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Saturday, November 22, 2008

Innovating Through Recession

Innovating Through Recession (Andrew Razeghi, Kellogg School of Management)

Monday, September 8, 2008

Marketing Your Way Through a Recession

Marketing Your Way Through a Recession

Executive Summary:

In a recession, consumers become value oriented, distributors are concerned about cash, and employees worry about their jobs. But a downturn is no time to stop spending on marketing. The key, says professor John Quelch, is to understand how the needs of your customers and partners change, and adapt your strategies to the new reality. Key concepts include:

  • Brands that increase advertising during a downturn can improve market share and return on investment.
  • Early-buy allowances, extended financing, and generous return policies motivate distributors to stock your full product line.
  • In tough times, price cuts attract more consumer support than promotions.
  • CEOs must spend more time with customers and employees.

The signs of an imminent recession are all around us. The spillover from the subprime mortgage crisis is weakening both consumer confidence and the consumer spending—much of it on credit—that has been buoying the U.S. economy.

Companies should bear eight factors in mind when making their marketing plans for 2008 and 2009:

1. Research the customer. Instead of cutting the market research budget, you need to know more than ever how consumers are redefining value and responding to the recession. Price elasticity curves are changing. Consumers take more time searching for durable goods and negotiate harder at the point of sale. They are more willing to postpone purchases, trade down, or buy less. Must-have features of yesterday are today's can-live-withouts. Trusted brands are especially valued and they can still launch new products successfully, but interest in new brands and new categories fades. Conspicuous consumption becomes less prevalent.

2. Focus on family values. When economic hard times loom, we tend to retreat to our village. Look for cozy hearth-and-home family scenes in advertising to replace images of extreme sports, adventure, and rugged individualism. Zany humor and appeals on the basis of fear are out. Greeting card sales, telephone use, and discretionary spending on home furnishings and home entertainment will hold up well, as uncertainty prompts us to stay at home but also stay connected with family and friends.

Now may be the time to drop your weaker distributors and upgrade your sales force.

3. Maintain marketing spending. This is not the time to cut advertising. It is well documented that brands that increase advertising during a recession, when competitors are cutting back, can improve market share and return on investment at lower cost than during good economic times. Uncertain consumers need the reassurance of known brands, and more consumers at home watching television can deliver higher than expected audiences at lower cost-per-thousand impressions. Brands with deep pockets may be able to negotiate favorable advertising rates and lock them in for several years. If you have to cut marketing spending, try to maintain the frequency of advertisements by shifting from 30-second to 15-second advertisements, substituting radio for television advertising, or increasing the use of direct marketing, which gives more immediate sales impact.

4. Adjust product portfolios. Marketers must reforecast demand for each item in their product lines as consumers trade down to models that stress good value, such as cars with fewer options. Tough times favor multi-purpose goods over specialized products, and weaker items in product lines should be pruned. In grocery-products categories, good-quality own-brands gain at the expense of national brands. Industrial customers prefer to see products and services unbundled and priced separately. Gimmicks are out; reliability, durability, safety, and performance are in. New products, especially those that address the new consumer reality and thereby put pressure on competitors, should still be introduced, but advertising should stress superior price performance, not corporate image.

When economic hard times loom, we tend to retreat to our village.

5. Support distributors. In uncertain times, no one wants to tie up working capital in excess inventories. Early-buy allowances, extended financing, and generous return policies motivate distributors to stock your full product line. This is particularly true with unproven new products. Be careful about expanding distribution to lower-priced channels; doing so can jeopardize existing relationships and your brand image. However, now may be the time to drop your weaker distributors and upgrade your sales force by recruiting those sacked by other companies.

6. Adjust pricing tactics. Customers will be shopping around for the best deals. You do not necessarily have to cut list prices, but you may need to offer more temporary price promotions, reduce thresholds for quantity discounts, extend credit to long-standing customers, and price smaller pack sizes more aggressively. In tough times, price cuts attract more consumer support than promotions such as sweepstakes and mail-in offers.

7. Stress market share. In all but a few technology categories where growth prospects are strong, companies are in a battle for market share and, in some cases, survival. Knowing your cost structure can ensure that any cuts or consolidation initiatives will save the most money with minimum customer impact. Companies such as Wal-Mart and Southwest Airlines, with strong positions and the most productive cost structures in their industries, can expect to gain market share. Other companies with healthy balance sheets can do so by acquiring weak competitors.

