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Double Down on Strategic Advertising

Tags: Advertisement, Recession, Razeghi, BNET Feature, Advertising, Recession Strategy, Susanna Hamner and John Maas

The scenario: Hard-sell or luxury-oriented ad campaigns are starting to sound tone deaf to recession-wary consumers. Some competitors are pulling back on advertising.

The tactic: Increase communication with customers to show how your product can ease the difficulties they’re going through.

Advertising budgets often become easy prey during down markets — but companies that start to slash do so at their own peril. “If there’s any time to increase communication, it’s during a recession,” says Andrew Razeghi, a marketing professor at Northwestern’s Kellogg School of Management. During the recession that followed September 11, just 25 percent of all companies boosted their ad spending — and those that did saw their market share rise more than twice as fast as it typically rises during a normal economy, according to a 2001 Cahners Advertising research report. According to a MarketSense study, during the recession of 1989-91, Pizza Hut and Taco Bell saw sales jump by 61 percent and 40 percent, respectively, after pumping more money into advertising, while McDonald’s slashed its ad budget and saw sales drop 28 percent.

It’s not that easy, of course. Marketers need to spend smart — and tune their message to customers' shifting attitudes during a financial crisis. “The closer a brand can cozy up to a consumer with a message along the lines of ‘we’re all in this together,’ the better off a brand will be,” says John Quelch, a Harvard Business School professor and author of Greater Good: How Good Marketing Makes for Better Democracy. For instance, a credit-card company should change its message from “use our card to give memorable holiday gifts” to “our card gives you the most money back.”

Taking advantage of its “Talk to Chuck” campaign, brokerage giant Charles Schwab brought out its CEO this fall to reinforce a calming message of reassurance. “I’ve been through at least nine of these ... and I’ve learned that I have to keep my patience,” Schwab says in one commercial. What’s the logic here? “The recession is sufficiently serious that investors don’t just want to talk to Chuck, they want to see Chuck,” Quelch says. “He’s a savvy person capable of holding the hand of the younger investor.” For companies without a high-profile “Chuck,” the communications budget may be better spent on smaller hand-holding gestures. Razeghi suggests preparing white papers about the recession to send to valued customers. “It reassures folks you’re still in the game,” he says.

Caution: Now is not the time for positive, brand-focused campaigns that won’t resonate with cash-strapped customers. But don’t campaign on fear, either. “People are sufficiently panicked already,” Quelch says. “A message that exacerbated the fear would be counterproductive.”

 
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    1

    Kittiep

    01/08/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Double Down on Strategic Advertising

    Thanks for your valuable points - Wish I had thought of this refreshing approach of enthusing brand managers to face their 2009 budget monsters. But what happens when budgets have indeed been slashed so much that they cannot afford the typically standard advertisements previously entertained?

    http://www.pharmajobs.co.uk/article.aspx?issueID=105&articleID=724

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    2

    Miles Technologies

    01/09/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Double Down on Strategic Advertising

    Another way to "Double Down on Strategic Advertising" is through Online Marketing. Search Engine Optimization and Pay Per Click Advertising are essential to any business' success in the current economy. - Miles Technologies, www.milestechnologies.com

  •  
    3

    fidelman

    02/26/09 | Report as spam

    Here are some more ideas

    If senior executives in the companies you are invested have less than 14 years experience, then they have not managed in a difficult economic period. Equally as challenging, analysts that are covering company stocks with less than 14 years of experience may not have the experience to properly evaluate the activities of senior management. So what clues should investors look for in properly evaluating whether the company they are following is going to survive the downturn?

    http://seekingalpha.com/article/122857-five-things-companies-must-be-doing-to-get-through-recession?source=wl_sidebar

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