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Blog > December 2011

Protecting your hard-earned reputation when times are tough

You’d probably expect a PR man to say this, but one of the last things a business should do in the current climate is slash its marketing and communications budget.

Think about it. The primary role of marketing, advertising and PR is to generate new leads, convert those into new customers and add to the bottom line.

But the less visible your business is the narrower that pipeline of prospects becomes and the more you risk your revenues being eroded.

Our experience however is that most businesses view marketing and communications as an investment rather than an expense, so the old adage that marketing budgets are first against the wall come the economic downturn doesn’t necessarily ring true.

So why is communication so important? I would sum it up in a single word: reputation.

Your customers buy your product or service because of your reputation in your marketplace. And that reputation is invariably hard won having been built up over a number of years. Reputation is what your business trades on.

But you can’t take reputation for granted. You might be the best at what you do but you’ll get nowhere fast if people don’t know about it. Nor can you rest on your laurels. We all operate in a changing world within changing markets, where customers demand ever more and competitors snap at our heels.

So you should always be asking yourself whether you are communicating effectively with your customers and prospective customers, and whether the methods of communication – be it website, social media, brochure, PR – are reaching the audiences you need to reach.

Depending on your objectives, those audiences might also include other groups such as suppliers, investors or potential investors, and you should never underestimate the importance of using professional relationships and your existing networks to get your message across.

But when times are hard it is easy for owner managers to take their eye off the ball. If you’re in the midst of a cashflow crisis, for example, then marketing and communications can slide down your pecking order of priorities. But the last thing you want is for your hard earned reputation and visibility in the marketplace to wither away because things aren’t going well.

That’s why it’s important to have a communications and marketing strategy so that if your attention is diverted by other demands in the business (and it will, without question), at the very least you have a framework in place for continuing to manage your customer relationships.
 
It’s also important that your strategy is flexible because you will have to react to a changing landscape, economic or otherwise, and it is those businesses that can adapt that survive.

The media landscape for example continues to evolve rapidly and the growth in social media presents tremendous opportunities to communicate directly with target audiences in ways which have not been possible before.

You should also consider how to deal with threats to your reputation because perception is everything and in the days of instant communication reputations can be destroyed in minutes.

In tough economic times that threat could come in the form of lost business, poor financial performance or the need to downsize, and from our experience it’s very important that these issues are managed.

If a business fails to deal with a threat to its reputation effectively then how it is perceived in its market – whether real or not – can severely undermine confidence among customers and suppliers. And once your reputation has been undermined, it’s much harder to row back.

We have worked with businesses that have been impacted by the downturn and have credible recovery plans in place, and by communicating those plans to target audiences in a structured way they have avoided reputational damage.

Recognising these threats to reputation can be half the battle, but with the right approach a bump in the road needn’t become a full-scale crisis.

Posted by Jason - @DCAJason


dca | Posted: 19/12/2011 14:54:29 | with 0 comments

Online vs the High Street – where will you be spending your money this Christmas?

The battle of online vs High Street shopping has never been more topical, with Mary Portas’ High Street review published today and towns and cities across the country fighting to get Christmas shoppers away from the computer and spending in the shops.

Retail expert and Government advisor Mary Portas has said that the growth of online shopping has left many town centres “dying”, and has made a long list of recommendations for traders and councils to try and regenerate the UK’s High Streets.

Working with both the Plymouth City Centre Company and White River Place shopping centre in St Austell, it certainly hasn’t escaped our notice that retailers are finding it increasingly hard to get shoppers through their doors.

Plymouth City Centre Manager Clint Jones has already been urging shoppers in Plymouth to shop offline (see our previous news release), but as someone who spends a good half of my day sat in front of a computer, I’d be lying if I said I was completely committed to supporting my local town centre.

Shopping online is undeniably easier – you can compare prices at the click of a button to make sure you’re getting the best deal, and browse hundreds of bargains while sat at your desk, no need to brave the rain and wind that’s currently terrorising the South West.

Many retailers that also have an online presence even offer better deals to people who visit their websites rather than their stores, further reinforcing the opinion that you’ll spend less if you shop online.

So what can local towns and cities do to bring shoppers back?

Well for me, Christmas shopping is all about the atmosphere – I want to feel festive, and a bit of gold tinsel draped over my monitor just won’t cut it.

011211XmasCarnival_005.JPG

Christmas lights, late-night shopping, Christmas markets, lantern parades, ice skating, Father Christmas – these are the things you can only find by actually getting out of the house and going in to town to shop.

Yes, it’s freezing and I have to don full-on Eskimo wear to even think about going outside in December, but a festive hot chocolate or glass of mulled wine will soon sort that out…

One of Mary Portas’ recommendations is that High Streets should become "multi-functional social as well as shopping areas", which is where the effort towns and shopping centres puts into community events – not just at Christmas, but all year round - pays off.

It’s also a great chance to meet friends and catch up over the aforementioned hot chocolate or mulled wine, which is ever so slightly more sociable than conversing over email or Facebook chat.

There are certain things I will still buy online – for example if I wanted a relatively expensive electronic product, I know I could probably get a better deal – but for cute and quirky Christmas gifts (not to mention fashion inspiration for all the Christmas parties) I’ll definitely be doing my shopping on the High Street.

By going into a shop, you can also count on their expert knowledge and advice, which is probably easier and more reliable than wading through hundreds of reviews on Amazon.

There is also the “use it or lose it” mantra to bear in mind – with one in seven High Street shops vacant and shops across the country shutting at a rate of 20 per day, without the support of local people the demise of local shopping is almost inevitable.

What do you think, is shopping in town too much of a hassle, or the best way to get into the festive spirit? What would make you shut down the computer and venture down to the High Street?
 

 
 

Posted by Natalie - @natblachford

dca | Posted: 13/12/2011 13:27:28 | with 0 comments
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