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Hey Kleenex, stop fighting the environment!
Posted on April 26th, 2010 No commentsSo strike me down if I’m wrong but my prediction is that Kleenex’s brand new product, Kleenex Hand Towels (http://www.kleenex.com/handtowels/), will be off the shelves in less than a year.
I have seen their advertisement on network television frequently over the last week or so and their marketing pitch to convert you from reusing a traditional hand towel (at home) to using their new disposable hand towels is that “hands are only as clean as the towel that dries them.” Well, I probably agree with that but environmentally, they’re bucking the system and my bets are on the system!
I’ll admit it, I’m not the “greenest” person in the world (although working on it) but even the voice in MY head screamed “HELLO???? Isn’t my traditional hand towel that I can wash over and over with my energy star (yes, I do have an energy star) washer/dryer better for the environment? This was my first reaction (and obviously a strong enough one to blog about it).
This entry isn’t about what’s green and what’s not. It’s more about strategic marketing. What is strategic marketing? In the end, it’s about business growth - selling product/services - growing the bottom line. A lot goes into the formula for strategic marketing including environmental influencers of the products and/or services that I’m marketing for my clients.
Environmental influencers are huge and cannot be ignored! Case in point: I have a pharmaceutical client that wanted their sales reps to gain more face time with doctors to increase prescriptions for a particular drug line. After some obvious and not so obvious research, I told them straight up it wasn’t going to happen. Docs are making less and less money and have less and less time and are paying more and more in insurance all while increasing their patient visits to make up for it their losses. And it was only getting worse. These are clearly environmental influencers that are impacting their audience.
Even the best chotsky or incentives (which are highly regulated now) wouldn’t get the reps face time. But what we did find out as result of a survey we distributed to sales reps and docs was that the “best incentive” by far was a medical textbook.
So instead of bucking the environmental influencers in our strategic marketing campaign, like Kleenex is doing against the “green” movement, we embraced it. We invited Docs to attend webinars (on their own time) in return for free drug samples and a medical textbook of their choice. It was a FABULOUS success. So, while we didn’t get what the client originally ordered – face time – we did grow the bottom line and that’s what strategic marketing is!
Kleenex, would love to hear from you! You’re a huge company with super smart marketers. Please tell me how you’re justifying your product that is the opposite of green with your strategic marketing approach that even set off bells and whistles in my “less green/SUV driving” head. Tell me how I’m wrong!
I welcome your comments!
Meg Ferguson, Vision House Marketing
“Extremely smart and effective strategic marketing”
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Strategic Marketing: It’s Not Just Making it Look Pretty!
Posted on November 11th, 2009 No commentsI’ve got a quick test for you,…just one question. Fill in the blank.
Strategic marketing is: ______________.
A) Making stuff look cool
B) Doing 15 activities for “awareness”
C) Building a Facebook page and using Twitter
D) Making the most efficient use of my marketing dollars, time and energy to support my business goals.
You caught me, that was kind of a loaded question, but I figured it was the best way to get my point across. It’s so often that we’re led to think that strategic marketing is something that it’s not. Why waste your resources and time to do things that aren’t going to produce anything for you? Don’t get me wrong, I love creating good-looking websites for my clients, sometimes we do a lot of activities in our campaigns, and yes, sometimes we use social media as part of those campaigns. However, it’s the underlying marketing strategy that is the most important thing that separates successful marketing campaigns from unsuccessful ones.
And what do I mean by this lofty phrase “strategic marketing” that I keep referring to? The idea of understanding why we’re doing what we’re doing, instead of just doing it. Strategic marketing should be #1 and the tools you use should be #2. If someone is telling you it’s the other way around, you should probably search for a new vendor.
Tips for getting results with strategic marketing:
- Ask Questions: “Why?” is generally a good one. Don’t be satisfied just with “doing marketing activities.”
- Get their background: Are you working with someone who has a marketing background?
- Define a Measure of Success: Do you want to increase your sales by 10% in the fourth quarter? Make sure they know that. Use the SMART goals (specific, measurable, attainable, realistic and time-bound)
- Ask for Case Studies and Testimonials: Do they have proven results?
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