Why "Sense & Respond" Marketing Is Critical During the Recession
In an earlier post on How Customer-driven Innovation Helps Beat the Recession I quoted McKinsey research that showed that the companies that emerged from the last recession in the top quartile, increased their marketing spend significantly more than their less successful peers.
But that raises the tricky question of whether all companies should just raise their marketing spend during a recession, or whether only some companies should. And if only some companies should, what the characteristics of those companies are?
An interesting paper on Turning adversity into advantage: Does proactive marketing during a recession pay off? by Srinivasan et al helps answer that question. Srinivasan looked at the business success of 150 US B2B companies before, during and after the last recession. She then looked at a number of factors which might be drivers of the effectiveness of increasing marketing spend during a recession.
The research found three factors that made increasing marketing spend successful:
- An Emphasis on Strategic Marketing - Successful companies already used segmentation to differentiate customers and personalised marketing communications to develop strongly positioned brands. These provided a foundation for proactively marketing to customers
- An Entrepreneurial Culture - Companies saw the recession as an opportunity to gain an edge over the competition and invested in risky new proactive marketing to customers
- Enough Slack Resources to Refocus on Proactive Marketing - Companies had under-utilised resources such as staff, cash reserves and production capacity that they could quickly refocus on proactively marketing to customers.
These three factors read like a recipe book for sense & respond marketing. As the recession starts to bite, the ability to continuously sense changes in customer behaviour and then to reorganise rapidly to take advantage of them, is likely to be one of the hallmarks of companies that beat the recession. This applies during normal times too, but it is critical during a recession.
The 64.000 dollar question is: are you one of these marketing-driven, entrepreneurial companies with sufficient slack resources to refocus on proactive marketing? Like Microsoft, DeBeers and BMW during the last recession. Or are you one of the product-focussed, bureaucratic companies that will try and cut its way through this one?
What do you think? Can your company respond to the recession with proactive marketing? Or are you doomed, in what will probably be the deepest recession since the 1930s?
Post a comment or email me at graham(dot)hill(at)web(dot)de to get the conversation going.
Graham Hill
Independent CRM Consultant
Interim CRM Manager
Further Reading:
Graham Hill, How Customer-driven Innovation Helps Beat the Recession
Srinivasan et al, on Turning adversity into advantage: Does proactive marketing during a recession pay off?
Stephan Haeckel, Peripheral Vision: Sensing and Acting on Weak Signals Making Meaning out of Apparent Noise: The Need for a New Managerial Framework
MarketPlace
Drive customer loyalty, empower support teams, and reduce costs. Get social.
[Feb 22] Guest speakers from Forrester Research, Allscripts, and CustomerThink will discuss market trends and research on social customer service strategies, as well as proven tactics from the trenches. Join the live webcast on Feb 22 at 10am Pacific (1pm EST).
Global Customer Experience Management (CEM) Certification Program
[March 13-14, Paris] An internationally recognized program with proven track record of success - being run for 33 times in 13 cities with attendees from 50 countries, the program is developed based on the U.S. patent-pending Branded CEM Method which aims to drive customer loyalty and brand differentiation with quantifiable business results. Limited offer: USD300 early bird discount.
10 Steps to a Single Customer View
Linking customer data across department databases and business units improves business intelligence, customer profiling, and customer management. This paper outlines 10 steps to improve the quality of customer contact data, including physical mail, email, and telephone information.
Featured Links
|
The leader in customer relationship management and cloud computing. |
Strategic Roadmap for Digital Marketing Free e-book (no reg required). 15 articles by digital marketing thought leaders. |
CEM Training and Certification Patent-pending methodologies combine the art and science of Customer Experience Management. |
Get your event or resource listed in the MarketPlace, reaching 200,000 business leaders monthly.
For more information, contact
CustomerThink advertising sales.

1 comments | 5319 reads 






