1. First, a business offering or manufacturing green products ought to be as “green” as possible, founding its credentials upon its own commitment to actual green practices. Are you selling recyclable materials and you don’t recycle?
  2. Second, a company must educate its customers about why their product matters and position it so that customers understand that it performs as well or better than non-green alternatives.
  3. Finally, customers must be empowered by green products, giving them the clear feeling that they are affirming their principles and participating in an action that helps to “save” the environment.

Green products may be good in and of themselves, but unless they’re marketed properly, they’re not going to make a far reaching impact. And that’s not good news for polar bears, or people or the bottom line.

Written by Scott Wigton

Are You Blind to Good Design?

Tuesday, February 24th, 2009

For too long, the power of good design has been relegated to a secondary role when it comes to developing a marketing strategy. But with more clients and customers basing their purchasing decisions on design, businesses must look at ways to incorporate design from the beginning.

Remember when the Apple Inc. iPhone debuted a couple of years ago? Within 30 hours, stores sold 270,000 units and some opportunistic entrepreneurs even began hawking the devices on Ebay for thousands of dollars above the retail price of $599.

And they had buyers.

Since then, Apple has sold more than 13 million of the touchscreen multimedia devices and Time Magazine named it the invention of the year in 2007. Apple’s CEO, Steve Jobs was named Fortune Magazine’s Most Powerful Businessman of the year.

Most companies would kill for that kind of response to a new product or service. Talk about buzz and brand loyalty. What people forget is that the iPhone was introduced into a very competitive, crowded marketplace, and it still blew away the competition.

Why? In a word: Design.

The value of design is something Apple has capitalized on since its inception over 30 years ago. That’s because Apple, under CEO Steve Jobs, has understood that design is much more than snazzy looks and slick packaging. Rather, Apple and a few other visionary companies, have realized that design, properly incorporated into strategic planning, is what drives innovation which in turn drives brand and builds customer loyalty.

Here’s what Jobs said about design (related to the iMac computer) in a Fortune Magazine article a few years ago:

“We don’t have good language to talk about this kind of thing. In most people’s vocabularies, design means veneer. It’s interior decorating. It’s the fabric of the curtains and the sofa. But to me, nothing could be further from the meaning of design. Design is the fundamental soul of a man-made creation that ends up expressing itself in successive outer layers of the product or service. The iMac is not just the color or translucence or the shape of the shell. The essence of the iMac is to be the finest possible consumer computer in which each element plays together.”

What is Jobs suggesting? Clearly he means that if any product, service or, for that matter, company, is to succeed, good design (and designers) must be brought into the strategic marketing process from the beginning.

In far too many businesses, however, design remains a secondary consideration. It is left until the latter stages of the marketing process, its only purpose to furnish products and services with a glossy company veneer. The hope, of course, is that this veneer, as Jobs puts it, will make a favorable impression on customers.

But as the Oracle of Apple hints, this veneer is too superficial to connect with customers. Why? Because it isn’t rooted in the core essence or value proposition of the company itself and the design ends up being weak. Sure, it may look pretty or be exciting in some way, at least initially, but it’s simply window dressing that fails to deliver on your company’s key promises.

How important is design? According to a 2007 “Design for Living” survey conducted by Kelton Research, 7 in 10 Americans said design is the most important factor when it comes to influencing them to desire a product. For people under 30, the power of design is even more persuasive. For many companies, the role that design plays in their strategic processes will have to be rethought. No longer should only left-brain, number crunching analysts dominate throughout planning processes. To remain competitive, companies will have to make room at the table for the right-brain creative types, the ones with the innate talent for distilling a company’s core values to their purest essence and then designing processes, systems, services and products that end users desire.

Great design, above all, connects with clients and customers on an emotional level, causing them to yearn for a product because of a desirable feeling it gives them. By incorporating design into strategic marketing processes from the start, a business can be assured that its value proposition will affect customers where it counts the most – in their hearts. And once you’ve got a customer’s heart, you’ve got a customer’s loyalty. So, does good design matter? Just ask 13 million iPhone users.

Written by Scott Wigton

Why Marketing Planning Is Important (Especially for the Coming Year)

Saturday, February 14th, 2009

A little bit of marketing planning goes a long way. And yet we’ve found far too many businesses whose approach to marketing is often unfocused, undisciplined and geared for short term results at best.

With the economy projected to be rocky in 2009, it may be time to seize the initiative and create a plan that will guide you to desirable — and long-lasting — results in spite of downbeat predictions.

Imagine a coach announcing to his players before the Big Game — “OK, guys, we’re just going to wing it today! Good luck!”
Hardly inspiring stuff. But even worse, the coach has made a fundamental error. He’s sent his team into the game without a plan for winning. Sure, the players might be talented, but even the best are likely to fail without a clear plan of action.
The same is true when it comes to meeting your business goals for the coming year. You may have high hopes and a good staff, but without a concrete marketing plan, your team will be no better off than the one in our hypothetical example.

Unfortunately, too many small business leaders behave just like that coach, either neglecting to develop a marketing plan, or else failing to update their plans for a new year and new economic realities. In fact, as recently as 2005, 75% of companies didn’t have an approved marketing plan.

