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Kevin C. Whelan

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June 17, 2022

Advice for independent marketers during a recession or downturn

Okay, so there’s some concern going around about a recession.

Will it impact your business? Is it already impacting your business?

Some of you have said that leads are drying up and clients are canceling services with you. So let’s get in front of it.

Here are a few ideas to consider here if you want to thrive during a recession or market downturn:

  1. Don’t panic—lead your clients
  2. Stay close to the money—focus on ROI, not just deliverables
  3. Be the better alternative to in-house employees
  4. Be ready to scale up or down as needed
  5. Invest in your expertise—be irreplaceable
  6. And of course, keep marketing yourself

The last scare like this

When COVID hit, my advice to my consulting clients (not marketers) was to a) get expenses in check so they could weather a potentially long storm and b) lean into marketing harder than ever before.

And while this advice is applicable to us as marketers again today, there’s a big difference between the COVID scare and an economic recession. The main difference is how much money (or lack thereof) is floating around.

I’m not an economist, but I see four big things happening now:

  1. Interest rates are going up, making debt more expensive, reducing overall spending, tanking stocks
  2. There’s less “free” money sloshing around in the economy in the form of stimulus cheques/checks
  3. Inflation is high and seems to be continuing—meaning everything is getting more expensive
  4. Unemployment is still low, so hiring employees is difficult (and expensive!) for your clients

And with that, companies are forced to tighten up. At least in some areas.

So what should you do?

1. Don’t panic—lead

As marketers, you have a remarkable ability to be nimble in times like these.

Remember that, unlike other discretionary business spending, marketing is still necessary and even more important in hard times than in good.

Here’s a great thread by Asia Orangio with data on how companies have fared when they leaned into marketing vs. pulling back during recessions.

Learn this stuff. Advise your clients on it. Be their fiduciary.

2. Stay close to the money

Your job is to help your clients make a financial business case to work with you.

Stay close to the ROI. Talk in terms of investment and returns—not just tasks and deliverables.

I can’t emphasize this enough. Focus on value, not deliverables.

Your clients are always thinking about how one thing creates more business profit or financial impact than it costs. Show them. Use my KPI sheet available in the MindshareOS package.

Focus on the KPIs that are moving the needle in terms of customer acquisition, retention, repeat purchases, and revenue per client/transaction.

Look at secondary metrics like volume and costs per lead, conversion rates, number of net new customers, account expansion, audience growth, and partnership opportunities.

3. Be the better alternative to in-house employees

In uncertain times, people want optionality. Use that to your advantage.

Your goal should be to position yourself as the better alternative to in-house marketing employees and teams.

You do that by having rare expertise (see #5 below) and flexibility.

Instead of hiring a new marketing manager, companies can hire a fractional CMO along with their recommended contractors for execution work—often for less than the cost of a senior marketing hire.

They can then turn on, off, up, or down the individual channels as-needed.

This is the flexibility they’re looking for.

I have seen this trend in marketing departments happening for a while and believe it will continue.

Agencies and freelancers who are willing to evolve what they deliver every month instead of sticking to a fixed scope of services will reduce the chance they’ll be fired and replaced with more flexible options.

Be nimble. Your value prop is greater expertise (and output) for the same or less than hiring internally.

Oh, and long contracts won’t be ideal, either.

4. Be ready to scale up or down as needed

Have down-sell options available.

If you’re 2x more expensive than all the other contractors, you’re at risk of being chopped.

Be proactive about reducing your fees (and scope) in cases where the value or demands require it.

Otherwise, clients think their only option is to fire you entirely. Think about this and make recommendations before they ask.

If you do drop your fees, drop your scope as well.

No discounts here. Price drops always include a scope drop.

My lower-cost services are often more profitable per hour than my high-ticket stuff. I give people better pricing when they buy more, not the other way around.

Don’t chop your fees when your clients need you to grow. 

I don’t think it’s a coincidence that three clients have expanded scope with me in the last few weeks. Smart operators know they need marketing leadership now more than ever.

Scale up or down as needed.

5. Continue investing in your expertise

Make yourself irreplaceable.

In the coworking niche I serve, there’s literally nobody (that I’m aware of) with my combination of marketing expertise and industry knowledge.

Sure, others have both traits independently. But I keep investing in my unique knowledge combination of marketing strategy, tactical execution, and industry-specific trends.

You simply can’t hire an employee or agency who can do what I can or bring the same value per dollar. At least… not easily. 🙂

And that has helped me increase scope with two clients in the past couple of weeks in the coworking industry (and one more in another industry).

6. And of course, keep marketing yourself

Stay consistent with your publishing, even if it seems like it’s bearing little fruit. Deals take time to form.

Talk about the state of the industry you serve. Share stories about what others are doing. Teach people the ways of flexibility and adaptability.

Make connections with your peers (i.e. in the free Mindshare community or via social media circles). Talk shop to stay on the pulse of things.

Be an advisor to your potential clients before they even hire you. That’s how they know you’ll be a good asset when they do hire you.

