Are you and your marketing agency on the same page?
Mark Kolier
As the U.S. and world economies bump along the bottom, customers
repeatedly ask their marketing agencies (among other vendors) to do more
with less. Our agency is no different.
Many clients have the perception e-mail marketing, social media
marketing, and “guerilla” marketing tactics are great ways to save
money. And yes, those channels should be considered a part of the
marketing mix...but not solely on the basis of cost savings.
For some clients a social media campaign may bear little fruit.
That’s why you should view your marketing agency as your partner in
achieving your sales goals. So how can you be sure you’re getting what
you pay for? Here are seven things to think about:
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Don’t be hesitant in discussing your marketing budget with your
marketing agency |
Be sure you can measure it
Aside from broadcast television/radio and magazine advertising, most
marketing channels today offer at least some ability to measure
performance. Satellite radio and cable television offer better tracking
capabilities than broadcast, and these capabilities will only improve
over time.
Set a realistic marketing budget
Your budget should be aligned with your sales goals, with a clear
depiction of how a successful marketing campaign will be evaluated.
Low/medium and out-of-the-park scenarios should be included.
I’ve seen far too many “budgets” that are very small and totally out
of line with their objectives: “We want to sell $20 million worth of our
product/service and we have a marketing budget of $100,000.” How exactly
is that supposed to work? Is 200 times your investment an achievable
goal?
Be prepared for the possibility some
tactics may not work
If you eschew all or most traditional marketing channels in favour of
new media marketing, there’s no guarantee they’ll be effective.
Sure, it’s possible you’ll extend your marketing budget, but by
ignoring traditional channels you’re potentially ignoring many current
or potential customers who don’t use social media.
Allow your expert partners to do
their jobs
It sometimes seems like everyone wants to play art director or
copywriter. Client-side ideas are very valuable (after all, you know the
product or service best), but would you make tweaking suggestions to
your doctor or attorney? Not likely. Marketing agencies are staffed with
professionals, just like your doctor’s or lawyer’s offices. Years of
training and experience have gone into their decision-making processes.
Incentive-based
deals are acceptable for marketing agencies
For certain products this may not be true, and an agency willing to
take some of its final compensation on the back end still needs to be
compensated along the way. But if you enter into a speculative deal, it
should be a deal you would want for yourself if the product truly
excited you.
“You win, they lose,” is not a basis for a successful long-term
partnership.
Ask your marketing agency to provide
prices for creation of different channel efforts
Remember, you’re the client, so it’s not taboo to ask what their
services cost. How much is a print ad? An e-mail or survey? A direct
mail package? An outdoor ad? A PURL campaign? Writing a broadcast or
cable spot?
Even asking what setting up a Facebook fan page or handling a Twitter
feed will run you aren’t out of bounds. If your agency isn’t willing to
give you information like this, you may want to look around.
Allow your marketing agency at least
a year to leverage their understanding your business
Yes, in some instances you’ll know relatively quickly that the fit is
wrong. But all the time invested in bringing your agency up to speed
will be lost if you change agencies like you change socks.
Don’t be hesitant in discussing your marketing budget with your
marketing agency. Let them tell you what they feel can and cannot be
done. Both parties will come out of that discussion with a much better
idea of the expectations and deliverables.
Salesandmarketing.com
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