Market Like it’s 1999 – B2B Marketing and Sales Tip #237
Remember 1999? The tech bubble had yet to burst, times were good and our biggest worry was Y2K. Back then marketers had a positive attitude and spent time tailoring messages to their audience around how the benefits of their product would help the prospect.
We all know that times have been tough this year, we don’t need to be reminded in every email, direct mail, blog post and webinar invitation we get. If I want to be reminded, I just look at my stock portfolio
. This is a plea to all marketers out there, STOP talking about the recession. Don’t remind your audience that their budgets have been cut or that they are now a man down.
If your prospects have had budget cuts and layoffs, there is no need to remind them of the current economic state; they live with the reminder every day. Instead, now is the time to focus on the positives.
Here are some reasons why you should NOT highlight the recession in your next marketing message:
- Stand out from the crowd. If you are sending out the same ways to recession-proof your X, as everyone else, your message will be lost. I automatically delete any email or webinar invite I get that has the word recession or economy in it.
- You are subtly reminding your prospects that their budgets are shrinking and that they should be spending less. FYI- your goal is to sell them something meaning you want them to spend more.
- Now is the time to really highlight how you are going to save your prospects time and money. Make them feel like your product is the one thing that cannot be cut from the budget.
- Perception is reality. As long as the media and we as marketers continue to propagate the idea that we are in a recession, then we will be in one. We can all do our part to be more positive.
My point is that we all know we are in a recession and although things are beginning to look up, we don’t need every marketing message to remind us of our budget cuts and staff losses.
One Response to “Market Like it’s 1999 – B2B Marketing and Sales Tip #237”
Leave a Reply




















May 17th, 2009 at 12:07 pm
Good list — I agree and have seen most of these. Usually you can attribute these to either (a) no 1 person owns the data and/or (b) the data sites in a contact mgt db where the contact = a record rather than relational where contacts are related to company records and company = a record