8. Emphasize core values. Although most companies are making employees redundant, chief executives can cement the loyalty of those who remain by assuring employees that the company has survived difficult times before, maintaining quality rather than cutting corners, and servicing existing customers rather than trying to be all things to all people. CEOs must spend more time with customers and employees. Economic recession can elevate the importance of the finance director's balance sheet over the marketing manager's income statement. Managing working capital can easily dominate managing customer relationships. CEOs must counter this. Successful companies do not abandon their marketing strategies in a recession; they adapt them.

Join the discussion on Harvard Business Online.

This post is based on an article by John Quelch that appeared in The Financial Times of London on February 19, 2008. Reproduced by permission.

About the author

John Quelch is Senior Associate Dean and Lincoln Filene Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School.


Friday, August 1, 2008

New Recommendation System = 40 Percent More Diggs

New Recommendation System = 40 Percent More Diggs

Posted: 31 Jul 2008 03:28 PM CDT

One month after launching its new recommendation system, Digg is already reporting positive results. Digg recommends stories based on other members with similar voting patterns and interests. Chief scientist Anton Kast writes on the Digg Blog:

- Digging activity is up significantly: the total number of Diggs increased 40% after launch.

- The Recommendation Engine is running strong: at any given point in time, the system is generating over 54 Million Recommendations, with the average Digger having nearly 200 Recommendations from an average of 34 “Diggers like you”.

- Friend activity/friends added is up 24%.

- Commenting is up 11% since launch.

Digg’s recommendation engine takes a Last.fm approach to finding people’s whose tastes overlap with yours and then suggesting stories they’ve Dugg up but that you’ve missed. It is collaborative filtering for news.

As Digg becomes more mainstream, it needs technologies such as this to bring it back to its glory days when everybody was interested in the same niche categories. Social recommendations work best when they are extracted from niche communities who are obsessive about one or two topics. Digg started out as a haven for hardcore techies, but has branched out.

The recommendation system is designed to, in effect, help Diggers carve out their own niche communities again. If you happen to like tech industry news, you will see stories from other like-minded Diggers. If you prefer politics or sports, you’ll get those stories. And if you like a combination, the system will grab recommendations from each appropriate bucket.

At least, that is how it is supposed to work in theory. The recommendations seem decent. But I personally haven’t noticed anything that really strikes home. Over time, it should get better.

Courtesy:  TechCrunch

Thursday, July 31, 2008

Nike Courage

Six Reasons Why People Flip Over the Flip

Six Reasons Why People Flip Over the Flip

Posted by: Rob Hof on July 30

Like more than 1 million other people, I’m a fan of the Flip, the little camcorder that, on paper, looks like it should suck. It has almost no advanced features that tech-obsessed folks think they need. Some of them, in fact, are downright livid about why people would prefer fewer functions.

No matter. Market watcher NPD Research just announced that the Flip is the best-selling camcorder in the U.S. as of June.

Here’s why—and I think this list provides useful lessons to purveyors of tech gear, who nonetheless will probably continue to ignore them in their endless quest to one-up each other.

1. It’s cheap. Starting at about $100, it’s affordable to almost anyone who’s at all inclined to shoot video in the first place.

2. It’s easy. Three buttons: Record, play back, erase. That’s it. No manual necessary. And uploading to YouTube is a snap, or actually a flip—press a release button and out springs the USB connector. The software installs automatically.

3. The video’s more than good enough. It won’t match a regular camcorder’s, but it looks just fine on a standard TV. And the Flip works surprisingly well in low light—better, notes one commenter below, than camcorders costing much more. This is really important, more than most people realize.

4. It’s small. It fits in just about any pocket. Maybe just as important, it’s unobtrusive, unlike most camcorders, which look kind of like miniature satellites spying on you.

5. It uses regular, AA batteries. Easy to replace and, even more important, no brick for recharging. (Except the new, smaller Mino, which uses an internal battery.)

6. It’s fun!

I don’t mean this to be an ad for the Flip. It’s far from perfect (optical zoom is something I’d pay extra for, and the new Mino model is getting a little pricey for what it is). But it’s refreshing when you run across a device that just works with no fuss. You’d think more tech companies would figure this out after all these years watching Apple eat their lunch.

