Marketing for Sustainable Entrepreneurs
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About this ebook
This book discusses marketing and public relations activities for sustainable entrepreneurs and emerging growth companies, an area that is concerned with supporting the efforts of the sales group to promote the company's products to prospective customers, collecting and analyzing information regarding the requirements of customers and their perceptions of the company and its products, identifying ways in which the company and its products can deliver value to customers and managing the planned communications by the company to each of its stakeholders. Regarding sales support, the marketing group has traditionally been involved in core activities such as advertising, promotions, collateral development, data collection and analysis and training. However, successful emerging companies understand that marketing departments must be empowered to think and act strategically and participate in fundamental decisions regarding product development, identification of target markets and management of customer relationships.
The book begins with an overview of the typical activities in the marketing area, including basic marketing tactics; and includes an overview of relevant legal issues, including the "truth-in-advertising" rules enforced by the Federal Trade Commission and its rules and regulations pertaining to advertising practices, state and local advertising statutes and regulations, and private advertising and marketing guidelines. The book then discusses various issues relating to strategic planning for marketing activities, including methods for organizing and managing a company's marketing activities and resources. The book continues with an overview of the issues that should be considered when planning internal marketing initiatives, including the development and implementation of a product marketing plan. The book also covers management of arrangements with outside providers of marketing-related services, including public relations firms and advertising agencies, marketing of sustainable products and services, and online marketing activities.
Alan S. Gutterman
This book was written by Alan S. Gutterman, whose prolific output of practical guidance and tools for legal and financial professionals, managers, entrepreneurs, and investors has made him one of the best-selling individual authors in the global legal publishing marketplace. Alan has authored or edited over 300 book-length works on entrepreneurship, business law and transactions, sustainability, impact investment, business and human rights and corporate social responsibility, civil and human rights of older persons, and international business for several publishers including Thomson Reuters, Practical Law, Kluwer, Aspatore, Oxford, Quorum, ABA Press, Aspen, Sweet & Maxwell, Euromoney, Business Expert Press, Harvard Business Publishing, CCH, and BNA. His cornerstone work, Business Transactions Solution, is an online-only product available and featured on Thomson Reuters’ Westlaw, the world’s largest legal content platform, which covers the entire lifecycle of a business. Alan has extensive experience as a partner and senior counsel with internationally recognized law firms counseling small and large business enterprises, and has also held senior management positions with several technology-based businesses including service as the chief legal officer of a leading international distributor of IT products headquartered in Silicon Valley and as the chief operating officer of an emerging broadband media company. He has been an adjunct faculty member at several colleges and universities, and he has also launched and oversees projects relating to promoting the civil and human rights of older persons and a human rights-based approach to entrepreneurship. He received his A.B., M.B.A., and J.D. from the University of California at Berkeley, a D.B.A. from Golden Gate University, and a Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge, and he is also a Credentialed Professional Gerontologist (CPG). For more information about Alan and his activities, please contact him directly at alangutterman@gmail.com, follow him on LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/alangutterman/), and visit his personal website at www.alangutterman.com to view a comprehensive listing of his works and subscribe to receive updates. Many of Alan’s research papers and other publications are also available through SSRN and Google Scholar.
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Marketing for Sustainable Entrepreneurs - Alan S. Gutterman
1
Introduction to Marketing Activities
§1 Introduction
Marketing and public relations activities focus on a variety of key goals and objectives—supporting the efforts of the sales group to promote the company’s products to prospective customers, collecting and analyzing information regarding the requirements of customers and their perceptions of the company and its products, identifying ways in which the company and its products can deliver value to customers and managing the planned communications by the company to each of its stakeholders. With regard to sales support, the marketing group has traditionally been involved in core activities such as advertising, promotions, collateral development, data collection and analysis and training. However, successful companies understand that marketing departments must be empowered to think and act strategically and participate in fundamental decisions regarding product development, identification of target markets and management of customer relationships. In fact, it is useful to think of the marketing group as the chief advocate of the customer armed with information regarding the problems confronting customers that can be used to convince other departments to identify and implement solutions in the company’s products that provide value to customers in a way that differentiates the company from competitors.[1]
The challenges confronting a company in the areas of marketing strategy and organization will change as the firm matures and enters each new evolutionary stage of growth.[2] For example, initial marketing activities typically focus on sales to parties that have some sort of preexisting relationship with the founders, such as former employers. The initial product is often customized to the unique needs of the specific customer and the founders devote a substantial amount of personal attention to completing the sale. Strategic objectives, if any, are to build credibility and fulfill an unmet demand. Marketing organization is non-existent or, at best, informal.
