Relationship Marketing Through the Pandemic

Relationship Marketing Through the Pandemic

Relationship Marketing Through the Pandemic

Written By Rajat Kapur

On

The chaos of 2020 has led many businesses to assess how well their marketing strategies translate during a pandemic. We’ve spent a good deal of time walking through this in our marketing during a pandemic blog series, but we wanted to narrow in a bit—specifically whether relationship marketing is possible during a global pandemic.

I don’t think anything has, or necessarily ever will change with relationship marketing. It will always be a cornerstone of business development regardless of what happens in the world.

Michael Stack

Founder Amaxx Workers’ Comp Training Center

What is Relationship Marketing?

At its root, relationship marketing is systematically creating personal relationships with your target customer’s key decision makers. Oftentimes, companies come across as nameless, faceless organizations with no emotion. Relationship marketing turns that on its head.

Relationship marketing is a big idea—not a single tactic or a one-time campaign. It’s a long-term strategy focused on customer retention. It takes concerted effort and authentic engagement to foster a real sense of connection with a buyer. It can’t be faked, and it should be considered at every touch point in the customer journey.

Why Does Relationship Marketing Matter?

It’s simple. The way you make your customers feel is important and can’t be underestimated—especially during a time as trying as the one we’re in. If they feel emotionally connected to your brand, they are more likely to stick with you. Not to mention, the cost of keeping a customer coming back is much less than acquiring a new one. Not only is it less expensive to sell to a customer who already knows and likes your product or service, they are more likely to recommend you to people they know, resulting in free and very effective advertising. The more engaged a buyer is with your brand, the more valuable they are to long-term growth. So how does relationship marketing stack up in a pandemic, and is it even possible?

I think relationship marketing is especially important and effective now because people yearn for connection as we are separated by the pandemic and political division. Moreover, given the cost of customer/client acquisition, the longer you can keep a customer and the more services or products you can provide for them, it drives down the acquisition cost and makes the relationship more profitable. That is the true value of relationship marketing – turning a transaction into a long term association.

Robert Curtiss

Account Executive Business Group Resources

Can We Still Use Relationship Marketing Through the Pandemic?

Always curious to get the perspective of our peers, we polled our LinkedIn family. With 91% saying relationship marketing is more important than ever, the results are clearly YES—businesses can still use relationship marketing during a pandemic. We’d even go as far as to say that tuning into how your customers feel and building personal relationships is more important than ever to survive and thrive in a global crisis.
relationship marketing poll

What can we learn from this and how can we leverage relationship marketing to build stronger ties with our customers, so we can emerge stronger when this is all over? Here are a few key lessons we’ve learned about how to leverage relationship marketing during a pandemic, along with some valuable insights from our network.

Lesson 1: Treat humans like humans

While frightening and unpredictable, the global pandemic has created a shared experience and the sense that we are all in this together. For the first time, we all face a common enemy. We know that we aren’t alone in dealing with this, and that link is creating a sense of camaraderie that has allowed us to tap into more authentic, human interactions. Inherent in this is an opportunity to connect with our customers in a way that the pandemic has proven our customers crave—more genuine, honest, and even humanized engagement. Treating humans like humans may seem obvious, but the past year has shown us how powerful this simple tactic can be for connecting with your customers in a new and meaningful way.

Hands down, people are connecting with people more than they ever have in my career. Remote work has made us hungry for real engagement, and it is significantly impacting the way people are choosing who to work with.

Brynne Tillman

CEO Social Sales Link

The biz world seems more “humanized” than ever before, this shared human experience has generated more authentic conversations than at any other time in my career. The ability to be real, cut the jargon and the crap, frankly and just be human to each other will continue to serve salespeople and marketers alike.

Stephanie Neale

CEO Blind Zebra Sales Consulting

For maximum long-term growth success you need to look and feel like your customers. You need to invest the time and money to deeply engage and make it personal. And ongoing. You also need to involve the entire company to show your customers the talent you have assembled across your company to help support their mission. This can be done during customer “experience” visits to your facility, training sessions, online interactions, seminars, etc. Digital tools further enable, but this needs to be complemented with the traditional, human-to-human interaction whenever possible.

Eric B. Luftig

Senior Executive

Lesson 2: Transparency is key to accountability and trust

With the global pandemic came a rising awareness of how important transparency and accountability are to creating a true connection. We have seen how, as organizations, we are in a position to help bring about true change in the world at large. Not only is it possible, in many ways customers are demanding it. While this doesn’t happen overnight, companies that make steps to become more accountable to their customers can leverage this shift as an opportunity to build stronger, more meaningful ties.

At its heart Relationship Marketing is about building trust and engagement with customers to drive loyalty over the longer haul. In today’s unparalleled environment- economic/business uncertainty, major global health crisis, record unemployment, social unrest etc, trust and even aligned values between people, companies and brands are indeed more important than ever.

Bob Olsen

Marketing and Management Consultant

In addition to a pandemic we are also experiencing an unprecedented shift in consumer and corporate accountability and expectation for honesty and diversity. So yes, it’s more important than ever especially as companies try to build a more inclusive and diverse workforce. As companies face the harsh reality that they don’t have a culture that fosters diversity of thought or embraces inclusion, how or where do they turn for authentic feedback or even recommendations? That is why in my opinion relationship marketing is more important than ever as we are living in this rapidly changing and honesty fueled evolving period of time while facing a pandemic.

