Don’t Execute Marketing Tactics from an Outdated Perspective

All businesses have goals to reach, and like any other department, the intent of marketing communications (MarCom) is to support the overall business initiatives. MarCom should be allowed to help move the company closer to success. So, executives, when your MarCom leader has ideas to help the company accomplish its goals, leave the past behind and listen with your company’s future in mind.

According to research reported in the article, “State of Integrated Marketing 2017: Mapping the Journey to Success,” marketers’ top priority is to create a unified cross-channel customer experience, i.e., Integrated Marketing Communications (IMC). The American Marketing Association defines IMC as a planning process designed to assure that all brand contacts received by a customer or prospect for a product, service, or organization are relevant to that person and consistent over time.

With that definition in mind and the statement McGraw-Hill Irwin makes in the book “Marketing,” — Good marketing is not a random activity; it requires thoughtful planning” —  it’s evident that thoughtful planning is essential to effective marketing outcomes.

An executive once told me that she and her peers are more concerned about the bottom line as opposed to social media and websites. In the same vein (and within the same company), the CEO shared reasons why he does not use paid advertisements. In his opinion, marketing is advertisements and it does not provide an ROI for his core business.

Unfortunately, both executives did not realize MarCom is not detached from business growth and its bottom line, but instead, they’re closely linked.

I would echo David Meerman Scott from his book, “The New Rules of Marketing and PR.” He says this way of thinking is not true anymore and people must transform their marketing. Scott would consider both executives’ perspectives to be old rules of marketing, such as:

    • Marketing simply meant advertising (and branding).
      • Advertising needed to appeal to the masses.
      • Advertising was one-way: company to consumer.
    • Advertising and Public Relations were separate disciplines run by different people with separate goals, strategies, and measurement criteria.

Consequently, if Integrated Marketing Communications was better understood, it would be a top priority for more than just marketers. If executives grasped this concept and began incorporating IMC into their company’s overall organizational philosophy, they would notice that it encompasses all industries. IMC can help grab consumers’ attention, produce a favorable response, and impact a company’s bottom line.

These planning processes help companies move away from antiquated, one-size fits all marketing ideology toward a successful business. One that provides a seamless experience for individual consumers across touchpoints. Companies thrive when executives support thoughtful planning and understand and use new rules of marketing, such as:

    • Marketing is more than just advertising.
    • You are what you publish.
      • People want authenticity, no spin.
      • Marketers (and executive leaders) must shift their thinking from mainstream marketing to the masses to a strategy of reaching vast numbers of underserved audience via the web.
    • Blogs, online video, e-books, news releases, and other forms of online content let organizations communicate directly with buyers (or audiences) in a form they appreciate.

Executives are more willing to give their buy-in when they know why the following is important:

    • Understand individual consumers
      • Incorporate digital tactics
      • Consistent messaging
    • Deploy an IMC philosophy cross-functionally

Individual consumers

It is an important part of the planning process to do primary and secondary research on your consumers to fully understand who they are, where they are, and what their needs or wants are.

Consumers don’t always follow a linear purchase or selection process. Instead, a large majority read reviews, get the opinions of others, visit websites, or browse social media pages. The goal of IMC is to guide them along by providing a customer experience at each touchpoint. Therefore knowing who you’re guiding and which touchpoint to use, helps the consumer and the company.

“The better marketers (and executives) understand the buying (or selection process), the more effectively they can harness great marketing and advanced data and technology to steer consumers toward a desired decision through personalized relevant interactions.”

State of Integrated Marketing 2017: Mapping the Journey to Success

Digital Tactics

Meet your consumers where they are by including digital tactics into the customer experience. Pew Research Center reports that across a wide range of demographic groups, a ratio of 7-to-10 Americans use social media and 9-to-10 American adults use the Internet.

By having multiple touchpoints, such as advertisements, blog posts, direct mail, e-newsletters, podcasts, ratings and reviews, social media, testimonials, videos, a website, etc. your consumer can choose how they interact with your brand, shifting from the outdated, one-way communication approach to a two-way conversation.

Adding digital components to your marketing mix allows your company to easily record data and outcomes, and in some cases, receive real-time results. Digital tactics help the consumer become comfortable with your brand and helps the company save money, but it also pushes your company into the well-established digital age making your business competitive.

Message Consistency

Your marketing message must be consistent and carefully linked across all touchpoints. Consumers trust brands with consistent messaging. Trust reduces anxiety. With less anxiety, comfort rises. And once a consumer is comfortable with your brand, the likelihood they’ll buy, subscribe, or choose you, increases. This is critical to building a long-term relationship with that individual consumer.

Cross-functional IMC philosophy

The organizational structure must be just as integrated as marketing communications. MarCom departments typically work with several company leaders, so it’s important that everyone is moving toward the same goal. The “State of Integrated Marketing: Mapping the Journey to Success” reported two variables that stand in the way of achieving integrated marketing success: lack of collaboration across teams and a lack of unified measures of success.

The survey conducted in the article showed that shared performance goals and collaboration are highly correlated with integrated marketing success. Executives can make IMC a priority by adopting it into the organizational philosophy, which eliminates silos because teams will work cross functionally to achieve their shared goals.

Through the years, I’ve heard interesting comments from executives:

“You can’t make people learn new things.”

“I don’t need to attend conferences or training courses.”

“Ten years ago, I did a paid media marketing experiment that didn’t provide an ROI. Which is why I don’t believe in advertisements.”

If these executives were MarCom leaders’ only avenue to information, one may think the need to stay up to day dissipates after a certain level of success is reached.

However, it’s the complete opposite. Once a person reaches executive status, they may have more direct reports, making them increasingly responsible for their subordinates. They also are more responsible for the company’s success and should update their knowledge as the business landscape shifts.

If business leaders refuse to learn new information, the least they can do is listen to their direct reports. Often, executives value the knowledge and opinions of only those who hold comparable titles, not realizing it may be just as obsolete as their own.

Is your perspective outdated?

Photo by Lukas Blazek on Unsplash

2 Comments

  1. Brian Nagele

    Alright so it’s not really a question about the topic at hand here but… how long does it take you to put together these kind of posts? Is it easy? Like did you have to research all this stuff? I’ve been wanting to start a blog myself, so just curious. Sorry not totally relevant but figured I’d ask. Thanks in advance

    • LaTina Lewis

      Brian, thanks for asking. I don’t remember how long it took to write, but I did a little research to support what I already knew and to connect ideas and claims with information from books or articles I’ve read. The length of time depends on your expertise on that particular subject and the various ways you stay current on that subject. I hope this helps!

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