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There is no law that says small firms can do business only with other small firms. If you can get your foot in the door, working for Fortune 500 companies is the smart way to grow a profitable marketing firm.

This article is about one small company—my own business, Articulate Marketing—and how we have found ways to turn our small size into a competitive advantage. We now work with giants: Hewlett-Packard, Microsoft, VeriSign, Symantec, and NetJets.

What follows, below, is what we've learned working with big clients.

Big is beautiful

Big companies are good clients. They do things that help small businesses. For example, they pay on time. They understand marketing, so they brief well and don't expect the impossible.

If you have ever lost sleep over a small business CEO who wants you to take away all his marketing pain but can't say what he wants (or what he's willing to pay for it), then you know what I mean. [1]

There are collateral benefits too. For example, big-name clients add luster to your own marketing. Also, you can learn a lot from working with the professionals in world-class companies.

Small companies can help

All my clients work with multinational advertising, marketing communications, and PR agencies, all of which have scale and consistency on their side. But they can be slow-moving, bureaucratic, and expensive. Without trying to replace them, small companies can provide more responsive service in niche areas (in our case, copywriting and advice).

Apply your marketing skills to your own business. Polish your expertise like a diamond so that everyone can see it the way you do. Conversely, don't try to be all things to all people. An old editor of mine said, "You can't be a good writer on every topic under the sun. Pick one field and be the very best."

What they see is what they get

When you're a small company, what your clients see is what they get. If you're the person turning up for the pitch and you're the person doing the work, there are no communications barriers.

Fred Brooks writes in his The Mythical Man-Month that you don't necessarily get more productive by adding more people; you just increase the amount of time wasted on communications. Understanding this point is central to outcompeting your bigger rivals.

This time, it's personal

It's easy to see multinationals as impersonal monoliths. Wrong! To misquote Soylent Green, big companies are made of people.

Try to see the world from their perspective. People in big-company marketing departments are generally budget-rich but time poor. They like dealing with people who make their lives easier by delivering good-quality work on time without lots of handholding. As with the rest of us, they like doing business with people they like.

So your first objective is to make contact with those people in large corporations who can become your champion.

Make contact with the mothership

There are several ways to make first contact. You can go work for a big company and then leave to set up on your own. You can work for an agency that is already rostered either as a subcontractor or as an employee.

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Bambi vs. Godzilla: How to Work With Very Big Clients

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Matthew Stibbe

Matthew Stibbe is CEO at Articulate Marketing and TurbineHQ.com, and the author of the Bad Language blog. Reach him via matthew@articulatemarketing.com.

LinkedIn: Matthew Stibbe