Marketing–The Top Priority

It would be nice to believe that every organization is a proponent of continuous marketing (which means marketing in both strong and slowing economies), but not everyone has done so.

Many of the organizations that did not market when times were good are now suffering. Others that should know better are becoming nervous as the bad news of the economy is reported and so these firms are cutting back on marketing and other expenditures.

When times are good, and business is plentiful, businesses are often so busy they do not have time to market. They are busy taking care of current client demands and as a result they did not take the time to look into the future. They might be aware of trends in their own industry and often hear or read about the macro economy but fail to make the connection between the two and how it might affect them.

Marketing, particularly in a slow economy, has to move to the top on the list of company priorities. In a good economy is should also be a high priority.

Marketing is an investment in the future of the organization. Firms that cut their marketing expenses at the first sign of economic trouble live in the short-term.

While it always makes good sense to manage expenses, cutting for the sake of cutting without a rationale other than just reducing expenses is foolish.

The problem with most business leaders is that they want the “quick fix” to turn things around.

There is no magic pill to take and no shots the doctor, however talented, can give a company to make marketing work.

Marketing takes time. Because it takes time, getting started and staying with it is essential. The results of efforts and expenditures today may not yield fruit for months, perhaps even years. The sales cycle from the first, positive impression the organization makes until the sale is completed could be a lot longer than desired.

Everyone wants results tomorrow but it rarely works that way.

One of the critical differences between the mindsets of “marketing as an investment” versus “marketing as an expense” is that organizations who take the long-term view intend to be around for the next twenty years.

Those taking short-term view see marketing as something that they must do, almost with a sigh of “If I have to…” With a foundation of regret, what will the results be?

Proactive marketing forces companies to see what is happening in their own industry, and take notice of the technological, governmental, environmental, cultural and political environment that could affect them.

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In periods of rapid expansion, most companies can throw up new products and services and not worry about the downside. In a slowing economy, the opposite is true. A slowing economy allows every company the opportunity to take a step back and determine where limited resources will be spent. This is the opposite of random cutting and slashing of advertising, creative and promotional spending.

By taking time to analyze the business and the external environment, a company can seek the answers to these questions:

What items produce the most revenue?

Which clients are more valuable than the rest?

What is the strongest competitive advantage?

What products and clients are the most profitable?

What geographic markets make sense to expand into and which should be exited?

What market segments should continue to be invested into and which should be put on hold or exited?

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Once these questions are answered, strategies can be developed to exploit the opportunities that have been thoughtfully considered.

All of this helps to provide the company with additional focus and better direction to navigate through difficult times.

Conventional wisdom would state that when the economy slows down, companies should cut back on spending and “hunker down” to ride it out. Market leaders don’t think that way.

Starbucks has and will continue to raise prices and at the same time, regain focus to further increase sales and profits during this slowdown. The company is focusing on increasing per store unit sales through elimination of unprofitable items, adding new items to their core offering (beverages) and increasing training of employees. The firm has also reduced previously announced expansion plans.

Even before this, Starbucks has enjoyed a higher per ticket order than all other “quick serve” restaurants and this renewed focus will increase the differential. All this is taking place while the price of coffee and other items purchased by Starbucks are increasing.

Regardless of the size of the business or the size of the budgets, your clients, now more than ever, need to know that your company is alive, well and ready to do business.

If they don’t hear from you, you can bet that they will be hearing from your competitors who aren’t hunkering down but are ramping up.

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{New Post} Happy New Year 2016 from Kineticdc

Hello Kinetic update to Super Job For You,

{New Post} Happy New Year 2016 from Kineticdc

Kinetic Die Casting Company wishes to express our hope that your 2016 is a prosperous one. We are pleased that we were able to serve you and your company with splendid die casting parts and tooling.

happy new year

We are closed until January 4, 2016 to celebrate with our family.

Many of our customers are pleased with us for the following reasons:

  • Kinetic Die Casting Company produces parts quickly. Many times our delivery is shorter than a week for completed parts.
  • Kinetic Die Casting Company produces great quality parts. Our quality is the highest available from any die casting company.
  • Kinetic Die Casting Company has die casting tooling holders and mold bases for other die casting tooling. We frequently mount insert tools in one of our mold bases at no charge to produce parts for our customers.

Happy New Year from Kinetic Die Casting Company

Call for prices for die casting tooling and parts 800-524-8083

Kinetic Die Casting is located in North Hollywood,California.