Once the company has successfully closed deals with its initial prospects there will generally be an increased focus on expanding market penetration by selling to new customers outside the relationship network of the founders. The product line is standardized and the company seeks product economies of scale and to establish internal controls. While the founders and other senior managers remain responsible for selection of new products and pricing, they spend less time on sales and marketing activities in order to concentrate on other aspects of the business. Additional salespeople, under the direction of a sales manager, are recruited to locate prospects and handle customer accounts and additional resources are set aside to support creation of a formal marketing group acting under the direction of a senior marketing executive.
Once market penetration has been obtained, attention during the next stage turns to further development of products and markets. Product and service orientation focuses on customer satisfaction and the marketing organization is expanded to include the full complement of marketing activities, including promotion, service and support for customers, and market research. Product managers are designated for each major product or family of products and they are responsible for developing strategies and requesting and execution budget requests for their products and markets.
Marketing activities during the fourth stage are driven by the need to deal with diminishing opportunities in the company's existing lines of business and the need to manage the company's product portfolio by eliminating mature products and selecting the proper mix of new products. Senior management must identify new business areas, including new geographic and demographic markets suitable for the company's products and technological expertise. The organization may take on a divisional structure, with each division having its own marketing function. A corporate-level marketing staff may be created to oversee divisional activities and manage the company's overall image (i.e., branding
) with the public and potential customers and provide planning and strategic assistance to each of the divisions.
Obviously, this is a bit of a simplification of the evolutionary process and a number of other issues will typically arise that will impact the organizational structure and focus of managers involved in the marketing area. For example, during the second stage of development, it is common for companies to reduce, if not eliminate, direct sales to customers and enter into an arrangement with one or more independent distributors or sale representatives. In that case, product managers will be one step removed from the actual end users of the products. Still another challenging transition is the creation of joint ventures with other companies as a way to gain entry to new markets as the core business matures. One crucial lesson from this view of marketing as a dynamic process is that successful completion of each stage makes the then-current marketing organizational scheme obsolete and companies must be prepared to plan ahead to make sure that the organization grows smoothly.
§2 Public relations
Many of the activities associated with marketing are product-driven and are designed primarily to educate potential customers about the company’s products and develop customer interest in purchasing those products. In contract, public relations, sometimes referred to as publicity
, refers to the deliberate and sustained efforts of the company to keep all of its stakeholders fully and correctly informed about the company and its activities. While relations with the media
are an important part of public relations, representatives of the press, radio and television are just one of many important groups that must be recognized by the company and the public relations effort must reach out to shareholders, customers, financial institutions, regulators, employees, business partners and the general public. Public relations uses many of the same tools relied upon for promoting the company’s products, such as advertising; however, a comprehensive menu of public relations activities will also include press releases, house journals, annual reports, articles in technical and business journals, films, webinars, joint promotions and sponsorship of charity events. Companies should have a public relations strategy designed with the same degree of care as a product marketing plan and may often rely on a public relations firm, a topic discussed in greater detail in the chapter below.
§3 Basic marketing and public relations tactics
Companies conduct marketing and public relations activities to increase awareness of their business, products and services within their target audience and, ultimately, to influence potential customers to behave in a certain way—purchase and use the products and services that are being marketed. The Internet has created a whole array of potential marketing strategies and tactics; however, the basics remain important for businesses of all sizes. Accordingly, when creating a marketing plan a company should carefully consider the selection and use of a public relations firm, creation and dissemination of advertising materials, participation in trade shows and industry exhibitions, contracting for radio and television advertising, use of marketing and sales representatives and contracting for special services including art work and production of infomercials. All of these tactics can be supplemented and complimented by using the Internet to advertise and sell products and services. Some of the tools available for online marketers include banner ads, e-mail marketing, search engine marketing (including search engine optimization), blog marketing, article marketing and social networking. Acceptance and use of Internet marketing has grown along with the development and refinement of tools to measure the effectiveness of online activities and track customer acquisition costs.
One of the key considerations for new companies in selecting and implementing various marketing and public relations tactics is creating and strengthening brand recognition. Obviously a start-up business has no brand recognition. While this is a liability in the short-term, it should be embraced as an opportunity for the company to build its own brand identify from the very beginning and style a message that it wants to convey to each of its stakeholder groups including specific customer segments. Since a start-up typically has limited resources to invest in traditional marketing tactics such as advertising and promotion the best way to get started with branding is to make sure that the company’s products meet real and important requirements of customers and that the sales group accurately conveys a credible message to customer regarding the features, benefits and performance of the products. In other words, customers must be trained to trust what the company says about its products so that the company is eventually perceived as a reliable vendor that can deliver on its promises and representations.
