You don't need to market differently during a recession—you just have to understand your customers better, according to Mary Beth West, CMO of Kraft Foods (Advertising Age, November 10, 2008).

I couldn't agree more. I've been using customer insights to develop effective marketing programs ever since my boss at Golin/Harris International appeared in my doorway late one Friday afternoon. Suddenly he said the words that made me reach for the bourbon.

"We're pitching the Jim Beam Bourbon business," he proclaimed. "We've decided to make you the lead." Next came the challenge, "We're counting on you—let's get this one."

Golin/Harris was competing against two other major agencies for the Jim Beam business. Quite frankly, we were all large, experienced, and good. The question was obvious: How could we differentiate ourselves?

We held numerous brainstorming and planning sessions, but the big idea didn't surface.

When the pitch was just a few days away, I looked around at the participants in our agency brainstorming session: mostly women in their 20s who lived in trendy Chicago neighborhoods and who did not drink bourbon. And I thought about the typical Jim Beam drinkers at the time: males, interested in outdoor activities, living in rural areas. No wonder we were struggling to reach this audience!

Picture the Marlboro Man, Minus the Horse

We decided to interview drinkers of Jim Beam and competing brands. The minute the respondents arrived for the focus groups, it was clear calling them in had been a smart move. These guys were obviously quite different from our female account team.

As we listened to the Jim Beam drinkers talk about their experiences and interests, we saw beyond the demographics to what really made these guys tick—the bonding among friends, their great interest in the outdoors, and the tradition of enjoying Jim Beam Bourbon that had begun, for many, with their fathers.

The focus groups allowed our team to get much more insight into the target audience. Our prospective client commented during our presentation that he was impressed that we had actually interviewed his users and gone beyond "a bunch of PR people sitting around a table, brainstorming and eating peanuts."

In fact, the groups generated the big idea that helped Golin/Harris win the Jim Beam business and ultimately led to a program that tripled in size by the end of the first year.

Straight From the Source's Mouth

Ever since that unforgettable sip of Jim Beam Bourbon, my first course of action when developing a marketing program has been to get direct input from whoever ultimate success depends on—or, as I call it, Straight from the Source's Mouth.

"Know thy customer" is often referred to as the first commandment of marketing. Ironically, it's been my experience in 25 years of consulting that this tenet is almost always overlooked or, at best, receives a perfunctory nod. Countless organizational decisions are based on executive preferences or beliefs that have no relationship to the people who are absolutely necessary for success—the customers.

The unintended result is marketing that misses the mark or even offends. No one can afford to do that, particularly in this economy.

Just ask Johnson & Johnson's marketers, who recently suffered from a major headache when what they intended to be a clever online ad promoting their Motrin pain reliever actually annoyed the target audience. J&J posted an ad on its Web site featuring a voiceover of a mother who said she carries her baby in a sling because she sees it as being "in fashion" and makes her "look like an official mom." Instead of laughing and buying more Motrin, mommy bloggers were offended and called for boycotts. Within 24 hours, J&J pulled the ad from both its site and magazines and posted an apology.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jenny Schade is president of JRS Consulting, Inc. (www.jrsconsulting.net), which helps organizations build brands and attract and motivate employees and customers.