Martin Pratt

Marketing Strategist at Incluzion

Lesson 3: Online tools are leading to more personal connections

As so many of us are in isolation, we are craving connection on a wide scale. We know that humans are social beings, and right now most of us are not getting the social connection we are used to leading many to feel isolated. Fortunately, we live in a world where online tools are readily available. Organizations that lean into these new ways of connecting through technology may discover new ways to engage with their audience that may not have been possible before the pandemic. In this sense, relationship marketing through a pandemic represents a powerful opportunity to tap into the needs of our customers—not just the needs our products or services can provide, but the simple human need of feeling connected.

Now that my corporate clients are settling into a longer scope of remote work, they are recommitting to leadership and sales training and coming to me for advice and input on how to make things more effective in this changing world. My business would be lost without maintaining those strong and authentic relationships, and I know they will continue to be differentiators.

Michael Sherlock

Chief Potential Officer at Shock Your Potential

Relationship marketing is absolutely important now and in some ways easier to do because of online tools.

Beth Granger

CEO Beth Granger Consulting

Relationship Marketing has become more important in the ‘new normal.’Regular in person meetings and encounters a salesperson used to maintain and grow existing customer relationships will continue to happen less often compared to the past. Therefore, marketing’s role in fostering and maintaining ‘customer success’ will need to increase. Ultimately, the ‘new normal’ requires deeper integration and more collaborative relationships between marketing and sales.

Mark Kesti

President & COO Innovo Sales

Given the crazy times we are living in, real and authentic connections with each other create bonds that tie us together. With so many people feeling isolated and anxious, a friendly interaction can have an especially positive impact on one’s experience these days—even if that interaction is between a customer and a brand. When the pandemic ends, the changes that people around the world have made in how they operate their day-to-day lives will likely persist, so now is the time to start thinking about how to foster these deeper connections so your relationship with your customers is even stronger post-pandemic.

Have you started planning for 2021? Maybe it’s time to consider taking a closer look at the ways you engage with your customers, and how those lead to long term relationships and long-term growth.

About the Authors

Rajat “Raj” Kapur is the founder and Managing Director of &Marketing. He strives to provide growing businesses of all sizes unparalleled marketing strategy and execution services. Raj brings two decades of professional experience in marketing, sales, and strategy development experience spanning B2B and B2C Fortune 50, mid-sized, and startups.

Ann Ehinger is a Marketing Manager at &Marketing. She serves as the link between clients and creative to drive projects that deliver results. With over a decade of experience working in the non-profit, technology, and agency space, Ann is adept at managing a project from idea to completion while navigating all the ups and downs that pop up in between.

About &Marketing

&Marketing provides the robust outsourced marketing department growing companies need without the high overhead costs of big agencies or full-time employees. Our variable model empowers businesses to reach their growth goals through access to the guidance and expertise of senior level strategists and a flexible execution team.

Top 10 (+2) Book Recommendations for Startups & Entrepreneurs

Top 10 (+2) Book Recommendations for Startups & Entrepreneurs

Top 10 (+2) Book Recommendations for Startups & Entrepreneurs

Written By Rajat Kapur

On

I often get requests for book recommendations for those who are in a career transition, considering starting their own businesses, or simply looking for a good read. Here are my top 10 recommendations, in no particular order:

1: The Lean Startup – (Reis)

The concept of building an “MVP” and testing it as fast and inexpensively as possible has shaped my thinking for my own business and almost every business I have advised since reading this book: https://amzn.to/2TaDPtG

2: The E-Myth Revisited: Why Most Small Businesses Don’t Work and What to Do About It (Gerber) 

Separating out an entrepreneur’s role as a business owner and a ‘tactician’ really shaped my thinking on how to build a business that can succeed without me. https://amzn.to/2VG1Hr3

3: Zero to One: Notes on Startups, or How to Build the Future (Theil)

Does a great job framing ‘how to start’ a business from nothing. https://amzn.to/38gjTtD

4: The Start-up of You: Adapt to the Future, Invest in Yourself, and Transform Your Career (Hoffman)

How to think of your own career as a startup from the guy who started up LinkedIn and PayPal. PS. I’d read or listen to anything that Reid Hoffman puts out there. https://amzn.to/32D6VVT

5: Building a StoryBrand: Clarify Your Message So Customers Will Listen (Miller) 

Very simple read on a very simple concept. Storytelling is all the rage, this book helps you with ‘how’ – changed the way &Marketing tells our client’s stories https://amzn.to/2Tq61Ic

6: Crushing It!: How Great Entrepreneurs Build Their Business and Influence – and How You Can, Too (Vaynerchuk)

It’s hard to say something about Gary Vee that he hasn’t already said about himself… However, he’s really good at understanding how people have completely changed how they gather and share information using technology – and this book is FULL of amazing ideas and examples. Gary Vee is somewhere between 5-80% of the reason I left my consulting job and went out on my own. https://amzn.to/2vjEL6c

7: Outliers (Gladwell) 

How you have to think and behave differently if you want extraordinary results. https://amzn.to/2uI3EYR

(P.S. I’d read or listen to anything by Malcolm Gladwell… He has a great podcast and his latest book, “Talking to Strangers” is phenomenal as well but is less business and more deep thinking – https://amzn.to/2JOfc0l)

8: Start with Why: How Great Leaders Inspire Everyone to Take Action (Sinek) 

Why you do something is more important than what you do. I tell the Apple vs Microsoft story regularly in my marketing courses https://amzn.to/2PD3sBf 

P.S. I’d read or listen to anything by Simon Sinek

9: Originals: How Non-Conformists Move the World – (Grant) 

Great book on how dissent, disagreement, and counterintuitive thinking leads to breakthrough results https://amzn.to/38DjvGW

P.S. I’d read or listen to anything by Adam Grant; he’s got a great podcast called “WorkLife” and his book with Sheryl Sandberg “Option B: Facing Adversity, Building Resilience, and Finding Joy” was phenomenal.

