The stock market fall this year is frightening economists, who say we may be ending a seven-year growth cycle. The Fed says U.S. financial conditions have worsened. And in Silicon Valley, where the fastest, most innovative private companies have thrived, more people are predicting a big shakeout, even raising comparisons with the severe 2008 downturn.
Downturns are tough, but the best companies will invest in smart strategies and technologies to overtake competitors, and thrive once things get better again. Companies that injudiciously slash marketing find that they must spend far more than they saved in order to recover, according to a study by the Harvard Business Review done after the last recession. The best performing companies balance spending with tactical changes to bolster immediate revenue generation.
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Here’s a smattering of the crucial tips we’ll hear. They’re strategies you should implement even in fast-growth times, but they are especially relevant in a downturn.
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1. Don’t automatically slash marketing
It’s a cliche: One of the first things you cut in any downturn is your marketing budget. Well, nope. It’s more complicated. Target was described in a HBR case study from 2010 as a company that made the right investments during the last downturn — including greater investment in things like R&D and marketing than its rivals — earning it a place among the best performers of post-recession growth, in terms of sales and earnings. At Marketing.FWD, we’ll hear from Target’s Kristi Argyilan, SVP of media, guest engagement, and measurement, who will explain how the company is spending on innovative marketing, drawing on influencers and its customer base to amplify its message. She’ll be sharing new examples, similar to the Imagine Dragons video released at the Grammy Awards last year that defied the standard ad spot format used by most advertisers.
2. Customer data can show you the way
3. Defense is the new offense
4. Leverage ‘brand’ marketing, but make it data-driven
5. Shift to digital, radically
6. Exploit targeting opportunities
As we’ve reported often at VentureBeat, many companies aren’t taking advantage of the growing number of personalization and targeting technologies, both in email, and in digital advertising. It’s time to invest in those, for more efficient marketing spend. We’ll be hearing from one of the masters of optimization and targeting, Pepijn Rijvers, CMO of Booking.com, the flagship company of Priceline, which is the largest travel company in the world. Booking.com is also the largest spender of advertising on sites like Google. Booking.com is widely respected for its ad strategies, and Rijvers will share some of his company’s newest initiatives — namely, novel ways to target customers based on their emotional and other contextual states. The company’s significant investments in data science give it an edge, so other companies should take note. He’ll be speaking with Brad Smallwood of Facebook, which is also leading this experimentation.
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7. Invest in less-expensive, cloud-based technology
We’ll hear from an executive at the Gilt Group, the online shopping site, about its latest strategies for growth in a time when the hype around the first wave of online shopping has died down. Gilt will share its tech strategies, including who it has bet on in Looker, a business intelligence tool that is cloud-based and self-serve, and a simplified version of the better-known BI public company Tableau, which has seen rocketing revenues over the past year.
That’s just the start. We’ve got a bunch more great marketing leaders as speakers at the event next Monday, from Baublebar, Visa, Harry’s, RentTheRunway, Oracle, and IBM — all ready to share the latest tips for high-growth marketing. Look forward to seeing you there.
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