In a booming economy you might just get away with that — if you’re lucky. When things go south, however, lack of a marketing plan could spell disaster. And with a turbulent economy expected for many months to come, a well conceived marketing plan could be worth its weight in gold.

Why? In short, it helps you focus on the Big Picture when you are tempted to hide among the details of day-to-day operations. Crucially, it supports your overall marketing efforts by helping you identify your best prospects, effectively communicate with them, and create the sales opportunities that make your business thrive. Finally, if done properly, a marketing plan will equip you with ways of measuring outcomes.

So, how do you get started? Begin by evaluating your company’s strengths and weaknesses; what do you do well and in what areas could you improve? Assess your market thoroughly. Who are your competitors and how are they doing? How are you positioned? Are market conditions stable or could they change in the near future?

A solid plan should also clearly express an overall strategy (as well as “ground level” tactics) intended to increase your business’s market share, customer acquisition, customer lifetime value, and frequency and recency of customer purchases. Importantly, your plan must stipulate how to increase your brand awareness and value. Every successful football team has a written playbook and the discipline to follow it, and when it comes to marketing, so should your business.

Of course, even the best plan is worthless without implementation. That means you must provide a sufficient marketing budget. Backing your plan with dollars means you are truly committed to sustained action, rather piece-meal steps in hopes of achieving your goals.
Finally, now is the time to get going on your plan.

Starting the New Year (or at least next business quarter) with a marketing plan completed, will pay dividends down the road and give confidence and energy to your team over the long term. That way when it’s time for the big “locker-room” speech to your team you’ll be prepared to say: “Listen carefully, here’s how we’re going to win the game!”

Business Self Defense During a Downturn (And the Number 1 Mistake to Avoid!)

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

What goes up, as they say, must come down. In the last few months, we’ve all seen our once soaring economy struggle like a wounded duck to stay aloft. But there’s no reason for your business to suffer a similar fate — if you take the right steps.

Daily, the media remind us how bad things supposedly are – customers aren’t buying, productivity has plunged, banks aren’t lending, etc. It’s enough to make even the most optimistic among us want to run for the hills and hibernate in a cave.

So what’s your business to do in times like these? Hunker down? Cut back? Sit tight and play the “Woe is me, nobody wants to buy” game?

Are you kidding? Now is the time to seize the initiative, get a leg up on competitors, and position your business not just to ride out the recession, but to experience remarkable growth when the economy picks up again.

Sound too good to be true? For many business owners, it does. Faced with a slowdown, they instinctively cut back in an effort to protect profits. What they don’t realize is they will end up limping through the recession. Worse, they will be unable to take full advantage of an economic turnaround.

So what can you do to avoid this tempting recession trap? First of all, don’t panic. Yes, slowing sales can be expected, at least for a while. But you can turn that around by avoiding the number one mistake made by too many businesses during an economic recession — cutting back or eliminating marketing efforts.

Multiple studies show that businesses that do NOT cut their marketing budgets during recessions experience nearly twice the growth of competitors who pare down their marketing efforts.

In fact, some firms are actually INCREASING their marketing efforts. For example, some major food manufacturers including Sara Lee and Kraft are planning marketing blitzes this year. Why? They understand that in spite of increased food prices and the overall glum economic mood, they need to keep their brands front and center in the minds of customers. Brand recognition and value are central to generating new customers and maintaining the loyalty of existing ones.

They also are exploiting multiple marketing channels ranging from print and television to in-store promotions and the Internet. Now, you may not be able to do all that, but chances are you can use some to your advantage, especially the low-cost Internet.

Along with operating efficiency, maintaining a strong marketing posture is absolutely essential to success in recessionary times.  Here are some tips for keeping your marketing efforts primed in 2009:

  1. Keep your happy customers happy. During a recession, 95% of a typical business’s sales volume comes from just 5% percent of its clients (compared to 80% of sales volume from 20% of top clients during normal times). So, it may be worth considering benefits or incentives for this key constituency.
  2. Boost your online marketing efforts. This marketing channel is relatively inexpensive and easily measurable.
  3. Keep in touch. Let your best customers/clients know you’re looking out for them by maintaining regular contact with them.
  4. Hone your messages. Make sure every marketing message has a specific purpose intended to move customers through your sales process.
  5. Reinforce your brand. Keep your brand front and center, with your core value proposition clearly apparent to clients/customers.
  6. Introduce a new product: Your competitors may be weakened by the recession. Now’s the time to debut a good product and capture overwhelming market share ahead of the competition.
  7. Get involved locally. Sponsor community events, get involved in cross promotions, take up a cause. These are great ways to raise brand awareness. And, don’t be afraid to get the media involved. A simple, well-timed press release can pay big publicity dividends.
  8. Word of mouth. There is no better marketing for your business than good word of mouth. It’s inexpensive and gives you tremendous credibility. Plus, the buzz often outlives the initial promotions.

Yes, we’ve all read the headlines. According to experts, we’re in a recession. But it doesn’t have to be a disaster for your business. In fact, it can be an enormous opportunity. All you have to do is keep a cool head and continue to tell your customers that you have a great brand — one that is well worth their investment.

Written by Scott Wigton