In John Coe's Day 1 afternoon intensive he summed up at the end with a quick story about Texas Instruments. It illustrates the importance of taking a few minutes to calculate the break-even cost of your promo campaigns.


John explains he was called in a few years ago by a TI marketer asking him to critique "a self-mailer that failed." This mailer had gone out to a clean list of 5000 current SMB customers to promote a chip upgrade. The revenue per sale was projected at $100K on average. Margins were around $75K each. The campaign cost was $35K.
John asked the marketer: "How many sales does it take to pay for the campaign?" Half of one sale. That's all he needed to break even. When asked why he had spent only $35K on this program, John was told the product manager set the budget based on what they had spent the previous year.
The lesson: If they had budgeted for a more expensive campaign, their agency could have created something with greater impact, which very likely would have generated more sales.
After all, it's not easy to sell a $100K product with a self mailer. And a fairly painless break-even analysis would have told them before they launched the campaign that what they were planning was going to miss the mark.


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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Val Frazee is Managing Editor for MarketingProfs. She works with a (stellar!) team to produce content solutions for corporate clients, seminars for Premium Plus members, how-to guides for Premium members and the Get to the Point newsletter for small business builders. Whenever she can break free, she hangs out in Know-How Exchange, our discussion forum. Before MProfs she learned the ropes on the editorial staffs of trade magazines for stockbrokers and human resources professionals. Demonstrating an addiction to startups and spin-offs, she has participated in a variety of product and company launches. And she spent most of her time in business school daydreaming about entrepreneurial ventures. She recently moved near Tahoe from the Bay Area and is still getting used to the idea of living in a small town where people are just so darn friendly and wagon wheels are common lawn ornaments.