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Posts Tagged ‘recession’

13 LESSONS FROM THE RECESSION

Friday, November 13th, 2009

This morning I went to Lessons From The Recession, a presentation by Katrina Michel and Liz Bielinska from Planning Express. This particular event was in association with Orchard and, though I go to lots of these things, this one was fun and very informative. Below are a few key points. Hope you find it useful too…

1. IN LOVE WITH NOSTALGIA

• People are harking back to “when it was all good and things were happier” than in the current climate
• Brands have embraced this such as M&S with their 1p Bazaar
• There has been a sales increase in nostalgic brands and products, such as Stork, Cake Mixture, Beans, Bisto and Rich Tea biscuits
• Fray Bentos pies has seen a sales increase of over 40%

THE CONTINUING TREND

• In 2010 and beyond brands that scream nostalgia will continue to thrive

2. GET IT FOR LESS OR FREE

• The current trends are M&S Dinner for 2 for £10. Morrisons launching Christmas dinner for £2.75 a head! Audi offering two free services on their cars
• People want value for money
• Latest data shows 80% of people are actively looking for bargains and 50% are using money off vouchers
• Buying things on the cheap is no longer something to be ashamed of, illustrated by Stella McCartney doing a range for Gap and Jimmy Choo creating a range for H&M

THE CONTINUING TREND

• There will be a long-term resistance to paying full price. Due to the continued discounts and offers in store because of the recession, people have changed their perception of price and what things are actually worth

3. WASTE NOT

• Waste less, spend less
• Throwing things away now fills us with guilt
• Due to our lack of money, wasting things feels bad
• The humble shopping list is now back to discourage impulse buying and some supermarkets are considering putting a ‘shopping list holder’ on the front of the trolley
• People are now eating food way past the sell by date
• People now feel they have to recycle more as they have a moral duty to do so

THE CONTINUING TREND

• Recycling is here to stay
• BOGOF’s are dead as people now see this as wasteful, but money off is here to stay

4. A PENNY SAVED IS A PENNY EARNED

• There has been a mass awakening to the fact that we all have to save
• 86% of people now hate being in debt
• We are taking saving tips from our parents as they did it so well
• Due to the extension of retirement age, people now want to control their own retirement age and the only way they will do that is to save

THE CONTINUING TREND

• People will save save save

5. MEND AND MAKE DO

• Everyone knows they have too much stuff. People are now turning to mending things rather than buying new
• Shoemakers Timpson has recorded a 40% lift in sales due to people mending their shoes rather than buying new
• People are hanging onto products for longer, so cars, beds and kitchen appliances people are getting them fixed or making do rather than replacing

THE CONTINUING TREND

• Having more stuff is becoming un-trendy
• Buying purposeful stuff and less of it is trendy

6. INFORMAL SOURCES OF INFO/OPINIONS

• People want to hear from other people and value what other people say, especially online, across all sorts of products and services
• Even down to mybuilder.com where you can rate the service the builder/handyman has provided
• PR is at the heart of this
• People are now owning brands, not necessarily the marketing department

THE CONTINUING TREND

• Marketing/PR are now directing people’s opinions of brands not shaping them. Consumers are shaping brands

7. OUT OF SIGHT OUT OF MIND

• As we all know big brands have failed this year such as Woolworths GM Motors etc
• 53% of people are less likely to be loyal to brands
• The brands that have failed have been mediocre

THE CONTINUING TREND

• Brands/Companies should always ask “ If we didn’t exist/provide a service would there be a need for us to be invented”

8. LOSS OF TRUST IN THE BANKS

• People see the banks as greedy
• Only 30% of people trust banks
• The current Natwest “HELPFUL BANKING” advert people don’t believe the sentiment

THE CONTINUING TREND

• Anyone operating in Financial Services needs to be seen as truthful

9. BECAUSE IT AINT WORTH IT

• Organic food sales are down 40% and have been denounced by ASDA
• Value lines in supermarkets have come into their own as people buy them and work out the difference between them and branded goods
• Trading down is officially cool
• Fairy Liquid is one brand that has managed not to be affected by this and is still going strong – possibly because of its claim of washing thousands of dishes – people see it as good value

THE CONTINUING TREND

• Trading down to own brand or value is only going to continue

10. HOME IS WHERE THE HEART IS

• We are all staying in more
• 35% of us are going out less
• We are even exercising at home due to Wii Fit
• Staying in is trendy as more people invest in entertaining in their home, whether that be on a new HD TV or a PS3

THE CONTINUING TREND

• We will all go out again, but not as much, as now our home is at the centre of entertaining our friends and ourselves

11. BETTER THE DEVIL YOU KNOW

• Trusted brands are going to become ever more important
• Brands that have survived the recession are simply going to get stronger, as these are the brands that have helped people through the difficult climate, whether giving more value or providing discounts – it’s all about goodwill
• And it doesn’t matter what advertising says as never before have so many people been unconvinced by advertising messages