Don’t get desperate, know your value, and keep doing your thing.

In closing

Market downturns affect all of us differently. But clients are still hiring and doing marketing. They always will.

It’s up to you to help your current clients get the best results possible in a flexible manner while leading your audience/potential clients, much in the same way you would advise your own clients.

Remember, people flock to leadership in uncertain times. Be the guide.

Oh, and don’t forget to focus on the ROI—even if it’s a longterm process.

June 8, 2022

What to do if nobody is buying your productized services

Are you having trouble selling your productized service?

In this new episode of Mindshare Radio, I break down the four main things to consider when trying to fix this specific problem.

Listen and subscribe.

May 16, 2022

Selling your expertise, not your hands (an interview with Alastair McDermott)

Alastair McDermott had me on his podcast recently, The Recognized Authority.

We chatted about the transition from selling execution to advisory services and knowledge products, what it means to be a fiduciary for our clients, some ethics and trust considerations, niching, and a whole lot more.

Give this a listen and subscribe to his show to hear from other great guests he’s had on his show before, including Alan Weiss, David C. Baker, Jonathan Stark, Philip Morgan, and Chris Do coming soon.

May 11, 2022

“In order to do this right…”

I know I said I’m stopping my daily publishing habit, but old habits die hard. You can bet I’m showing up again today because I want to. Onto the show…

It can be nerve-wracking to propose a project that is more expensive or takes longer than a client is asking for.

Our first instinct might be to charge the bare minimum to get the job done. Or to promise the most ideal of timelines—assuming nothing will go wrong—to win the deal and avoid pushback and rejection.

But we know that’s not realistic. Something always comes up.

The problem is, while you think you’re giving the client what they want, you’re actually undercutting both you and them.

You’re reducing the likelihood of achieving the very thing they’re hiring you to do, which is to get a business result.

In this episode, I talk about one magical phrase that gives you and your clients more confidence to do better and more expensive work than they originally hoped for.

And why it’s the best thing for them—and you—to take this approach more often.

Listen to the 2:35 episode or add Mindshare Radio to your podcast player for future recordings.

May 8, 2022

A problem you’re uniquely capable of solving

What’s a problem you’re uniquely capable of solving?

Something that interests you and keeps your attention. Something you could work on for a long time. Something the market also wants to solve.

Maybe, instead of chasing opportunities, you could do more of that.

April 30, 2022

Pricing based on how you feel

There are a lot of ways to price your work.

The one that will probably net you the most money in the long run is value pricing.

Value pricing means capturing a percent of the value you help create.

The problem with value pricing is it involves a more nuanced conversation. You have to be patient, ask good questions, estimate your costs, and be able to calculate potential ROI situations to find the right price.

It’s an advanced method but one to try out as you get further along with your career.

Until then, keep it in the back of your mind and use it to inform the direction of your prices.

Another way to price, one more common to a lot of us, is based on how we feel about our prices.

Feeling out your prices may seem like the wrong way to do it, but I think it deserves more credit.

The longer we do our work, the more conversations we have. The more conversations we have—and the more work we do—the more patterns we see.

Over time, our ability to feel out a good price becomes honed in.

The market gives you feedback, you see how long things take, you factor in the typical value of each result you produce, and eventually, your prices become obvious.

If you’re not sure where to price, pick something that feels right. Add a little to it so it makes you at least a little excited to do the work.

That’s your price. At least for now.

Have more conversations. See what results you get. Adjust accordingly.

Feeling out your prices may leave some on the table in the short-run, but it’s not a bad strategy if you keep evolving over time.

Pricing is as much about how you and your buyer feels as it is any logical metric based on estimated value.

April 25, 2022

The five buyer types

I listened to a great 2Bobs episode recently (a podcast by David C. Baker and Blair Enns) and I highly recommend checking it out.

They broke down the five buyer types (Convenience, Relationship, Price, Value, and Poker Player) and how to sell to each one in your proposals. It’s an interesting take.

Give it a listen— think you’ll get a lot of value out of it.

April 14, 2022

The problem with generalist positioning

There are a lot of problems with having purely generalist positioning.

The main one, though, is that potential clients don’t know what you’re actually good at.

So they’re left to figure that out for themselves—and there’s no way to tell what you’re actually good at until they work with you.

But by then it’s too late.

The best prospects will go to someone who looks the most qualified on paper. They will spend top-dollar with them to do things right.

And that means you’ll be left with the less-than-ideal clients.

The ones who don’t understand just how nuanced the work is to do right—which means they won’t value your work enough to pay you well.

They’ll be price shopping and have unrealistic expectations based on naive perceptions that things are easy.

Yes, I believe you can be a generalist and specialist at the same time. You can build around your best skills and ideal niche until you don’t need to take on other clients.

But that’s largely out of necessity and to hedge your bets while you build a more specialized business.

Having purely generalist positioning is a recipe for running a business you won’t enjoy running. And that means something.

Listen to this 15-minute episode of Mindshare Radio for a more detailed perspective or subscribe via your favourite podcast player

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