Marketing Archives

Focusing your ad budget

I totally agree with Seth Godin’s latest post on spending your marketing budget wisely and focusing. I think that this is not unlike risk management in general. Investors, hedge funds, mutual funds have to constantly make decisions about their portfolios. Taking the two extreme cases, if you invest all you have in one stock, you have a chance of winning and a chance of losing. Most likely you will lose. On the other hand, if you spread everything over the Dow or the S&P 500 index, you will probably not lose as much, but also not win. Kind of like roulette. In marketing, however, another element is added. That is competition, which is not a consideration when picking a portfolio strategy (at least according to my meager knowledge in capital markets). When you consider this element as well, it means that you have to pick your battles wisely, and anticipate the actions of your competitors. That’s when some game theory could come into play. But all in all I think that the answer, as usual, lies somewhere in the middle. You have to figure out the right mix of your spend on different marketing channels.

I would compare this tension between focusing and diversifying to a broader discussion between product managers and CEO’s about what products a company should roll out. How to spend their budget on actual product development? Should they cater to the needs of all clients (something marketers would always say a strong yes to – now I am talking about product development, not about marketing spend) or should they focus on one product and learn how to manufacture it as best as they can, and benefit from this constant learning. The larger the diversification in production, the harder it is to react to changes, the harder it is to maintain support of all of your products and the harder it is to gain tacit knowledge in one field. It’s also hard to keep costs down and retain profitability because you are trying to react to everything that’s happening. That’s expensive.

Back to marketing, I agree with focusing, but the answers to these questions are not so simple. As a general guide, the 80-20 rule may be a good place to start. In other words, my verdict is focus, but don’t gamble!

P.S.  If you read this please comment I’d love some feedback so I can improve. Thanks.

pipes1

This is an FYI post. I thought about sharing my way of using RSS for various purposes that regard to staying informed about market trends or specific companies. I have used this simple method while interning at a cash-strapped company. Early-stage startups or just people with ideas may find this useful.

The gist of this is filtering your RSS feeds. I am assuming you are a user of RSS. If not, and you are reading this blog, then it would probably be a good idea for you to get started. Get the free FeedDemon and start saving time.

Let’s say you have an idea for a product, and you want to see what’s going on with other companies. So you subscribe to an RSS feed of an industry publication. But you want to know only about some specific companies, without having to go through every feed every day.  That’s where you can use Yahoo Pipes. They have a great graphic interface which kind of reminds me of wiring that you would do between modules in a music application. Your pipe should be extremely simple. You fetch a feed or as many feeds as you like with the appropriate module and hook it to a filter containing conditions on what words you want to see in the title, description or author of the feed. The last step is to hook the filter to the feed output. Then all you have to do is run it, and add the feed to your RSS reader. This is virtually creating a feed off of a search engine of a specific site, since sites don’t offer that kind of customization to their RSS feeds. This can be used for many purposes.

Yahoo pipes offers much more functionality, with many different modules and operators that you can run on RSS feeds. For instance there is a pipe marking a ship’s route on a map using the ship’s coordinate feeds and Google maps, and a bunch of neat stuff. There’s a host of user-created examples, with the source piping included to help you understand what’s going on, as well as simple tutorials.

I realize that this is a geeky post, but I wanted to expose something that I found useful. Let me know if you find this useful as well.