10: Never Split the Difference (Voss)

Not just a book about negotiating, but also a book on leadership, communications, and how to diffuse difficult situations. https://amzn.to/2wf9Wzw

Bonus #1: Go Giver (Burg)

A parable about how long term success can be driven by an attitude of giving without the desperate need for an immediate return. A great philosophy! https://amzn.to/2xlFOn8

Bonus #2: Built To Sell (Warrillow)

Another very simple to read but profound parable which made me fundamentally think differently about my business as a ‘saleable unit. Even if you’re not trying to sell your business, this helps you think about how to simplify it! https://www.amazon.com/Built-Sell-Creating-Business-Without/dp/1591845823

What books should I add to this list?

About the Authors

Rajat “Raj” Kapur is the founder and Managing Director of &Marketing. He strives to provide growing businesses of all sizes unparalleled marketing strategy and execution services. Raj brings two decades of professional experience in marketing, sales, and strategy development experience spanning B2B and B2C Fortune 50, mid-sized, and startups.

About &Marketing

&Marketing provides the robust outsourced marketing department growing companies need without the high overhead costs of big agencies or full-time employees. Our variable model empowers businesses to reach their growth goals through access to the guidance and expertise of senior level strategists and a flexible execution team.

Case Study: Using Webinar Marketing To Drive Sales

Case Study: Using Webinar Marketing To Drive Sales

Case Study: Using Webinar Marketing To Drive Sales

 A recent MarketingProfs article quantified the impact of COVID-19 on marketing budgets:  88% of marketers expect to decrease investment in in-person events & conferences with a corresponding increase in virtual events and webinars.  &Marketing recently helped a long time client manage this very dynamic to leverage their offering of a timely service.

Business Challenge Summary

Our client is a well known IT security provider with a knowledge base of experts who have created a proven solution to a pending regulatory requirement that impacts many businesses.  However, a lack of awareness and understanding of the regulatory change, including the timing, requirements, and approval process, surrounds the need to become certified. An extra level of complexity exists because the certification has a range of “levels” based on the nature of the business.

Since the coronavirus pandemic became a reality in the early spring of 2020, the government has been emphatic that the timing and rigidity of these certification requirements will remain unchanged. This has caused further chaos with many impacted companies scrambling to become certified while working remotely.   Fortunately, our client has a strong brand name within their industry, belongs to many trade associations, and has deep relationships that span decades.

Their aggressive sales goal has become even more challenging because the usual paths to prospects (networking events or in-person meetings) can’t be completed due to stay-at-home orders that were put in place due to COVID-19. The business leader turned to &Marketing to develop a lead generation strategy and plan, all while working from home.

&Marketing helped him solve some thorny issues, such as:

  • How he can leverage his company’s strong name and network to build awareness about their solution to this particular issue.

  • How they can add value without being overly salesy.

  • How they can establish themselves as thought leaders and the go-to solution for those in need of guidance.

  • How all of this could be accomplished while most of the country was self-quarantining.

&Marketing’s solution to these issues? A webinar pilot.

Because this was a pilot, the client’s senior management identified a success indicator of 10 engaged and qualified prospects on the webinar.

&Marketing’s Approach

Our team had a challenge ahead of them, given the circumstances. We needed to execute the pilot webinar within one month from project kickoff, from idea to execution. Our cross-functional team, including copywriting, creative, email marketing, and technology, executed a turnkey process for our client where & Marketing handled all the details, including:  

  • The webinar technology, along with a “dry run” to ensure everyone could manage the tech and platform seamlessly 

  • Coordinating the speakers, the presentation, and the delivery  

  • Prospect invitations, signups, reminders, and follow-ups

  • Developing the content —which was fragmented across their organization— into a cohesive story both online and in a presentation format, through a mix of document review and expert interviews. 

  • Aligning a disoriented client team who was adjusting to a remote working environment. This team included subject matter experts, speakers, and those with networks we wanted to leverage.

Results

We had 71 total webinar registrants and 50 qualified prospects attendees for the webinar. That’s 5x the original goal of 10 qualified leads. In addition to attendance, the engagement during the webinar and feedback upon conclusion were both strong. We saw:

  • 70% attendance rate, which is 2x the industry average.
  • An average score of 8.9 in the post-webinar survey, with no response below a 5.
  • 80% of survey respondents want to hear more from our client on this topic, paving the way for more activity.
  • 95% of attended who responded felt “somewhat” or “much more confident” navigating the regulatory change than they did prior to the webinar.

Most importantly, the client received inquiries from four attendees immediately after the webinar to potentially engage in their services. Several outstanding questions and potential future topics provided the sales team with plenty of follow-up opportunities.  Additionally, a plan is in process with another webinar, along with a comprehensive content plan that puts our client’s expertise front and center.

