How marketing can help your business survive the Coronavirus

When news first reached us of a flu-like virus affecting residents in Wuhan, China I’ll be the first to admit that it didn’t immediately ring alarm bells. Fast-forward several weeks and the World Health Organisation have labelled it a ‘pandemic’. It feels more like something from a Hollywood blockbuster than real life.

Corona.jpg

You only need to see the empty shelves in most supermarkets to understand that at least some of the UK population are in a state of panic. Companies who can, are taking their employees out of the office environment and are allowing them to work from home. Some businesses where this is not feasible have made the difficult decision to close their doors for the foreseeable future.

Source: The Rex Facebook Page

Source: The Rex Facebook Page

But what does it all mean for your business? And how can you survive?

Typically, in times of financial crisis businesses cutback on their marketing activities however in this situation I think the opposite should be true. In this blog I will talk about some of the possible opportunities for your business and how to survive the Coronavirus outbreak.

1.      Be where your customers are

Whether your customers are self-isolating or working from home. There has never being a more important time to improve your digital offering. Is your website up-to-date? Are you effectively utilising social media? Have you communicated with your customers via email or text? We’re in uncertain times and this is a great opportunity to solidify brand loyalty by communicating effectively with your customers and providing reassurance.

2.      Turn a negative into a positive

The National Trust announced this week that they will be removing pay barriers from all their National Trust parks and Gardens. I’m not suggesting that you need to go to such great lengths but positive PR during this uncertain time could get you in front of a whole new audience. Smaller initiatives such as reaching out to the elderly and at-risk groups in your community could have a positive impact for your brand. Sainsbury’s and other retailers are offering to open their stores for the first hour exclusively to these two at risk groups. What steps could you take as a business to help the most vulnerable in society?

3.      Strength in numbers  

Now more than ever is a time to unite with other businesses who may be suffering. Manchester hospitality leaders have unified this week by launching the ‘pay it forward’ scheme to help support local restaurants and bars through the Coronavirus pandemic. The scheme encourages people to purchase discounted vouchers at participating restaurants during the run up to Easter which can be redeemed from May onwards. And for the added feelgood factor for each voucher purchased a charitable donation of £1 is also made to Hospitality Action. So, speak to your competitors and look at ways you can work together.

4.      And finally, don’t panic

This is an unprecedented situation and with so much uncertainty surrounding Coronavirus and its economical impact we must ‘keep calm and carry on’. The government have announced several measures to support businesses through this difficult time including £330bn in loans and £20bn in other aid. It’s important to remain positive and instil your consumers with confidence.

 

If you’re feeling concerned about the effects of Covid-19 on your business or are looking at ways to improve your digital presence why not give Kiesha at Icon Marketing Communications a call for an informal chat on 07979 940526.

Why you should hire a Marketing Consultant

This month we have a guest blog by the super talented Lindsey Milner. Lindsey has several years experience working for some of the largest media houses in the industry. Take a read of her blog ‘Why you should hire a Marketing Consultant below…

Linds.jpg

Time is money. Two heads are better than one. Jack of all trades, master of none. 

If you own your own business, these phrases probably pop into your mind most days?

Often a business is set up to pursue a passion. Unfortunately, the reality is less hours are spent on the ‘passion’ and more on marketing tasks like:  

Why isn’t my website getting more visitors?

What’s the quickest route to increased sales? 

Who really is my target audience?

If you can relate, then here are our top 3 reasons why hiring a Marketing Consultant will be the best decision you make this year:

 

Fact 1: Marketing Consultant’s will understand and care for your business as much as you do.

Let’s say you’ve set up a vegan food delivery service.

Your background is in nutrition and you have decades of skill and experience at creating exemplary vegan cuisine.

Even if your Marketing Consultant hasn’t worked on an identical proposition before, their background, skill and experience is in making exemplary, water-tight and profitable strategic business plans.

Within a couple of months of working together, they will establish:

·        Who and where are your target customers?

·        How and when do they want to be targeted?

·        How often you should send marketing messages to them, when and in what format?

·        Which platforms should you spend time and investment on?

·        How to generate a return on investment (ROI) on any of your marketing activities.

