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Sales Literature and Sell Sheets
Incubation
and How it
Applies
to Marketing
Jim Schakenbach
Managing Partner, SCT Group Inc.
www.sctgrp.com
As an entrepreneur or venture capitalist youre used to hearing the
term incubation used to describe a business model in which
a fledgling company is brought under the wing of a benevolent protector
often another company that provides low-rent space, management,
legal, or financial help, or a combination of all of these. The incubator
provides valuable support and assistance during a critical stage as the
vulnerable young company develops its new product and gets ready to survive
on its own.
But did you know that incubation also applies to marketing new products
or services? In this case, incubation refers to the time it takes for
a potential customer to act upon marketing and sales efforts. Remarkably,
many companies dont consider incubation and how it affects the burn
rate of their often limited marketing resources as they roll out new offerings.
Instead, they wait expectantly for the phone to ring or the web site to
light up with inquiries and orders. When that doesnt happen immediately
frustration, even anger, set in. Blame for lack of leads and sales gets
assigned reflexively, without thought or analysis. Almost inevitably,
bad marketing decisions follow and further efforts suffer.
Often, the problem is simply not taking incubation into account. Its
that period of time between when a marketing message reaches a potential
customer and when they take action. Think about it when was the
last time you made an immediate decision on an important purchase? Probably
never. Chances are you did some research, asked some questions, sought
out other opinions. So how can you expect your potential customers to
act any differently? Virtually every sale has an incubation period. For
low-cost consumer goods it can be fairly short a shopper looks
at a particular product, decides oh, I need this, maybe compares
some prices, and buys it. However, a longer incubation period occurs for
big-ticket capital sales, those involving a complicated or new technology,
or sales in highly competitive markets with lots of choices. Studies have
shown that seventy-five percent of corporate sales lead respondents with
active buying intentions make purchases six months after initial contact.
In fact, a solid fifty-eight percent actively involved in a purchasing
decision take over a year to buy. What does all this mean?
Start your marketing activities early and often
As a rule, you can never start your marketing outreach efforts too early.
This should include targeted, informative contact with trade editors (make
sure you have press kits available, especially for trade shows); an easy-to-navigate,
content-rich web site with links to appropriate industry portals and trade
publications (hard copy and e-zines); and, if possible, some targeted
advertising, particularly highlighting trade show participation. Practice
what we call outside in thinking and develop your marketing
communication messages to clearly and accurately position your product
or service for the market, highlighting features and benefits in which
the potential customer will be interested. Be aware that this may yield
results that differ from what you initially thought were the most important
attributes of your product or service. Put yourself in your customers
shoes and develop your messaging and outreach accordingly.
As you begin these activities, remember the incubation period and reign
in your early expectations. Be reasonable. Avoid knee-jerk reactions to
any one particular effort or result, such as lack of response to a single
print ad. It typically takes several exposures to a message before an
impression is made and a response is initiated. Above all, avoid cancelling
programs because a single article, direct mail piece, or ad didnt
yield immediate results. After all, you wouldnt stop eating just
because you had a meal you didnt like, would you?
Rest easy in the knowledge that no matter how big or small your marketing
program, incubation is going to happen. Plan your efforts, including sales
projections and ROI analysis, to take that into account and you wont
be disappointed.
©2007 SCT Group, Inc.
sctgrp.com
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