The &Marketing team did a great job organizing this and keeping our team on track to deliver this webinar successfully as a lead generator. If we had done this internally it wouldn’t have gone as quickly or as smoothly. We ended up getting 5x our goal in terms of attendees and several meetings as a result of this webinar!

DIRECTOR OF SALES AND OPERATIONS

Are you facing challenges of your own in generating leads and meeting your business’s growth goals? We’d love to learn more about your challenges and how a webinar or webinar series could help take your organization to the next level.

Attendance Rate

Avg. Score on Post Webinar Survey

%

Want to Hear More From Our Client

%

Attendees Felt Confident Leaving the Webinar

Are you facing challenges of your own in generating leads and meeting your business’ growth goals?

We’d love to learn more about your challenges and how a coordinated marketing approach might help take your organization to the next level.

About &Marketing:

&Marketing provides the robust outsourced marketing department growing companies need without the high overhead costs of big agencies or full-time employees. Our variable model empowers businesses to reach their growth goals through access to the guidance and expertise of senior level strategists and a flexible execution team.

How Small & Medium-Sized Businesses Can Survive and Thrive in The Post-Coronavirus Environment

How Small & Medium-Sized Businesses Can Survive and Thrive in The Post-Coronavirus Environment

How Small & Medium-Sized Businesses Can Survive and Thrive in The Post-Coronavirus Environment

Written By Rajat Kapur

On

Introduction

It goes without saying that businesses around the world have experienced unexpected and immediate disruption since the outbreak of the coronavirus. Remote work and video conferencing have boomed, business travel has taken a dramatic hit, and individuals and businesses – especially those considered essential – have aggressively pursued hygiene, as per the CDC’s guidelines. Small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) especially have faced intense pressure and uncertainty, as many have had to cease some or all operations.

As expected, many SMB leaders are focused on managing the challenges of the present moment: how to keep their employees and customers healthy and safe, and how to help their business make it out on the other side of this pandemic. The businesses that will sustain growth over the long-term, though, are the ones that are simultaneously planning for the future. When the quarantine ends, businesses open back up, and people return to their offices, life will be anything from “business as usual.” The coronavirus has caused discontinuities in business that may have long-lasting effects, which SMBs need to start considering and acting on now in order to create and sustain long-term growth. 

The purpose of this piece is to provide recommendations on how to formulate an action plan, with both immediate and long-term tactics, to help you position your business to be even stronger and more competitive in the weeks, months, and even years following this pandemic. It’s certainly a daunting time, but remember: many small businesses (perhaps even yours) survived the Great Recession against seemingly insurmountable odds; with the right tools and a thoughtful approach, you can survive this, too.

“It is not the strongest of species that survive, nor the most intelligent, but the one most responsive to change.”

— CHARLES DARWIN

Summary of Key Recommendations

 

  1. Liquidity will be critical for small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) to survive; the key to recovery, however, will be maintaining customer relationships with high priority customers who account for 80-90 percent of sales and margins. Most companies will have to cut costs – especially fixed costs – but they have to protect the base. Make sure you take advantage of any government loans or grants for which you are eligible.
  2. Companies must not only follow health and safety regulatory guidelines, but proactively communicate safety “as a differentiator” to employees and customers, making workplaces as safe as possible.
  3. Employees are anxious right now, so open communication and transparency is critical. Business leaders must communicate policies and expectations around the ‘new normal,’ including health and safety, office policies, social gatherings, and working from home. Employers should enable flexibility, understanding that employees have unique circumstances, and should keep morale up to reduce employee turnover.
  4. Continue to invest in marketing and sales. Communicate with customers and prospects through the transition to the “new normal” across multiple channels. You may need to update your team’s technology capabilities and skills.
  5. Several discontinuities have started to emerge and these will drive new products and services, new business models, and other innovations. Innovative companies who see these discontinuities as opportunities will adapt to change, transform themselves, and come out of this crisis even stronger. These discontinuities include:
    • Consumers now have a greater focus on health, cleanliness, and personal protection.
    • Employees want to enhance their remote work environment.

    • The online world is exploding for all types of businesses (both B2B and B2C) with online ordering, home delivery, home entertainment, virtual sales interactions, customer meetings, and events.

    • Unfortunately, some smaller competitors will go out of business, which will create partnership or M&A opportunities for the survivors.

    • Supply chains are being disrupted and may have to be rebuilt (especially those that are international). Domestic manufacturing and simpler supply chains may emerge.

    • Governments and multiple world forums will debate the steps to be taken, resulting in more opportunities.

  6. Post-recovery,  there is a reasonable probability that the coronavirus may return and last for several years. Leaders should plan accordingly:
    • Prioritize critical products and services, as well as critical functions. Protect the “things you do as well as or better than competition” and what made you successful in the first place.

    • Speak regularly to customers, suppliers, investors, lenders, partners and local officials to continually keep a pulse on the market. 

    • Learn how to be flexible and agile to meet the challenges that arise. There are simple frameworks on thinking about a business and prioritizing your efforts. Contingency planning with alternatives accounted for will enable a quick response to whatever may happen in the future.

    • Use the opportunities created to “Reinvent, Redesign and Regenerate your Businesses.”  

Part 1: Emerging Discontinuities Will Provide Opportunities

Before we dive into the short- and long-term tactics to pursue as you navigate the current and future impact of the coronavirus, it’s important to first address the discontinuities that are emerging and the opportunities they present.

