Defining Contemporary Marketing Washington DC

Defining marketing is a tough job—much like shoveling out after a great blizzard. Even when you think you're finished, there's always another area to go over. But don't be afraid, you don't have to have a marketing degree to do a fine job of marketing your company.

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The Winters Group Inc
(301) 336-0400
10214 Marlboro Woods Drive
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Marketing can be a confusing concept. So confusing that if you were to ask 10 people to offer up a good, straightforward definition of marketing, you would get 17 different answers (and that includes asking the experts). That's not much help. Allow me to explain why I think this exercise in definition is worth your trouble.

In today's speed economy, we are all faced with many choices—sometimes too many. As consumers of business services, our choices reflect the perceptions that have been formed in our minds through the marketing efforts of other (often bigger) firms. You know most of the players who run hard after your business dollar; United Parcel Service, Dell, Federal Express, Office Depot, American Express, etc. You may have chosen to align your company with some of these big name corporations or perhaps you've gone a different way, but either way you have been swayed positively or otherwise. Those influences, along with the recommendations and war stories of your colleagues, have resulted in your choices.

Choice Is Good, Right?

Insightful marketers say that we now all labor under "the tyranny of choice." What do they mean? Isn't choice a wonderful thing? The answer is a qualified "yes." Consumers, for the most part, love choice (unless you have difficulty making quick, confident

choices—then you'll be one of many staring at 10 different varieties of Cap'n Crunch in the cereal aisle).

Marketing strategies and promotional activities help clear a purchasing path for us all. A brand is built . . . trust is built. Imagine how commerce itself would grind to a halt if each of us was not influenced into action by various marketing efforts and the qualified opinion of those we trust? We would all still be stuck in the cereal aisle at the supermarket, laboring over this tyranny of choice, going over and over the more than 350 brands that claim to be the best for us.

Here are just a few examples of why being outstanding is often no longer enough, while standing out can really get the job done. The last 25 years have resulted in an amazing proliferation of product and service choices in just about every category. An average supermarket has 40,000 products and yet American families fill 80 to 85 percent of its needs from just 150 of them. That means there's a good chance they will ignore 39,850 items in that store. Translation . . . there are many disappointed business owners who just never had a shot with you. Choice can be cruel. Work to improve your odds of being considered and chosen.

The good news is that as a business owner, you have those very same powers to influence perceptions and, ultimately, purchases. You certainly don't have the resources or the scope of the giants of this world, but what percentage of power you do have must be put to good use. Simply put, successful marketing concepts do not discriminate. In a relevant sense, they can be as powerful when leveraged by you as when they are leveraged by some of the larger fabricating firms across this country.

Marketing As King

Marketing has grown in importance; often replacing production, engineering and in some extreme cases it has even made the pricing function subordinate! Most attribute this shift to the expanding buyer's market and the need for many industries to develop a strong consumer orientation. Think of the surfacing manufacturers that you currently support. Would you categorize them as consumer-oriented? Does there currently exist a buyer's market when it comes to choices in surfaces? I'm certain you will agree that both answers are an emphatic yes! These conditions don't leave you much room for interpretation. As critical links in the value/supply chain, your orientation must line up or you'll simply drop from the chain.

What Marketing Isn't

Defining marketing is a tough job—much like shoveling out after a great blizzard. Even when you think you're finished, there's always another area to go over. But don't be afraid, you don't have to have a marketing degree to do a fine job of marketing your company. I agree that the marketing concept is often difficult to get your arms around—particularly if you're simply trying to decipher the latest buzzwords (one-to-one marketing, viral marketing, guerrilla marketing, permission marketing, etc.). Let's steer clear of that and stick to the proven basics.

First, it is often much easier to define marketing by what it isn't, rather than by what it is. Some folks believe that "marketing" is simply a fancier term for "selling." Well, that's not it. Others believe that marketing is sort of the "big brother" to selling. While there is some of the same family blood between them, it is more horizontal (cousin to cousin) as opposed to vertical (big brother to little brother). For most of us who are in transitional stages of our businesses, where we have aspirations to grow and achieve, we see and feel the inspiration of our larger fabricator brethren who have made marketing an integral part of their business activities.

What Marketing Does

Rather than pass on my own subjective definition of what marketing is, I think it's more valuable to help you grasp what marketing does. In boiling marketing down to its very essence, you might find it helpful if it's illustrated as going A.P.E. since marketing is all about Awareness, Positioning and Existence. Let's monkey around a bit with marketing and take a closer look in this confusing cage:

Awareness: Unlike selling, marketing is about creating awareness of your firm and explaining its role in the marketplace, and doing both in a manner that reaches out to those segments of the market where you bring the most value. Sometimes you can best do this in an indirect manner by becoming active as a high-profile member in that segment and creating appeal for the organization as a progressive, involved and caring market leader. If "you" are the entire organization, then "you" become the brand. Get ready for your big close-up!

Positioning: Your business needs a theme or marketing position that places you at the top of your field (not just in a sales volume sense) and ahead of the pack. Possibly, you have a particular element of your company's history that can become one of your position platforms. When done well, positioning efforts can have extraordinary results. A smaller second-generation plastics supplier in the Northeast found "integrity" to be her most effective and resonating statement to the marketplace. After weeks of searching for just the right words, her "a-ha!" moment finally came. She immediately trademarked the phrase "Where Integrity Endures," and has since found that statement to have an emotional value and customer stickiness that went far beyond regular commerce.

Existence: Why are you here? It's not just a metaphysical question that man has been pondering for ages; it's also the ultimate business question, which, if you can't convincingly answer for yourself, the market will answer for you. For those who can't properly justify their existence, the market's view of you will rapidly sink until the consensus is that you are merely taking up space. Next!

Differentiation: A Marketing Cornerstone

It may seem a bit dramatic, but the marketer's rallying cry of "Differentiate or Die" is really right on the mark in the 21st century. We live in an era of killer competition. (I'm sure you've noticed that your competition isn't just taking up space—they are quite good at what they do!) If your company doesn't become powerfully great when it comes to explaining your purpose within the marketplace and downright moving when describing just how essential and special your essential and special functions really are, then you are, quite literally, a goner. Be prepared to enthusiastically defend the link you, and only you, provide in the value chain.

Most importantly, know in what meaningful way you are different from the rest. Are you faster, better, cheaper, cooler, more flexible or employing better technology? Are you a whiz-bang designer with an engineering background, a market leader, a visionary, a teacher, a great corporate citizen, an efficiency expert, a philosopher, a pin-point prognosticator or a planet-friendly organization? Find your uncommon place in the world, find your uncommon voice as a business leader, and then use them! Teach everyone you possibly can, through the marketing and branding process, why the differences (not the similarities) in your business offering are compelling enough for ready-to-spend and highly targeted customers to flock to your shop, store or site.

Stand out! Use this knowledge to help build your own definition of contemporary marketing. Design and implement the most effective set of interwoven marketing initiatives possible and put them in play. Get chosen in 2007!

Chris Traynor, SPHR, is the Director for Whip-Smart™ Management Consulting, Wayne, N.J., and has 25 years of experience in the solid surface industry as a consultant to fabricators, distributors and manufacturers. He can be reached at ctraynor@whip-smart.com.

author: By Chris Traynor


Featured Local Company

The Winters Group Inc

(301) 336-0400
10214 Marlboro Woods Drive
Washington, DC

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