§4 —Public relations firms
While companies generally develop and maintain an in-house department that handles various aspects of creating and implementing marketing campaigns, including relations with media outlets, one of the most common and important strategic relationships in the marketing area is with a public relations firm. Companies may go through an extensive search procedure in order identify and select a public relations firm that suits their requirements with respect to the specific activities and ability to work within a reasonable budget. The initial phase focuses on finding possible candidates and includes obtaining recommendations from business partners and researching the relevant trade journals to see what firms might have experience in the company’s industry and with the specific target audience. The next step might be to create and disseminate a request for proposal (RFP
) for public relations and marketing services. Each RFP should be customized to the requirements of the specific company; however, it is essential that the document include some background on the business and mission of the company, the current public relations and marketing challenges for the company in the eyes of senior management, an outline of the proposed scope of work, a list of the minimum qualifications to submit a proposal, and a brief description of the procedures to be followed with respect to reviewing proposals and ultimately making a decision. Once proposals have been received from prospective public relations firms the company should move forward through a formal selection process including additional interviews with the principals of the firms that appear to be the best fit and perhaps asking the firms to complete a basic assignment so that they company get a better idea of the quality of their work and how they relate to clients. Once the selection has been made the parties should enter into some form of contract or agreement that outlines their relationship and includes provisions relating to the issues discussed in the chapter below.
§5 —Advertising
Every business needs some form of advertising,
which is formally defined as the act of calling something to the attention of the public especially by paid announcements distributed through mass media that emphasize desirable qualities so as to arouse a desire to buy or patronize. Advertising is sometimes referred to as promotion.
Advertising is highly regulated under federal and state law and advertisers must be extremely careful to ensure that advertising materials are not deception or unfair. For example, if an advertisement includes a demonstration of a product or service, the demonstration must show how the product will perform under normal use by consumers. If testimonials or endorsements are used as part of an advertisement, they must reflect the typical experiences of consumers unless the advertisement includes a clear and conspicuous statement to the contrary. If consumers are offered the opportunity to purchase a warranty on a product through the mail or by phone or computer then the advertisement must include a description of who consumers can obtain a copy of the warranty. If an advertisers advises consumers that they can receive a refund—using language such as satisfaction guaranteed
or money-back guarantee
—consumers must be able to receive a description of the terms of the offer and a full refund for any reason.
Advertising may appear on a number of different platforms—newspapers, magazines, radio and television stations, and online advertisers. Companies may decide to line up advertising campaigns on their own using their in-house resources. For example, a company may enter into a contract to post advertising on billboard space and another possibility might be placing advertising in an online magazine. In most cases, however, growing businesses ultimately decide to bring in an outside advertising agency as the company’s key partner in developing and distributing information regarding the company’s products and services through various media channels. The contract with the advertising agency should address the scope of the services to be provided by the agency, compensation, billing procedures, rights of ownership and use in intellectual property created by the parties while developing the advertising materials, the rights of the agency to work for competitors, and the term of the agreement and events that might trigger early termination of the agreement (and the consequences of early termination).
§6 —Trade shows
For many businesses, participation in a trade show or industry-wide exhibition is a good opportunity to meet a large number of prospective customers and other business partners and allow media outlets a chance to observe demonstrations of the company’s products and meet the company’s managers and hear their story about the company and its business strategy. When the decision is made to participate in a trade show the company will generally enter into a contract to lease exhibit space at the show. This contract will be limited to specifying the number and type of booths that the company will be leasing and the lease rate for each booth. Additional terms and conditions relating to the use of the space and participation in the trade show will be included in a separate set of exhibitor’s rules that will serve as addendum to the main contract.
§7 —Radio and television advertising
While there is a lot of attention being paid to New Media marketing tools and strategies, companies have yet to devote a significant amount of there marketing budgets to digital media and continue to rely on traditional advertising vehicles such as television. Part of the explanation for this is that non-traditional media, such as the Internet, have yet to reach the scale where companies can rely on it for satisfying there goals and objectives for branding. Moreover, companies remain somewhat skeptical about making significant changes in their portfolio of marketing activities given the lack of widely accepted methods to measure the effectiveness of spending on New Media.
Launching a radio and/or television advertising campaign may seem like an overwhelming and expensive project; however, while national television advertising may be a bit too pricey for smaller companies there are lot of good opportunities available through local stations and on cable television. Marketing personnel should start by speaking with advertising representatives from radio and television stations to understand the available options and determine whether their programming will provide the company with access to its target audience in a cost-effective manner. A company may, directly or through its advertising agency, enter into a contract with the owner of a network of television stations to purchase specified advertising inventory (i.e., commercials that will run at specified times during the programming that appears on the television stations).