Consumers have a heightened focus on health, cleanliness, and protection, and they’ll be willing to pay more to ensure this.

The effects that the coronavirus has had on how we operate our day-to-day lives will likely persist after this pandemic, since the virus could flare up again. This will impact our home life, work environments, and social settings, as well as the products and services we consume in those places. 

Consumers will continue to spend more time at home and will have a greater focus on improving their home environment.

Even when the government lifts stay-at-home orders and the economy dials back up, it will take time for consumers to readjust. A Harvard study showed that social distancing may be needed until 2022. More time at home will result in a greater focus on improving the home environment and activities like home delivery, home entertainment, Internet use, etc. 

Online transactions are exploding.

There has been a major uptick in online sales on Amazon and other online retailers and delivery services. Research shows this trend will likely continue when the pandemic ends. Customers – especially younger generations – will look for clean, easy-to-navigate websites. For B2B, companies will look for vendors who can seamlessly sell, invoice, and hold meetings online as remote work continues. Many companies will need to deepen their digital footprint, grow their online capabilities, and train up their employees.

How companies operate and conduct business is changing.

Even when this pandemic ends, many companies or individual employees may continue working from home depending on their circumstances. This will require certain technical capabilities to optimize work from home environments. Internal meetings – and even important B2B prospect meetings – may occur online. Teams will need to be proficient in Zoom, Slack, and other video/messenger apps. 

Supply chains are being disrupted. 

Smaller companies have shut down operations and over a third may not survive. Imports are stalling, especially from China. There is increased discussion on domestic manufacturing of “essential supplies.” According to McKinsey, “Actions taken now to mitigate impact on supply chains can also build resilience against future shocks.” It is necessary to granularly review bills of materials (BOMs) and catalog components and products needed by service companies, to identify what is at risk. Remember, when your business opens back up, some of your vendors may not. You will need to look for alternatives, some of which may require cash upfront.

Smaller competitors will continue to go out of business due to poor cash flow; this could result in new opportunities.

This is an unfortunate reality to face, and companies still in business will seize it as an opportunity to gain market share. Or, they’ll consider partnerships, mergers, or acquisitions. Even direct competitors may combine operations to stay in business. Types of relationships that would have been unfathomable in February of 2020 may become a reality a few short months later. These new relationships will not necessarily be a cash-only basis, but take many forms such as equity, commission only, or part cash/part stock part commission. 

These discontinuities can serve as the foundation of short- and long-term action plans for SMBs, as detailed below.

Part 2: Immediate Actions SMBs Should Take

“Small business owners can mitigate risk, protect employees and support customers.”

— US CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

Aggressively pursue loans, grants and investments. 

Work with your bank and investors, but don’t forget other sources. Hedge funds, private equity firms and big investors have hundreds of billions of dollars sitting in reserve. However, anticipate that the cost of capital and availability of private loans may pose more challenges as a result of this global shift. 

Take health precautions seriously. 

Be obsessive about hygiene, health, and safety.

  • Ensure social distancing at the office, especially for those who are at the greatest risk for contracting the virus. 

  • Have masks, gloves, hand sanitizers, and antibacterial wipes in your common area and near employee desks.

  • Follow the health and safety tips from the CDC.

  • Appoint a member of your team to help communicate these guidelines and ensure all individuals are following them.

  • Proactively communicate your health and safety measures to the general public (on your website, via email, and on social media). Consider doing ‘more than the minimum required’ as many customers and consumers will be weary, even if they don’t communicate it. 

Allow sick employees to stay home.

Previously – especially in the United States – there has been a ‘hero’ mentality about working while sick. This will likely change post-coronavirus, especially since many employees have found success working remotely.

Employers should clearly communicate that anyone with symptoms should work from home (no questions asked and no doctor’s note required). According to the CDC, employees should stay home until they are free of any symptoms or fever for at least 24 hours. If working from home is not an option for your business (i.e. food service), be sure to implement appropriate cleaning procedures at your business location. Be clear with employees regarding your coronavirus policies and safety protocol. 

Even if your employees are healthy, ask them to inform you if one of their family members is sick. You can refer to the CDC’s guidelines for appropriate risk assessment.

Enable remote work capabilities. 

Until we are far past this pandemic, offer employees the option to continue working from home if they wish to (and require it for those who are not feeling well, as mentioned above). This pandemic may have a long-term impact for many people, so be mindful of different circumstances and understand employees may need more flexibility than in the past. Whether your entire team is still working remotely or just a few of them, here are recommendations on how to optimize their remote work environment: 

  • Allow employees to expense materials/items that will enable efficiency and productivity (office supplies, a second monitor, etc)

  • Implement a policy that outlines when you expect your team to be online and available when working remotely, and standardize the preferred method of communication (email, Slack, Zoom, etc.). Be sure to still allow flexibility, depending on individual needs and circumstances. 

  • Ensure that all weekly/regular in-person meetings remain on the calendar as video meetings if your team is not in the office. This will be necessary to ensure deadlines are still met.

  • Instruct employees to redirect calls to their office line to their cell phones.

  • Schedule a weekly team gathering via Zoom to boost morale. 

Give employees more flexibility in general. 

