I am going to say something pretty controversial: it is entirely possible to market your products or services effectively—with minimal advertising.

Now as the foundations and pillars of rational marketing thought come crashing down, please let me explain.

According to a recent Associated Press article, "the New Democrat Network has spent just over $3 million to buy air time for campaign ads in battleground states and expects to spend more than $1 million more before Election Day on ads emphasizing Democratic positions on issues such as health care, education and the minimum wage."

In response to this, the Bush campaign has countered with $2.4 million spent airing ads aimed at targeting specific ethnic groups in key states. Totaling the spending between the two factions tabulates into a hefty $6.4 million dollars—all of it spent on advertising within eight weeks!

In another article titled "Ad Wars," in the August 2004 issue of Health Leaders Magazine two leading hospitals in the same community are duking it out with pricey print and broadcast advertising campaigns.

One is an academic center; the other is a community hospital. Both are vying for patients. Unfortunately, the article does not discuss other marketing strategies that the two hospital groups might be using. However, it's likely that a significant portion of their marketing spend is on advertising.

In the 1950s, advertising was one of the ways to best spend marketing dollars. There were few broadcast networks, and most people received their news via radio and newspaper. The marketing professionals of 50 or 60 years ago were as talented as the marketers of today. But it was easier to sell products and services due to less advertising clutter, minimal competition and fewer channels in which to reach the consumer.

Fast forward to the year 2004, where media fragmentation is the norm. There's cable, Web, email, direct marketing and just about every marketing channel under the sun. One company has taken to putting advertisements on the foreheads of students! There is no shortage of ways to reach your target audience.

For the political campaigns of John Kerry and George W. Bush, surely their entire campaign budgets are not focused on advertising. However, with a careful eye toward 527 groups like Moveon.org and Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, it seems that the preferred way to get the message out is advertising.

Among them, millions of dollars are being spent on political radio, print and television ads—enabling station and media managers across America to sleep very well at night.

Perhaps in the world of political campaigns, spending $6.4 million dollars on advertising in eight weeks is chump change. But there are plenty of high-tech marketers who would be satisfied with that amount as their annual marketing budget.

Advertising can be effective when it's targeted in minimal doses, but perhaps someone should remind the Bush and Kerry campaigns that advertising is not synonymous with marketing.

Politics aside, it's a different world for high-tech marketing professionals. With message clutter and a myriad channels through which to reach a target audience, most high-tech marketers have neither the inclination nor the resources to spend millions on pure advertising.

Instead, a high-tech marketing mix should contain the complete arsenal of tactics, such as direct marketing, hosting targeted events, building communities of interest, engaging in thought leadership production, marketing and competitor analysis, community affairs, and media/analyst relations.

In the corporate world, marketers need to be judicious on how they spend marketing dollars and resources, especially since budgets are tight—and in some cases Lilliputian.

As for mass advertising, many marketing professionals reason that there are too many communication channels, too much clutter and too many people tuned out to advertising. Instead, marketers need to be targeted and focused, and need to engage in micro-campaigns—such as wooing 50-100 top prospects instead of hoping to reach millions with a few large ad buys.

Some will say that advertising is most effective for "building brand," and marketing tactics like direct mail are geared more for instant response and sales. I don't know too many of my fellow marketing professionals who have hundreds of thousands, let alone millions, to spend on "building brand." We're all focused on building relationships and revenue.

Others will argue that a careful mix of mass advertising is necessary along with targeted and focused direct marketing campaigns. Again, there are few marketing professionals who are not concerned with the latest quarterly numbers and helping close as many deals as quickly as they can.

Marketing dollars are just too precious to spend on mass advertising.

Is online advertising the best answer? At least with online advertising, there is an opportunity for measurement.

Subscribe today...it's free!

MarketingProfs provides thousands of marketing resources, entirely free!

Simply subscribe to our newsletter and get instant access to how-to articles, guides, webinars and more for nada, nothing, zip, zilch, on the house...delivered right to your inbox! MarketingProfs is the largest marketing community in the world, and we are here to help you be a better marketer.

Already a member? Sign in now.

Sign in with your preferred account, below.

Did you like this article?
Know someone who would enjoy it too? Share with your friends, free of charge, no sign up required! Simply share this link, and they will get instant access…
  • Copy Link

  • Email

  • Twitter

  • Facebook

  • Pinterest

  • Linkedin


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Paul A. Barsch directs the professional services marketing programs for one of the top 10 software companies in the United States and blogs about the intersection and impact of technology and marketing (www.paulbarsch.com). He can be contacted at paulbarsch(at)yahoo(dotcom).