§8 —Marketing and sales representatives
One marketing tactic, albeit often housed in the sales function, is the use of outside individuals and firms to actively market the company’s products and services and actually take orders from customers and manage customer relationships. For example, a company may engage a third party to market the company’s services to potential company clients and to serve as a liaison between the company and any new clients obtained through the activities of the third party. A more industry-specific example of outsourcing marketing and sales is a marketing services agreement between an insurance company and an independent agent/broker who will agree to act as a marketing agent for the insurance company’s products and services. This form of agreement is similar in form and effect to an independent sales representative agreement; however, the agent/broker will have some flexibility in devising and implementing specific marketing and sales strategies for successfully offering the insurance company’s products and services to the agent/broker’s client base.
§9 —Special services
Companies may contract with different types of outside providers for special services that might be required during the course of a marketing campaign. For example, a contract may be needed with a design firm that will prepare art work for use in the company’s advertising materials. In addition, an outside production company might be used to assist in the creation and distribution of an infomercial,
which is a program that is a paid advertisement for a particular product or service that normally includes demonstrations and endorsements from consumers, celebrities or experts and, finally, information on ordering. As with any other type of advertising, infomercial advertisers must be able to substantiate any and all express and implied claims that reasonable consumers would take from an advertisement.
§10 —Online marketing and sales activities
More businesses are looking to electronic commerce
(or e-commerce
) as a powerful new marketing and sales channel for their products and services. Currently, billions of pounds in commercial and consumer transactions are conducted over the Internet each year. As security tools for online transactions continue to improve, a growing number of users have transacted business over the Internet by trading securities, buying goods, purchasing airline tickets and paying bills. Businesses and consumers are finding that online transactions can be faster, less expensive and more convenient than transactions conducted via human interaction. In addition to direct sales activities, many companies are now using the Internet to:
Provide instant information about their products and services;
Expand customer service and communications;
Test-market new goods and services;
Contract online with other businesses interested in trading partner relationships;
Open up distant markets;
Augment traditional advertising with targeted online promotions;
Provide customers a means of monitoring orders; and
Provide 24-hour accessibility.
While the Internet is no longer a new publication medium, standards are still emerging and many people are unaware of potential legal problems, a situation that dictates giving one person final responsibility for content decisions. The site owner should select a project coordinator who can work with the developer and any outside hosting service. The project coordinator should also work with counsel on legal issues associated with setting up the site and obtaining and protecting rights to content. In addition, the project coordinator should be responsible for evaluating and implementing security procedures that may be appropriate to prevent unauthorized use or copying of material on the site. Further, the coordinator should be responsible for performance measures of the site. At the very least, procedures should be implemented for tracking usage of the site and obtaining demographic information on visitors to the site.
Like many other things for any business, a new web site, attractive as it might be, will only be successful if the company can attract visitors to the site. Accordingly, it is important for the company to have a strategy for promoting the site even before the site is launched. Among the issues to be addressed are the following:
Company business materials: one of the easiest, and often most neglected, methods for promoting the company’s web site is the simple practice of making sure the site address or URL is always prominently displayed on any item created by, or distributed from, the company. This would include business cards, stationery, sales literature, display ads, packaging for the company’s products, invoices, and e-mail communications.
Search engines: in order for its web site to be located by individuals and sophisticated software tools, companies must actively register the site with web search engines and directories. Search engines catalogue web sites and provide a means of quickly searching the sites for a particular word or phrase. Many popular search engines are free, since their services are paid through display or banner
advertising. Registration can either be done by the site owner, perhaps using one of the several available free registration services, or can be turned over to the developer or an outside service that will handle the registration for a separate fee.
Meta-tagging: another unique technological tool for the Internet is the practice referred to as meta-tagging,
which involves placing words on web page so that they are invisible to users but detectable by the various search engines. Meta-tagging can serve the useful purpose of describing the content of the web site, allowing site operators to control search engine indexing by specifying both additional keywords to the index and a short description of the text. Hence, in developing a web site it is important to ensure that the site is registered with a wide range of search engines and that a list of keywords describing the site is included in a meta-tag.
Mailing lists and newsgroups: participation in mailing lists and newsgroups is another way to promote web presence. Although it can be quite time consuming, it is a good way to market directly to those people who have the greatest interest in a specific product or service. However, caution should be used not to overtly promote products and services in inappropriate situations. For example, company representatives participating in a newsgroup or a listserve with potential customers might limit any advertising
to the signature line at the end of the e-mail that might include a slogan, brief description of the business, and the company’s web site address.
Linking agreements: companies may want to identify other sites that are likely to be of interest to the company’s target market. It should approach these other sites to determine if they would be interested in including a link to the company’s site. In most cases, the site owners will simply agree to create reciprocal links. In some cases, however, the company may have to pay a fee to another site for including a link, or in worst cases the other site owner may demand a royalty based on a percentage of the revenues collected through the link.
Co-branding agreements: a co-branding arrangement is a novel way for two web site owners to forge a strategic relationship based on building inducements to drive traffic from one site to another, so that