When offices, schools, daycares, businesses, and other commercial settings reopen, it won’t all happen at once. Employees may have unique circumstances (care for family members, nontraditional family needs, etc), which will require flexibility with their time and how they operate. Try to be as understanding as possible when something comes up and have a contingency plan in case you suddenly become short-staffed.

Reduce meetings and travel. 

Minimize opportunities for exposure to the virus. Postpone team meetings or hold them virtually. Skip non-essential conferences or other business travel. If your workers get sick because of business travel or meetings, you could have a liability issue on your hands, in addition to managing low morale and increased sick leave requests.

Do realistic accounting. 

Most businesses are suffering and need to make hard decisions. Try to form realistic estimates of your cash flow both during and after the pandemic. Compare this with your fixed expenses and determine what you can cut. Sometimes, it makes sense to cut the more flexible expenses early while you continue paying the more vital expenses. 

Additionally, identify expenses that you can delay, such as rent (if eviction has been frozen), leverage public assistance and other ways of bridging the gap, and consider cutting office space if you can. 

Stay informed on updates in your area. 

We don’t yet know the full impact of the coronavirus in the United States, but the CDC has said that your risk varies based on your location. Therefore, each state, or even metro-area/county, will continue making decisions based on unique circumstances. Stay in frequent contact with state and local officials for updated guidance and policy recommendations affecting your community. 

Communicate with your employees. 

Even when your business resumes full operations and employees return to the office, it’s likely that employees will continue to have concerns about their health, their family’s health, and their job security. Listen to their concerns. Keep them informed on the state of your business and update them on any policy changes (in-person if you’re in the office, via email, your Intranet if you have one, or even a recorded video message to add a personal touch). Honest, frequent communication will help mitigate fear, prevent the spread of misinformation, and boost morale (your employees may also be able to help identify gaps in your coronavirus plan and make improvements). Importantly, always communicate with empathy. 

Be smarter about your marketing. 

Now is not the time to cancel your marketing, whether you’re a big company or a small company (or somewhere in between). Customer interactions with your brand and business transactions will continue to occur virtually. Therefore, without digital marketing, you’ll lose the most important part of your business: the customer relationship. Pivot your marketing strategy from overt lead generation tactics to providing value to prospects and customers during this difficult time and fostering community. 

  • Communicate with your customers. If all or part of your business closed down due to the coronavirus, ensure your customers know when you’ve opened back up, and make them aware of the precautions you’re taking to protect them and your workers. Be more proactive about communicating your health and safety policies online and in-person.

  • Ensure your website is easy to use. Stay responsive via chatbots, email, and phone numbers.  For B2B especially, enable interactivity, information-gathering, and invoice capabilities on your website. For B2C, make purchases, returns, and access to customer service as easy as possible for customers. 

  • Continue to create content for your audience that brings them value and resonates with their pain points during this difficult time (i.e. blogs, white papers, infographics, etc). House this content in one place on your website.

  • Use email marketing to keep customers up-to-date on your business, distribute content, and maintain connections with current and prospective customers. Consider these dos and don’ts when communicating with them.

  • Optimize your website for SEO, because organic search rankings will be even more important as consumers rely heavily on the Internet to find what they need. More on how to analyze your SEO: “Keep Calm & Market On: 3 Marketing Tactics to Do During a Crisis.” 

Adjust your selling strategy to accommodate remote work and social distancing. 

  • Prioritize virtual contact with current and potential customers, and make sure they’re aware that even if your store is closed, you’re still available to service them. For B2B companies, consider account-based marketing, where you build relationships with multiple individuals at specific organizations. 

  • Maximize the use of LinkedIn as a relationship building and selling tool. With over 260 million monthly active users, it has become the platform for value-added thought leadership. Sales teams that previously relied on in-person interactions will need to be retrained on virtual relationship-building.

Part 3: Long-Term Priorities SMBs Should Consider

“While models and predictions abound, no one can say with certainty what the course of the virus will be, much less the impact the pandemic will have on people and societies.”

— DELOITTE

Prioritize critical operations. 

Long after the quarantine ends and companies open back up, it won’t be “business as usual,” especially for SMBs. A MetLife & U.S. Chamber of Commerce Small Business survey indicated that nearly half of small businesses (46 percent) believe it will take the U.S. economy six months to a year to return to “normal.” Prioritizing and protecting critical operations and processes will be necessary to keep your business moving. Here are suggested ways to do this:

  1. Develop a plan on how to meet key business functions in the event that critical staff members are unable to work.
  2. Cross-train multiple employees so that multiple people know how to perform key functions.
  3. Be prepared to make adjustments as you go, such as using alternative suppliers or putting certain operations on hold.
  4. If you operate in multiple locations, give local managers the authority to make operations decisions based on the circumstances in their area.
  5. Protect your core competences (the things that made you successful in the first place and areas where you are as good as or better than competitors). These could include technical capabilities, trade secrets, key employees, and/or exceptional business processes.
  6. Have a plan in place for how you’ll prioritize your biggest customers (those who make up 80-90 percent of your business.)

Protect your supply chain and consider other vendors if needed.

SmallBizTrends reported that 30 percent of businesses expect the coronavirus to have a moderate to high impact on their supply chain. Speak to your suppliers, investors, partners, and local officials regularly to learn how you can begin implementing safeguards that will help you stay above the red until some level of stability returns.

 Also recognize that when your business reopens, the vendors in your supply chain may not. You may need to find new vendors, some of whom may require cash-on-delivery. It can take time and effort to build a new supply chain.

