Does Your Marketing Plan Need Changing?
Change is good, right? Not always. But when is it bad? Is it a
question of good or bad? Sounds philosophical. Maybe it is.
Philosophize on this…why would one take something that is going
good – no.. great – and change it? Obvious answer is to make it
better. Not!
In business or in marketing, change is not always good. When
you have certain promotional actions that are in place making
things happen, or in better terms, making you money – don’t
change them! Why do I say this? Because I see it time and time
again. Someone has a marketing campaign that is bringing in a
good return on investment and they up and decide to change
their postcard! What?!?!?!?!? Change your postcard – why???????
“Er uh, we just decided to do something different.”
And then some three or four months down the road, they call
back with their tail between their legs and ask – no demand to
have everything back the way it was before. In this latter case
– change is good.
I am not just saying that to say that one should always keep
their postcard marketing campaign the same and never change it.
Quite the contrary. Change your marketing, change your habits,
change your way of life when it warrants it. There is really
some truth to the old adage “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.”
Maybe it is human nature to want to change everything once
something gets going just the way they planned it. Who the heck
knows? All I can say is step outside the human-nature box.
Change only when things are drastic or when change is
warranted.
Drastic circumstances deserve drastic measures. But how do you
determine drastic? Sometimes that is really easy. Your
company’s income is crashing. Do something! Change! Or better
yet, figure out what you changed and get it back to what was
working.
How about a plateau? Does that deserve change? Depends on how
long that plateau lasts. I have never seen things leveling off
and staying level forever. It either goes one of two ways – up
or down. I know an optometrist who had a very successful
practice in small town USA. He never really marketed. He never
really had to. People knew of him from miles around. Mainly he
did PR stuff – a fundraiser here, networking there, etc., etc.
His good works made him well known and respected and the
community ooo’ed and ah’ed over him so much the paper loved
printing it.
But things changed. Malls started opening up. People started
shopping out of small-town USA and into the bigger cities. The
environment changed. But he didn’t. He still kept a good
practice, but you could see something interesting – his gross
income started to plateau. And over time – many years – that
plateau gradually started to show where it was really going. I
actually don’t have to say where – you’ve got the picture.
Now, would that demand drastic measures? Taking into account
inflation, cost of living and other factors that are on the
rise – yes, I would say that would demand drastic measures. Did
he take them? Not until the direness became all too apparent.
But yes, he finally did take them. He started postcard
marketing his you-know-what off!
I have another client that is just a dream. They have had the
same list for the past 5 years, ever since they have been in
business – thirty thousand physical therapists they mailed to
over and over and over and over and … They never changed. They
figured if it was bringing in the income it was the thing that
was working. And it worked and it still works. And today – they
made Entrepreneur’s 100 Hot List for 2005.
So, next time you think about changing your marketing plan,
look to see if it needs it. Look at your numbers. Are they
improving? Declining? If your income is going up – don’t change
one single thing. But if it is going down or flat lining – for
heaven’s sake, change!
About The Author: Joy Gendusa founded PostcardMania in 1998,
her only assets a computer and a phone. By 2004 the company did
$9 million in sales and employed over 60 people. She attributes
her explosive growth to her ability to choose incredible staff
and her innate marketing savvy. For more free marketing
advice, visit her website at www.postcardmania.com
|