The New Marketing Mix: Where Will You Meet Your Customers?
January 7, 2008
It wasn’t so long ago that the marketer’s quiver held a
handful of arrows. The skillful often chose some combination of print
advertising, radio, broadcast television and cable spots, Yellow Pages ads,
direct mail, billboards, special events, telemarketing, press stories - and of
course, word of mouth. These were the trusted marketing tools. You could count
on them.
That was then; this is now and everything has changed. More
accurately, it is changing. Since most of us prefer stability and
predictability, we may see what is occurring as something akin to a transition
from the old to the new as we look for a new list of trusted tools to emerge.
Unfortunately, it may be little more than wishful thinking.
This picture came into abrupt focus one morning when the
telephone rang. It was a vendor from a company placing video monitors
displaying consumer ads in supermarkets. “As you know, advertisers are trying
new ways to get to customers, particularly since many of the traditional
techniques are no longer effective,” said the salesperson, who was expressing
the deepening dilemma facing companies today.
Not only are there no silver bullets, but the bullet supply
is running mighty low.
ANYONE HAVE THE ‘RIGHT' ANSWERS?
Although some may disagree, no one has a corner on right
answers today when it comes to marketing tactics. When someone asks if a
particular tactic will produce the desired results, there is only one
acceptable answer: It all depends on the product or service, the target
demographic, the message and, particularly, how the target customers want to be
approached.
The CNN debates with Democratic and Republican candidates
are a good example of the profound changes taking place not only in political
marketing, but the entire marketing universe as well.
Perhaps the most dramatic event took place in July 2007 when
3,300 people posted video questions on YouTube for a Democratic presidential
candidates’ debate. It was the first ever political reality TV event and what
may come to be thought of as a marketing watershed in political campaigning. It
may have helped shape the answer to this question: Is voter apathy the fault of
the voters or is it a reflection of feeling ignored?
The event sent the message that the public wants real people
to question the candidates. No longer will we accept professional talking heads
interposing themselves between candidate and questioner. Even more to the
point, the politicos looked painfully uncomfortable that evening as they
struggled to come up with “make sense” answers.
While this is but one example of the many communication
changes taking place today, it illustrates the sea change that’s occurring.
To put it as clearly as possible, no marketer can say with
certainty how to reach a particular audience as things stand today. If that
isn’t enough, there is reason to doubt that the clouds of confusion will soon
part and the sunlight of certainty will shine again.
This was driven home recently while going over a proposal we
were preparing for a prospective client. Although this was a modest-size
regional business, we found we were recommending a dazzling array of 11
different marketing tactics.
MARKETING ‘THOUGHT-LINES'
Here are some thought-lines when considering an
organization’s marketing strategies:
1. All marketing tactics are temporary.
The time has come to recognize that there are no permanent solutions. One major
soft drink company is changing the design of its cans every 12 weeks in an
effort to grab attention, while wine bottles are quickly becoming works of art.
The e-mail blast frenzy lasted about a year, about as long
as it took to ramp up the spam filters. The question today is always, what’s
next? Will Google’s cell phone deliver advertising messages that work with
consumers? Should electronic ads be games? And what about mini-social (and
micro) networks? How will they fare in letting customers speak with each other
about your company’s products and services?
If there is a message in all this, don’t expect any tactic
to last. Everything is temporary. Technology will constantly open the way to
new opportunities.
2. All marketing is essentially
experimental. On top of the temporary nature of marketing tactics,
they are also experimental.
“We’re waiting to see how all this shakes out before we do
anything,” said a company president. The words are hauntingly reminiscent of
those who announced rather proudly that they would wait to buy a computer until
they were perfected. Today, these same people view their computers as
indisposable. It all happened in just a few years.
Even though there are those, particularly some vendors and
ad agencies, that like to suggest that they have “the answer,” it’s clear that
all marketing is, to one extent or another, experimental. There are no
certainties, no guarantees. What works with one group of customers may not work
with another. And some things don’t work at all.
3. Marketing requires an array of
tactics. A major shift in thinking about marketing is needed. Rather
than bouncing three or four balls at one time, marketers are juggling up to a
dozen or more at the same time.
The roster may include a blog, a series of eBulletins
delivered to particular customer segments, several Websites, advertising
sequences on Google and Yahoo, personalized direct mail, TV and radio spots,
print newsletters, print advertising in selected venues, billboards and a
mini-social network, to name but a few. The frustration is felt when someone
says, “What about trying billboards?”
The marketing concept is finding ways to connect as
intimately and meaningfully as possible with individual customers, recognizing
that not even three or four venues can deliver your message to your entire
universe of customers and prospects.
4. Customers are the only experts.
Perhaps the most poignant moment of the CNN TV debate featuring the videoed
questions was the one featuring the woman who had lost her hair as a result of
breast cancer treatment. Nothing was more real than her question about health
care.
Al Wittemen, the managing director for retail strategy for
Advantage Retail and a marketer for 35 years, points out that today’s customers
think less about brands and more about themselves. Even though it should be
obvious, it’s ignored more often than not.
Wittemen uses prepared foods as an example of consumer
behavior. When the customers comes to the supermarket, there is far less
interest in picking out a particular brand than there is in picking out dinner
for tonight. In other words, “shoppers are not necessarily looking for high
drama. More often, they are looking for relevant solutions to their immediate needs,”
he notes.
Why did an advertising agency replace a higher-end
well-known brand (Xerox) copy machine with a lesser known one (Lexmark)? It’s
simpler, faster, and more flexible. That’s exactly what Honda, Hyundai, and Kia
are all about, too.
When customers are getting ready to make a purchase today,
the first place they go to is the Internet, to look for what others have to
say.
Among his observations regarding customer behavior, George
Colony, the Forrester Research CEO, said that while 100-question surveys might
help measure customer satisfaction, there is one question that will do the job:
“Would you recommend this product or service to a friend or colleague?”
It’s time to forget about the hype and listen to the customers;
they’re the experts.
The marketing mix today isn’t just in flux; it’s fluid. If
anyone thinks it’s time to wait on the sidelines until the parade of
possibilities goes by, the competition will have run off with the customers.
Publication date: 01/07/2008
John Graham is President of Graham Communications, a marketing services and sales consulting firm, and the author of "The New Magnet Marketing" and "Break the Rules Selling." He can be reached at
j_graham@grahamcomm.com.