Is Your Audience Going Frugal? What You Need To Do Now - Heidi Cohen

Is Your Audience Going Frugal? What You Need To Do Now - Heidi Cohen

Hi from a sweaty New York City. That’s my new acronym: Thank God For Air Conditioning! While sidewalk cafes continue to abound in New York City, I recommend opting for the cool air conditioning inside. One overpriced cup of Joe buys you a comfortable place to spend the afternoon working. When I was young, my parents packed us into the car on steamy nights to go to the movies where the air conditioning was always set to freezing. So stay cool while you read the latest marketing news chock full of images and charts. Remember: August is one of the most important months for marketers. Why? Because now is the time of year when you assess your results to-date and plan the rest of your marketing for the year. This ensures your business meets its targets. Also, many businesses start their annual budgeting. Promotional Plan: How To Create An Effective Calendar To Improve Your Results Marketing Lesson of The Week – What To Do When Consumers Get Frugal Voice Notes – Can Your Audience Listen To Your Content?

What To Do When Consumers Get Frugal For many Americans, summer means a family car trip, whether it’s to a new destination, relatives or weekend home. Americans pack their family and belongings into their cars and head for the open road. When I was a kid, we always took a trip to a different part of New England for two weeks. Since these trips require one or more fill ups, US consumers become acutely aware of gas prices. Having taken 2 road trips, one in May and one in June, my husband and I were surprised to see the highest gas prices we’ve ever seen in the US. Due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, prices at US gas pumps have been steadily  rising. While the US doesn’t import fuel from Russia, the higher demand for gas from the remaining suppliers has caused prices to increase around the world. For many Americans, driving is their only transportation option. So an increase in gas costs means they have to reduce costs elsewhere. As a result, higher gas prices have fueled US consumer concerns regarding inflation. Since consumers act on their beliefs, this increases the chance of consumer-driven inflation. To mitigate inflation concerns, the US government has released some of its strategic gas reserves to reduce prices at the pump. But this aid may be too late to change consumer behavior. Due to inflation concerns US consumers have changed their shopping behavior. 90% of US customers have noticed price increases especially for gas and groceries, items they buy on a weekly basis. What does this mean for your business? 13 percentage point increase in purchasing of another brand, often a private label. 9 percentage point increase in shopping at another lower-priced retailer. This includes wholesale clubs, discount stores and mass market retailers. These trends hold true for both retail and online shopping. (Source: McKinsey 2022) How Do Consumers Respond To Inflation? While the broader macro-economic environment matters when deciding how your organization should respond to customers’ changing spending habits, understand your buyers’ view of their purchasing options. This makes direct and more frequent conversations with your customers and end-users even more important than ever. During bad times, every expense is on the chopping block for your audience, regardless of economic status. As a result, people pay more attention to their bills to see where they can reduce costs. Why? Because everyone feels the squeeze on their household budget. So where do people cut first? They start their frugal journey with nice-to-have items and small indulgences. 61% stop or reduce eating out. They also cut or reduce takeout or prepared food; 46% spend less on clothing including repairs and secondhand shopping; and 36% cut back on all types of video games. Substitute homemade for store bought. For example, cook at home instead of eating out, take-away or prepared foods; Trade down on expensive options. Buying private labels versus brand name options; Use cash over credit cards and other payment options to limit spending; and Stretch usable life of products such as clothing and home products. (Source: 2022) Talk to customers about the economy. Find out whether your buyers like your products and how they feel about the economy. This activity applies across your organization and must be documented, collated and distributed. Assess other ways to package and/or present your offering to make it more attractive to budget-conscious buyers. Your options include changing packaging sizes, locking in sales for a longer period of time at a lower price, and offering DIY options. For example: Hedgehog Fibres created Fibre Clubs to lock in 3 month subscriptions for special batches of yarn. Also, they limit the number of subscriptions. So they get paid in advance and only create enough product for subscribers. Key point: Know your customer since yarnies will tradeoff going out or on vacation to buy special yarns 5 Pricing Challenges: What You Need To Know To Improve Outcomes

