You work with your team to design a well-integrated marketing plan that you believe is the best approach to the market. And, sure enough, upper management demands a budget cut that disrupts your plan.

The budget-cutting process puts you as a marketer in defensive mode—you may lose key tactics that have strategic value in the marketing mix, or the cuts scale back the overall marketing to the point where you question the potential impact.

During this exercise, marketers need to be prepared to articulate their strategy in terms that are relevant to executives. Three steps may help your case:

  1. Detail your expected outcomes.

  2. Educate executives on the dynamics necessary for marketing success.

  3. Simulate your strategy on a small scale.

1. Detail expected outcomes

Cutting budgets is relatively easy and painless for the finance group. Cutting future profits and cash flow is not. The better you can link marketing initiatives to financial outcomes, the better position you will be in to defend your strategy.

Marketing objectives are often tied to the customer response in terms of actions or perception changes. You can map out the expected outcomes by repeatedly asking the question, "And then what happens?"

Marketing impact will follow one or more of these patterns:

  • Drive incremental sales. Mapping your outcomes is pretty straightforward if your marketing directly generates sales.

  • Feed prospects into the sales cycle (alternatively viewed as the customer funnel). This is where you are generating interest and demand that other marketing and/or sales activities will drive to a completed sale. As you map the impact that follows your marketing, you'll benefit by showing integration of the target audience, message, and timing.

  • Improve a problem area in the sales cycle or customer funnel. This approach to assess your impact is appropriate if you have analyzed the customer funnel for your business and can detect significant "leakage" points where the company fails to convert prospects to the next stage of the funnel. You may find that the leakage point is beyond the stages that marketing manages, such as your retail partners' recommending a competitive solution or your sales force's struggling to get management approval to complete the sale. A strategy that addresses these leakage points can show clear outcomes.

  • Improve effectiveness throughout the sales cycle or customer funnel. Some marketing initiatives are intended to move more prospects through all stages of the funnel. You raise the brand profile and build a strong reason for choosing your solutions, and it will result in an increased number of prospects' entering the customer funnel, with more of them progressing further along their buying process and more of them buying from you. Your outcomes need to show up as incremental performance of other metrics and should be coordinated with the groups managing those stages of the customer funnel.

  • Repositioning the brand. Marketing that is intended to have long-term impact on the brand position, without making any impact on current buying decisions, must be viewed differently. Changing your brand position to gain new competitive advantages can take time. The investment will take time to have an impact, but the expected impact on incremental sales that will come in future years is usually significant enough to justify the business case. This approach requires long-term buy-in from company executives and should not confront the same budget cut threats.

After mapping out the expected outcomes, you must quantify the impact and determine the key metrics that will let you know you are on track. Even without perfect information or previous measures, use your best assumptions to estimate the contribution. This gives more validity to your strategy, shows thorough thinking, and sometimes generates a constructive dialogue to refine the assumptions.

2. Educate executives on the dynamics of your strategy

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Jim Lenskold
Jim Lenskold is founder and president of Lenskold Group (www.lenskold.com), a consultancy that delivers a comprehensive approach to marketing ROI measurement and management. He can be reached at jlenskold@lenskold.com.