KDC specializes in manufacturing aluminum alloy casting parts.

If you would like a quote, please visit our website:Kinetic Die Casting Company Prices

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Article – Concrete Roofing for Your House

Super Jobs For You,

We have published new article to the blog in our Tile Mold website. Concrete Roofing for Your House
Concrete Roofing for Your House. If you are preparing to construct your home or to replace and change its finishes on the exterior, you might be attracted in choosing concrete roofing tiles. These roofing materials are frequently used in cold climates where the external parts of the house such as …
You may view the latest post at http://www.tile-molds.com/blog/concrete-roofing-for-your-house/

Roof Tile Molds Company – A Division of Kinetic Die Casting Company
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Learn from Failing Businesses

It seems that nearly every day the media is touting that some brand name business or an industry is on the verge of collapse. The reality is that every day, businesses fail and industries consolidate, meaning companies are purchased by competitors or go by the wayside.

Ultimately, those businesses that cannot adapt or change will fail. Some of those businesses we are sorry to see go, others we wonder what took so long, and still others we know should never have been started in the first place. Lessons are learned when a business closes the doors; hopefully those that succeed learn from those that fail.

Here are some lessons learned by observing organizations that failed to adapt to a changing marketplace.

First, speed matters. Companies that can execute quickly will do better than those that have so much bureaucracy that changing course or speed takes too much time and too many approvals. General George S. Patton is credited with saying that “A good plan, violently executed now, is better than a perfect plan next week.” That thought is not lost on those that move quickly to adapt to changing conditions.

Second, planning is critical. Too many companies fail to have the most basic of plans, simply because leadership doesn’t want to commit the time and resources to having to develop one. The companies that develop a plan almost always survive and prosper; those that don’t drift and usually end up dying.

Third, having the wrong people in the organization can lead to disaster. According to international press reports, Jerome Kerviel, accused of costing French bank Societe Generale about $7 billion in losses had been doing risky trades for almost four years before his activities were discovered.

That of course, leads to the fourth lesson which is not having sufficient or significant financial controls (!) but also screams of another critical lesson (number five) that that there was a lack of daily and on-going supervision. Kerviel told investigators: “I can’t believe that my superiors were not aware…” In organizations that fail, there might be a question about who supervises those that supervise; in successful organizations the question doesn’t need to be asked because it has already been answered.

As organizations grow, and expand layers of management creep in, leadership must learn to turn over control and grow trust at the same time. However, systems have to be created, installed and monitored. Many firms lack these internal policies, procedure and systems so they are developed only when the need arises, usually as a result of a crisis. The sixth lesson is that the needed systems, developed in advance of when they are needed, fail to materialize.

The seventh lesson is that leadership, at whatever level, did not have the skills to do all that running a business requires, and did not intend to acquire skills that were lacking. Without a commitment to personal growth, how could the business hope to adapt when leadership was content with the status quo?

James Allen wrote that “Men are anxious to improve their circumstances but are unwilling to improve themselves. They therefore remain bound.” In successful organizations, leaders understand two things. The first is that what they already know will change; the second is that there is a lot they don’t know and they need to learn it.

Eighth, leadership did not see or refused to face, the brutal facts of the current reality. It takes courage, perhaps more courage than some leaders have, to be able to see what the real world looks like. As an unknown author said “Reality bites… and doesn’t let go.” No one likes to be bitten, but if those in a leadership position aren’t willing to do so, how can anyone else be expected to?

The ninth lesson is that the business does not have a sustainable competitive advantage. The internal answer to a question as to why any prospect should choose to do business with the organization and not the competition is weak or nonexistent. Those serious about creating and building an organization continually ask and rethink the answer to the question “Why should you do business with me?” In organizations that fail, the question is met with a shrug, and the issue is never addressed or passed to someone else to address.

The last lesson is that the company failed to go their own way; to avoid the herd or pack mentality. Far too many organizations are like lemmings, following those in front of them, heading right over the cliff (sub-prime mortgage anyone?). With a strong set of core values, used for decision making at every level, every company can set itself apart and set a course for long term success.

Keats wrote: “Failure is, in a sense, the highway to success, inasmuch as every discovery of what is false leads us to seek earnestly after what is true, and every fresh experience points out some form of error which we shall afterwards carefully avoid.”

Super Job Information gives information on how to get a job and how to hire good people. If you are looking for Zinc Die Casting Jobs look at this website. This Zinc Die Casting Blog will give you more information you can use for zinc castings.

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