 

Google A-Go-Go

Google Acquires Video Editing Service For YouTube
TechCrunch
In a rare acquisition, Google's YouTube acquired startup Omnisio, a service that lets users edit videos.

Omnisio lets users extract sections of video clips found on YouTube, Google Video or Blip.tv and then mash them up to form their own embeddable video clips. According to TechCrunch, the all-cash deal is worth $15 million.

Omnisio, which was founded by Australian trio Ryan Junee, Julian Frumar and Simon Ratner, has only been around since March 2008; TechCrunch points out that the sale is another win for owner Y Combinator, which invests small amounts of capital in companies at the idea stage. Reddit, acquired in 2006, TextPayMe, bought by Amazon in 2007, and Auctomatic and Anywhere.FM, acquired earlier this year, are other former Y Combinator companies. - Read the whole story...

Google To Open VC Unit
The Wall Street Journal
The Wall Street Journal reports that Google is planning to start its own venture capital unit. The venture will be lead by David Drummond, Google's SVP of corporate development and chief legal officer, and William Maris, a 33-year-old former entrepreneur. But details, such as how the group will be structured and what sorts of investments it will pursue, remain murky. In fact, the plans could still fall through.

Google would join such tech and media giants as Intel Corp., Motorola, Comcast, Amazon and Walt Disney in setting up its own formal venture capital arm. Their respective investment records have been spotty at best, in part because corporate venture capital units face different challenges from traditional VCs, which invest in private startups at an early phase in hopes of a big payout when the company is sold or goes public.

Startups, meanwhile, are sometimes wary of taking corporate money because the agreements often come with requirements like a buyout clause if the company becomes successful. These funds also don't usually allow senior employees to invest their own money, whereas VC firms typically do. According to PricewaterhouseCoopers, corporate funds' share of the overall VC market fell to 7% in the first half of 2008 from 8.4% in 2007. - Read the whole story...

Google Reveals Search Targeting Practices
The New York Times
We know that Google gathers lots of data about its users, but we've never known how the search giant uses it to filter individual search results. However, earlier this week, the company decided to shine a little light on that process, explaining how it customizes search results in a blog post. In short, Google uses search data to guess where you are and what you're most likely searching for.

Now, a small note in the upper-right-hand corner of the results page will alert users when this is happening. For example, the note could read, "customized for the San Francisco metro area." The text may also provide a link to a page that has additional information. There, Google displays the IP address it used to determine that the search came from San Francisco. It also identifies the search terms it has taken into account to determine this. Not only that, but the page also includes a link to the search results that would have come up if Google hadn't taken into account the user information. This way, Google is allowing people to make choices about how much information to give to Google.

In his report, The New York Times' Saul Hansell applauds Google for taking steps toward helping people understand what the company is doing with their information. That said, it doesn't answer questions about how Google uses this information on its other pages. The disclosure only refers to search results, not advertising, which is the second important area where Google leverages user data. As Hansell says, "I'd like to be able to see what data was used in deciding to show an ad to me and who will get what information if I click on it. Yes, some of this may be seen as "proprietary" information, but to my mind a company that wants to use my "proprietary" history of Web surfing needs to come clean about what it is doing with that data." - Read the whole story...

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Trip It Real Good

From Daily Candy - July 30, 2008
Organized Travel with TripIt

tripit!

You edited your stuff until your bag fits overhead (if it requires more than a bikini and cover-up, you’re not doing it). But that avalanche of travel info printouts could fill a steamer trunk.

Next time, get help from online travel tool TripIt. Its patent-pending technology, the Itinerator, gobbles info from all your sources and spits it back out as a single plan.

Lost you with “patent-pending”? Yeah, it’s dorky. (We’d never actually say the word “Itinerator” out loud.) But it’s easy and damn useful. You e-mail everything — flights from ba.com, hotels from Orbitz, car rental confirmation — to one address and it’s all (miraculously, mysteriously) condensed into one itin.

TripIt gets bonus points for all the, uh, bonuses: weather forecasts, city guides, maps, and directions. Traveling with a gang? E-mail everyone the Itinerator-generated play-by-play and never again suffer the dreaded “what time is our flight again?” call when you’re already at the airport.

Ah, technology. We just love this interweb thing.


Available online at tripit.com.