Can Your Audience Listen To Your Content? Do you give your audience the option to listen to your content? If not, you may be missing a significant opportunity to expand your audience. Consumers listen to content in a variety of formats. They include: Movies and videos without the image, Articles read by computer or other device, and One of the best ways to build your brand and distribute your content is to use a targeted podcast. In 2022, 177 million Americans aged 12+ at least tried a podcast. To put that into context, that’s about the number of Americans who used Facebook last year.(Source: Edison Research 2022) Still think podcasts aren’t worth your marketing time? Of interest are the devices used to listen to podcasts since this gives marketers information about the context in which their content is consumed. If you answered voice assistants and smartphones, you’d be wrong. Because podcast listeners also use their computers and cars to listen to content. Assess the podcast market to better understand it. As part of your research, start to listen to a few podcasts to understand what people like and dislike about them. Also ask friends and colleagues about whether they listen to podcasts and which ones they like and why. Consider whether a podcast would make a good addition to your content marketing offering. Audio Content Research: What You Need To Know To Improve Your Marketing

Are Conferences Part Of Your Content Marketing Mix? In today’s environment where vaccinated and boosted individuals still get breakthrough cases of COVID, many businesses face the question of “To Conference or Not To Conference?” Conferences are a major part of the marketing and content plans for many businesses. They provide the following benefits: Create multiple revenue streams for businesses that host conferences. They include sponsorships (or advertising), attendee fees and virtual replays of the conference Allow sales teams to meet prospects and customers IRL. Provide speaking opportunities for experts and influencers. Speakers may get paid, do presentations for free or pay to present. In addition, conferences provide a hook for content creation before, during and after the event. My favorite example was the ebooks created by Top Rank Marketing for Content Marketing World. Here’s my page in the 2014 edition that is a teaser for my talk and promotes attendance at Content Marketing World. It also stands alone as a big rock piece of content. The Secret Sauce For Creating Epic Curated Content At A Conference So how do you answer the conference question for your business? It depends. (I know this is my favorite go-to answer.) While people want to get out and see other people after 2+ years of COVID, they’re concerned about how safe different environments are. Before every marketing event this year, my Twitter feed was filled with people who couldn’t wait to hug everyone. Marketing speaker Jay Baer posted a photo showing him kissing the floor of his first live speech post-COVID. The problem: Not everyone is at the same place in terms of their COVID concerns. If you’re planning a conference, think about how you can make your event safe for the maximum number of people. This includes the event space, food, drinking, hotels and travel. Also, consider reimbursing people who get COVID before your conference and can’t travel. Content Entrepreneur Expo (aka: CEX) in Phoenix did a great job of handling a live event in uncertain times. They did the following: Planned for a small number of attendees. Their goal was a maximum of 500 people. Being a new event, they used the expo to see who their audience was and what they wanted. Required proof of vaccinations from everyone. No exceptions! Allowed for spaced out seating for all aspects of the conference including the main stage, breakout rooms and dining. MAICON, the conference run by the Marketing AI Institute, offered both in-person and virtual options for attendees. The two challenges when offering the option of in-person or virtual attendance are: Attracting enough live attendees to cover the fixed cost of renting conference space.  Attendees are sick of virtual events. After being fed a regular diet of free computer-based events, attendees don’t think they should pay for this content. The upside of offering in-person or virtual attendance for your conference is: Sponsors get a better opportunity to talk with attendees. So people aren’t on a scavenger hunt for the best swag. Conference creators get to build a tighter community among attendees. As a result, you build a stronger base for future events with paying sponsors and attendees as long as your business can handle the short-term loss. 3 Types Of Conference Content That Will Boost Results Use your conference as a hook to create content before, during and after the event. Create a hashtag and monitor it during the event to spotlight other people’s content. Also, collect user-generated content for future use. Record your conference, even if it’s a live-only event. Create a plan to reuse this content for educational materials and future marketing.

Tune in as Heidi Cohen and Jeff Coyle discuss “How Getting Your Business Heard Changes Your Content Strategy”.

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