Wednesday, March 16, 2011

The marketing mix - should it change?


Successful b-2-b marketing uses a combination of marketing techniques that working together produce results. But do companies have the right mix? Are they bringing new online methods into the mix? Are they clinging on to old methods that no longer make an impact? In the next few blogs we will examine what methods companies are using, or could use and ask some challenging questions to evaluate present day suitability.

Because there are a growing number of marketing techniques that could be deployed, it does not mean they must all be used. The marketing mix is not a checklist that has to be completed. It is the skilful use of the right combination of techniques that are right for an individual company.

With marketing budgets under pressure our experience suggests that rather than re-think the whole budget most companies apply a percentage cut across the board and continue to allocate resource in the same mix as before. Many marketing communications budgets still have the same two high ticket items at the top of the list – ‘display advertising’ and ‘exhibitions’ – but are light on new online methods. Much evidence suggests that display advertising is in decline in the b-2-b sector. Consider the trends in the industrial media for example – card rates are heavily discounted, editorial pages are shrinking and filled with paid for advertorial from press releases, while publication intervals are increasing. Fortnightly publications are moving to monthly, monthly publications are producing amalgamated January/February issues and so on throughout the year. Meanwhile surveys suggest that fewer people look to magazines for information and recommendation or even read magazines, but turn to the Internet instead. This is reflected in sales lead analysis where few enquiries are attributed to publications as a source. Despite this, display advertising typically remains the top budget item.

Exhibitions might actually cost even more if the ‘off budget items’ were included - travel costs, hotels, entertaining, opportunity cost of staff away from their regular duties. Despite the claims of exhibition promoters, customers and prospects find it increasingly difficult to justify the time away from the office when they can discover all the information they need on the Internet and if they need a product demonstration then the exhibition environment is distracting at the best. But exhibitors have evolved a ‘club’ mentality as they migrate around the country and world, seeing the same familiar faces of people that are actually their competitors not prospects. Exhibitor lounges contribute to the club mentality and re-enforce the concern that dropping out of a trade show leaves the field open to competitors to benefit. Again sales lead analysis for exhibition-generated enquiries is at best disappointing.

Because the traditional promotional methods take up so much of the marketing budget it is difficult for new opportunities to get a look in. The next few blogs will put some of the sacred cows of marketing communication up for examination.

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