Continue to enhance your online presence.

  • Build a content strategy. Determine the topics for which you want to be a known thought leader, and develop a calendar to help you develop regular content (blogs, eBooks, infographics, videos, employee profiles, etc). Promote this content through email, social media, and industry-related publications.

  • Use email and social media as a way to create an online community and a sense of belonging for your customers, and ultimately increase the number of people talking about you and your brand.

  • Create a customer portal to enhance customer engagement and create a safe space for users to connect, support one another, and ask questions.

  • Shift your budget from in-person conferences to virtual events (i.e. webinars).

Innovate: rethink your business approach as customer needs continue to change 

Your long-term viability depends on understanding (and even predicting) how your customers’ needs will change. Most of their lives are different today, and will likely be different again in six months. People are building new habits, some of which will persist. There will be more take-out, more online selling, different forms of entertainment, a new emphasis on hygiene, etc. Talk to your customers – perhaps through a survey – to better understand them.

Based on these changes, how might your business model need to change? Can you modify your offering to accommodate new customer needs? Focus on your existing customers by proactively showing support, providing excellent service, and maintaining relationships. Also, consider new ways to deliver your service or product (think home delivery, mail, or virtual web-based services). As you think about this, it’s helpful to break your business down into three parts (see graphic below). Remember that these should build on your core competences: “the things you do as well as or better than competition,” and what made you successful in the first place.

Expect that new partnerships will emerge. 

Smaller businesses in a similar industry (even competitors) who are feeling pressure may partner or merge. This may not necessarily require large cash outlays. Consider combining operations to:

  • Improve your efficiency

  • Grow your customer list

  • Add to your supply chain

  • Give you access to more geographies

Conclusion

Ultimately, there is no universal, one-size-fits-all solution for small and medium-sized businesses during and after this crisis. The plan you implement and the actions you take should account for your company’s unique circumstances and idiosyncrasies. However, we’re confident that what we’ve outlined here can serve as a valuable guide as you continue to navigate this difficult time. 

Are you wondering how you can personalize and prioritize these immediate and long-term actions for your business? We’re here to help and have the resources and expertise to provide counsel on the full picture of your business. Please contact us here

If you’re looking specifically for more guidance on how to pivot your marketing strategy to build and sustain long-term growth when this pandemic ends, contact us for an initial marketing analysis. We will conduct an unbiased assessment of your current marketing tactics – including SEO, web, content, and social media – and determine how we’d recommend you proceed post-coronavirus. 

We wish you, your team, and your business good health!

About the Author

As the founder and Managing Director of &Marketing, Rajat “Raj” Kapur strives to provide growing businesses of all sizes unparalleled marketing strategy and execution services. Raj brings nearly two decades of professional experience in marketing, sales, and strategy development experience spanning B2B and B2C Fortune 50, mid-sized, and startups.

About &Marketing

In today’s fast paced world, many growing businesses are struggling to modernize their marketing approaches because either they don’t have the expertise or the bandwidth to do it themselves.

&Marketing provides seasoned marketing strategy professionals and a nimble execution team to help our clients achieve their goals. Our unique partnership model allows us to augment our client’s existing teams or outsource the entire marketing function in an affordable, flexible, and transparent way.

When To Consider Outsourcing Your Marketing Department

When To Consider Outsourcing Your Marketing Department

When To Consider Outsourcing Your Marketing Department

Written By Rajat Kapur

On

Some businesses like to keep their marketing departments in-house. For example, many big companies can afford to hire a full marketing team internally and prefer to maintain complete control over the strategy and execution. Others know they need support, but think they can’t afford a digital marketing agency. And then, of course, there are the small companies who (if you can believe it) don’t see the value of marketing at all, and therefore devote minimal resources to it.

At &Marketing, we are in the business of offering outsourced marketing solutions. We’ve learned that specific scenarios call for outsourcing this function, depending on the unique goals, needs, and current state of your company. Our experience with B2B and B2C clients of all shapes, sizes, and industries has taught us the perfect mix of circumstances that may indicate it’s time for your growing business to look externally for marketing support. For the most part, it boils down to resources, bandwidth, and skill-sets. Here’s how to know when to consider outsourcing your marketing department.

1: You have neither the time nor the resources to do marketing in-house

You recognize the value of marketing, but you’re understaffed and don’t have the time to commit because day-to-day operations take up all your time. You don’t have the budget to hire marketers in-house, so you might be thinking about bringing on a few different specialist contractors, to avoid the overhead costs and still get those boxes checked.

An outsourced marketing department would make sense here, as you gain access to a group of experts at about the same cost of an employee, and usually at a fraction of the cost of a single senior-level Chief Marketing Officer. If you’re looking to hire contractors, you might want to pivot and consider hiring a single company, so that all of the specialists can seamlessly work together, instead of separated in a silo.

We know what you’re thinking (and you’re right): agencies are expensive. Many of them are rigid in their approach and try to force a one-size-fits-all, big-company model onto smaller, growing companies. However, some outsourced marketing departments have a flexible, tailored offering specifically for growing businesses, scaled to meet your needs and your budget.

