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The top five marketing mistakes companies make and how to recover. When marketing efforts are not successful, many companies wonder why. Why isn’t the phone ringing? Because marketing efforts must be more than a disconnected series of tasks. Put the power of marketing to work for your company by avoiding the five biggest marketing mistakes we’ve seen companies make. #1 Marketing without a strategy in place. Common Mistake: Because companies are frustrated by a lack of revenue, they often equate limiting their target market with limiting opportunity. The fact is, for marketing efforts to succeed, you must define a target market segment where your product has the most relevance and the best competitive advantage. Most of us can simply not afford to market everything to anyone along with delusions that we are the only option for our customers to consider. Recovery Plan: Build a brief overview description of each product and service you offer, including features and benefits, and concentrate on the differentiating features. Research your competition and document their offering, pricing structure, strengths and weaknesses, and how you plan to compete with them. Once you identify your key advantage over the competition, play it up consistently in every marketing vehicle you produce. Recognize that you can’t afford to market to everyone and define your target markets by grouping and categorizing the characteristics of your current customer base. Finally, create a calendar of events and associated budget that will act as your road map to success. Watch your sales begin to climb. #2 Being inconsistent with your brand. Common Mistake: Although some companies have actually gone through the steps of clearly outlining their company’s positioning language, we find that many individuals within that company still have their own version. The result? A confused audience - unsure of who you are and what your company does - that is unable to convey your offering to anyone else. Brand awareness is only built by consistently communicating your company’s position and identity each and every time, so that eventually your “listeners” will repeat your positioning exactly as you intend them to repeat it. Recovery Plan: Host a brainstorming session with key team-members and craft a statement that everyone agrees upon, understands and supports. The positioning statement must include who you are, what you offer, for whom, for what result, and why someone should choose you over anyone else. Then do a full audit of your materials and fix any inconsistencies. Remember all employees must work together as ambassadors of the brand. #3 Not integrating marketing with sales efforts. Common Mistake: Often marketing teams spend a considerable amount of time, effort, and perhaps most importantly money to create a collateral kit and sales presentation for a new program or product offering. To further illustrate the point, many times a marketing team will launch a new direct mail program to “generate sales leads” for the sales team, only to find that sales doesn’t follow up on them because they don’t feel the leads are “qualified.” Not having a clear integration between sales and marketing can only result in failed marketing programs, costing you lost revenue opportunities and wasted expenses. Recovery Plan: Also, schedule quarterly customer visits for marketing and sales to call on a variety of current clients together. These visits provide more insight into the customer’s perspective and the sales person’s challenges than any other technique. Bring the lessons learned back to the advisory committee to shape more relevant marketing tools. Without uniting sales and marketing efforts, your strategies are only realizing one-half of the equation. #4 Marketing something you don’t actually have operationally. Common Mistake: Your marketing team has created eye-catching materials, compelling positioning, and an aggressive campaign for the launch of a new company offering. The campaign is very successful, however operations cannot handle the demands. Or maybe, the product itself is not available in time, or has many production problems. Recovery Plan: Perform a gap analysis and assess what needs to happen to fulfill the new business demands, from both marketing and operational perspectives. Then create a plan and detail the specific steps required for each team to support existing sales as well as successfully roll out the offering to new customers. Identify milestones for each group to report on and demonstrate progress. You must raise your game to meet the new demand. #5 Not using the marketing mix effectively. Common Mistake: Many marketing plans we see only focus on one activity like direct mail, or advertising, or public relations, or cold calling, and do not use several or all of these vehicles together in concert. Putting your eggs in only one basket may generate some leads for your company, but this strategy will ultimately limit your ability to maximize sales opportunities within a target market. Your customers need to see and learn about your company through a few different vehicles before they will be finally prompted to respond to your offer. Recovery Plan: Choose the activities that cater specifically to your target market, and then create a program schedule that ensures the right level of coverage across the multiple channels, increasing activities around key product launches or to address seasonality issues. Then be patient and let them work. It takes time, but rest assured, the variety of vehicles, working in concert, will build awareness and generate leads at an exponentially higher rate than any one vehicle alone can accomplish. B&BD
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