THE CONTINUING TREND

• Goodwill & great PR; advertising will continue to falter

12. KEEP IT SIMPLE

• There is so much technology but people are becoming resistant to higher functionality of products
• Gadgets that are straight-forward and do their job have more appeal
• As consumers we are being over-loaded with technology
• 76% of people just want a mobile to make calls and text
• We haven’t got time to learn new things

THE CONTINUING TREND

• Embrace technology but keep it simple

13. SOMETHING THAT MATTERS

• Grand gestures are out the window
• People now want something that matters “it’s the thought that counts” is now in full effect

THE CONTINUING TREND

• Thoughtful simple products are the way forward

By Gary Bramwell, Deputy MD

CONSUMER PR AND MARKETING DURING THE RECESSION HAS MADE BRANDS BRAVER. NEEDS MUST?

Monday, July 13th, 2009

Since the recession hit we have seen many brands take a nose dive both in sales and brand image. To many this has meant the end, but to others this was just the beginning of what may become a bitter or glorious brand war.

Last month two of Britain’s biggest supermarkets waged a multi-million pound price war on each other, giving shoppers an unexpected and welcome boost to their budgets as the prices were slashed throughout both stores. Firstly, Asda jumped in with two feet, revealing they planned to make cuts of £250 million to 10,000 items, including food, clothing and general merchandise. Tesco swiftly followed suit, announcing £270 million of reductions to more than 3,000 products.

The supermarket wars are now in full swing and these guys are not afraid to play dirty, claiming out and out that they sell the cheapest and best products around and publicly slurring the opposition in advertising and PR campaigns. Some are even parking branded vans carrying sabotaging messages outside competing superstores. Asda Chief Exec, Andy Bond is upfront about his intentions, telling the Telegraph, “We are declaring a supermarket price war. Over the next year we’re going to expose businesses that prey on customers, forcing them to pay through the nose for goods and services while they pocket massive margins.”

The supermarkets are not the only ones going head to head. Pepsi and Coca Cola, the two marketing arch-rivals are rumoured to be gearing up to continue their age old brand fight. Add to this Apple’s 2008 advertising campaign, slurring the lowly PC in their British poster campaigns, a move some have called ‘obnoxious’ and ‘borderline unethical’, but one that Paul Lee at Clean Cut Media calls, “so unique and memorable it will most likely go down in history as one of the best campaigns.”

This week Brazen launched the Nicky Clarke desiRED straighteners. Thanks to some sterling results from independent testing, the consumer PR and marketing strategy is now lead with the statement – “Independent tests show more women prefer Nicky Clarke desiRED straighteners to ghd” – a clear message and a full on head to head strategy – and one that invites the consumer not only to try the product but to check out the (considerably cheaper) price – a hugely important factor at the moment. This strategy is a winner no matter what state the global economy is in, but during the recession this is an even clearer call to action to the consumer.

In this financial climate this is fast becoming the norm however, and the consumer should sit back and enjoy the benefits that come from feuding brands. The recession is forcing companies to become more creative, think faster and smarter. It makes sense. After all this is a brand eat brand world now and only the fittest and most ruthless can survive. And along the way, we are all learning more and more effective consumer PR and marketing strategies. Enjoy consumers, enjoy.

By Victoria Jones, Account Director

PR TO BEAT THE RECESSION

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

Most recession related stories fill me with dread. So I pretty much dread every day these days, what with the media being fixated on the ‘recession-brink-of-depression’ bandwagon.

But then came this article by Claire Beale in the Independent.

She picks up on WPP boss Martin Sorrell’s comment relating to the advertising and communications industry that we’re entering a prolonged L-shaped recession. The upshot being that the potential victor in all this (if there can be any in such a torrid world) could be the PR industry.

No music to the ears of adland, she says.

And I agree. In my intimate experience, ad agencies (and media buyers for that matter) have eternally been split into two camps. One, the navel-gazing lot who love PR because it makes their ad campaigns famous. And two, those who loathe PR because they don’t understand it and think it could be better invested in a few press ads. Oh, and possibly a third camp – those who couldn’t care less.

But now the tides are turning and PR is gaining a newfound respect (and fear) among our aforementioned media cousins. Because the lines have all become blurred – PR, advertising, digital media, SEO, experiential, sponsorship, media buying – now we’re all in it together, on a level playing field, hustling for business.

As for business – there’s no doubt it’s still be out there (fingers crossed) for those who can change and evolve to deliver it the best. And as the beauty of PR has always been that it can turn on a sixpence to reflect the mood of the consumer, corporate, social, media and political landscapes, I for one feel extremely grateful to be sitting this side of the fence.

How’s your business? Are you finding the recession is focusing the mind and making you personally and professionally perform better than ever? I’d love to know.

By Nina Webb, Owner