2: You need to grow fast, but you don’t know where to start (and don’t have the time to figure it out yourself)

You’re under tremendous pressure to generate leads fast and grow your business under tight time constraints. You have a great product, but don’t know how to reach your audience, and lack the time to piece together a marketing team to strategize and execute a lead generation program. An effective lead gen program takes time – it’s a marathon, not a sprint – but there are some things in the short-term you can do to generate quick wins, as long as you have the know-how to do it. Outsourcing this work will save you time. 

3: Your current marketing efforts are inconsistent or ineffective

Many employees at growing companies wear multiple hats. Your in-house marketer may also be a sales or customer service rep, so they’re pulled in many directions. They only have time to send an email to prospects every so often, publish a blog post every other month, and post on social media less than once a week. With all of those hats constantly being switched, it’s likely they don’t have the time to put strategic thought behind these tactics. Without strategy and consistency, marketing efforts are futile, because generating qualified leads takes time and focus. If your in-house marketers can’t commit, it’s time to look beyond the walls of your business for support.

    4: You have a marketing leader or “Chief Marketing Officer,” but daily execution work is hindering his or her focus on higher-level strategy

    Perhaps you have a Chief Marketing Officer (CMO) but no broader marketing team, so your CMO is left to handle both strategy and execution with no support. The day-to-day work becomes cumbersome, between content development, social media management, emails, and digital advertising. Your CMO loses focus on the bigger picture and has limited time to assess the results of their work and refine their strategy. An outsourced marketing department can become an extension of their team and focus on the execution work, allowing your CMO to stay focused on business goals.

    5: You don’t have all the marketing skill-sets you need in-house

    You have a strong group of marketers in-house, but their expertise doesn’t span the full marketing spectrum. You have a content writer, a social media coordinator, and a paid search specialist, but you lack strategists, project managers, graphic designers, web developers, SEO specialists, and the analytics nerds. Or maybe you have a jack-of-all trades digital marketing generalist, but they lack deep expertise in any one area. 

    While we’re not saying you need all aspects of marketing covered at all times (priorities vary depending on your business), there may come a time when you want to run a certain marketing campaign that requires skills your team doesn’t have. With an outsourced marketing department, you gain access to whichever specialists you need, all in one place.

    6: You need support for a one-time marketing initiative

    If you have a one-time project that requires multiple areas of expertise you don’t already have (i.e. redesigning and optimizing your website), it would be costly to hire additional full-time employees. Once the project ends, you may not have any work for them to do, yet will still be responsible for their salaries and benefits. It’s better for your ROI—and more efficient— to outsource the project. You can contract a single marketing company that has all the specialists you need, for as little or as long as you need them. You also won’t need to worry about training them. They’ll hit the ground running right away.

    7: You’re struggling to hire marketing talent internally

    A study from 2019 showed that: 

    • 90% of companies are having trouble finding marketing talent

    • More than 80% of open marketing roles take 5+ weeks to fill, and almost one-third sit vacant for more than 2 months

    • Nearly 80% of companies have an understaffed marketing department 

    If these stats reflect what you’re going through, then consider outsourcing to a team of marketers who are ready to jump in and get to work, even if it’s only a temporary solution as you work to build a long-term in-house team. 

    8: You’re in a dynamic market 

    When things are changing rapidly around your business and you can’t seem to communicate quickly or effectively enough, an expert pair of hands may help. When could that happen? In a variety of scenarios: 

    • Your industry decision-making is changing. Decision-makers are either going through generational shifts, or the power structure is changing. Maybe they don’t go to the same trade shows they used to? Or maybe they’re not as willing to take sales calls?

    • Your industry is growing rapidly. If new customers and new competitors are popping up, it’s often hard to keep up with the changes.  

    • You’re pursuing a new industry or new geography. Often, selling your products or services to a new industry or geography requires an updated strategy, new tactics, and new lingo. If your current team only knows the old way, expert hands can help re-assess the fundamentals. 

    Ultimately, an outsourced marketing department is beneficial for many reasons. By partnering with them, you can: 

    • Trust that they’re keeping a pulse on the ever-changing trends of the industry

    • Gain a fresh perspective on your business

    • Save costs vs traditional agencies or full-time employees

    • Move quickly but strategically 

    • Leverage their analytics platforms and technology, which enables smarter and more strategic decision-making

    At &Marketing, supplementing in-house marketing teams, or even serving as your complete marketing team, is our bread and butter. The “&” in &Marketing signifies a partnership. We cover everything from strategy, storytelling, business intelligence and analytics, to planning and execution, and we consider ourselves an extension of your company. It’s us & you!

    As you work to determine whether or not your company should consider outsourcing its marketing department, it’s important to keep in mind what it takes to strategize and execute a marketing program that yields results for your business. We encourage you to check out our eBook – Marketing Planning like a Pro: The Importance of a Coordinated Approach to Marketing – to learn more about this.

    About the Author

    As the founder and Managing Director of &Marketing, Rajat “Raj” Kapur strives to provide growing businesses of all sizes unparalleled marketing strategy and execution services. Raj brings nearly two decades of professional experience in marketing, sales, and strategy development experience spanning B2B and B2C Fortune 50, mid-sized, and startups. 

    About &Marketing

    In today’s fast paced world, many growing businesses are struggling to modernize their marketing approaches because either they don’t have the expertise or the bandwidth to do it themselves.

    &Marketing provides seasoned marketing strategy professionals and a nimble execution team to help our clients achieve their goals. Our unique partnership model allows us to augment our client’s existing teams or outsource the entire marketing function in an affordable, flexible, and transparent way.