Karl Kukor

on December 28, 2009

category: direct marketing

Manager Business Development

2009: The Year of the Ostrich

The Chinese have an animal name for each year, but I proclaim that 2009 was the Year of the Ostrich. Hallelujah and jubilation, it is almost over. I work in Business Development here at Hacker and have been in sales and marketing for more years than I like to admit. This has been the roughest year in my memory and has been called the toughest since the headline appeared October 30, 1929, “WALL ST LAYS AN EGG”.   It must have been an ostrich egg because the first six months of the year many marketing executives had their heads buried in the sand, or maybe just hiding under their desks. I felt like the Maytag repair person: No one to talk to, everyone scared, in hiding. One contact said she could not talk to me today because they just announced 42,000 layoffs and “I have some fires to put out today.”Gives you an idea what Business Development is facing.

Is your head buried in the sand? What that does is leave your backside VERY vulnerable. Competitors will be pouncing on your customers and prospects while you think you are playing it safe.By summer, folks started to face reality that the world was not ending, the sky was not falling and, lo and behold, they began to talk. They were not ready to act but at least they would talk to us. We switched from the Year of the Ostrich to the Year of the Dragon. Every meeting, every action, every decision seemed to Drag On. As Bears owner George Halas was known to do, they “threw nickels around like manhole covers.” Marketers facing smaller budgets, smaller departments and perhaps the threat of losing their own jobs, became extremely cautious, watching every penny spent and wanting to know what it was doing for them immediately. Well, folks, that’s why direct marketing is so hot right now, everything can be tracked, measured and analyzed to measure ROI.  

Be gone Dragon, Damn the Torpedoes and Full Speed ahead!

We are in a unique period in history. Never in the last 234 years as a nation has there been such a shake-up of marketing executives and personal. Almost every company in America has different marketing management in new positions seeking new ideas as we enter a recovery year in 2010. What a great time to be in Business Development as these new execs seek proven ways to keep the business they have and acquire new customers.

Marketing execs in America, my advice to you is to explode out of the gates in 2010. Your competitors might just be reading this, too! Either you are part of the steamroller or you will be part of the pavement. If you are content coasting, you are sliding down a hill.

2009 is gone. To all a New Year’s toast: “To your health and a safe and prosperous explosive 2010!”

 


 

There are no comments for this post.

Jürgen Stephan

on December 15, 2009

category: lead generation

Executive Director, New Business Development

Are you feeling lucky for 2010? Well, are you?

2009 has been a rather depressing year for many marketers. Staff has been cut (maybe yourself, too), budgets have dwindled; what was true yesterday isn’t anymore; and nobody could really give you a straight answer about the prospects. Social media – while highly touted in the media and in hallway conversations – can’t be the answer for everything.

Time to change that: 2010 will be a year of growth and departure. Are you with me?

We’ve been planning an aggressive marketing campaign to our top four vertical markets. Can’t tell you much more about that or I’d have to shoot you.

Our marketing and creative teams have come up with some awesome concepts, very targeted and relevant in content. We will deliver them early in Q1 in a multi-step approach that will prime a year of recovery. Maybe you’ll be even one of the recipients.

Those of us who used 2009 for testing different marketing channels – e-mail, mobile, social – will reap the rewards in the new year. Despite sluggishness in decision-making and shifting targets, I’ve personally been involved in a flood of new business conversations with marketers looking for new resources, significant program improvements and marketing-ROI savvy partners.

So 2010, bring it on!


 

Comments:


12/15/2009 at 1:17 p.m.
I am feeling lucky- Spread the good news
Its funny how people are naturally conditioned to spread bad news faster than the good.. We all need to remember not to get sucked into the daily contagious doom and gloom negativity of economic hard times and look forward to great things to come and be proud we made it through a challenging year that made us all stronger.. We all should feel lucky!!
>>Laura Madel-Hacker Group, Seattle WA
...................................................................................................................................

Carolyn Hansen

on December 2, 2009

category: integrated marketing

Vice President/Marketing

Is advertising effective? Does it work on you?

Here’s a great way to NOT prove the effectiveness of advertising: Ask people if they think it works on them.

An Adweek Media/Harris poll discovered that very few people admit that advertising sways them.

You could have knocked me down with a feather.  (That was sarcasm!)

Seriously. Mumble-something years ago, when I was an advertising major in college, they taught us that people never confess to being swayed by advertising. If someone disses the profession, they said, ask them what toothpaste they use – and then ask how they found out about its wonderfulness.

This is the kind of survey that discovers that 95% of all adults consider themselves better-than-average drivers.


 

There are no comments for this post.