 

The same way vegan food is your calling, improving the profitability and efficiency of your business via marketing is theirs.

 

Fact 2: Hiring a Consultant won’t be ‘expensive’. It will generate a return.

There’s nothing like the thought of losing money to strike fear into the most rational of folks. However, let’s flip this fear on its head.

If you need to grow your business ASAP, you’ll soon learn you have to pay to some extent, to do that.

Whether it’s spending on advertising or improving your digital platforms via SEO, CRO or content creation, there will always be a cost even if it’s just your time.

If you don’t have experience in these fields, I can guarantee that trying to fudge it yourself, no matter how many hours you spend on You Tube tutorials, you won’t get the outcome you desire.

You could advertise at the wrong time of year, to the wrong customer.

You could be optimizing clicks to your website rather than conversions.

It could all amount to a poor performing quarter in both financial and development terms.

A Marketing Consultant can guarantee as little waste of your pennies as possible AND increase your business growth within the shortest time possible.

They’re the experts and do this day in, day out, with qualifications to boot.

“Then I bet their rates are expensive” I hear you cry?

As with anything in life, you get what you pay for.

However, the brilliant thing about a Freelance Marketing Consultant is that they’ll work with you to find out your primary objectives, then calculate back exactly how many hours a month they need to hit those objectives for you.

It maybe you only need five to ten hours a month? Or two days a month. Or a month’s work to get you off the ground so to speak.

Whatever you need, they can give you: with no other overheads and a promise they’ll put everything in place to get the returns you seek, with as little waste as possible.

 

Fact 3: They have a deeper understanding of digital marketing than you do.

In today’s digital world, the job of a marketeer is as broad and diverse as you can get.

Outside of the traditional marketing techniques like branding, advertising, PR, events, and generating new business, today we also specialise in:

1.      Website creation and maintenance

2.      Search Engine Optimisation

3.      Conversion Rate Optimisation

4.      Social media

5.      Content creation

6.      Copy Writing

Digital and its users move fast.

Staying on top of trends and techniques to get all of these marketing tactics spot on, is a full-time job in itself.

With the best will in the world, you can google “How do I improve my website search ranking” and take a few punitive steps towards it. But you won’t get the results you desire any time soon.

A Freelance Consultant can put all of this in place for you and teach you a few tricks of their trade.

 All of the phrases we began with are true.

As a business owner, it’s imperative you put your business in the hands of experts.

This time next year, we can’t promise you’ll be a millionaire.

But we can promise you’ll have built a brand and awareness of said brand, increased sales and have a solid understanding of the next steps to work towards your ever-evolving business via sensible targets and objectives.

And if you want to work with Marketing Consultants that really, really care, get in touch with Icon today. We are here whenever and however you need us.

Mum’s the Word for Business Success

It may only be in its first trimester, but 2019 is already a boom year for ex-radio presenter and mum-of-two, Kiesha Humphreys who is celebrating her fourth year at the helm of Icon Marketing Communications Ltd. In that time, Icon, a specialist marketing consultancy based in Wilmslow, has been responsible for a number of SME business success stories across Cheshire and Manchester.

Kiesha HumphreysPhoto credit: Senem Peace Photography

Kiesha Humphreys

Photo credit: Senem Peace Photography

Kiesha explains; “I set up the business after the birth of my first son, and Icon is an anagram of his name, Nico. I’d been working at a senior level at a large advertising agency in Manchester, and while I was on maternity leave it struck me that there is a gap in the market for a reasonably priced and flexible marketing resource, in the area.”

Kiesha has first-hand experience of smaller businesses approaching large agencies and being put off by the cost. She says, “Bigger organisations can be a bit intimidating to smaller businesses – especially when they only need a one-off marketing facility or a bespoke marketing service.”

While larger organisations often don’t see the immediate potential in helping businesses when they’re starting out or are at the ‘expansion phase’, Kiesha seizes the opportunity to put her big agency knowledge and international marketing expertise to the test.

“For the past 15 years I’ve worked in the UK and South East Asia. In this time, I’ve seen the communications climate change dramatically – and it still is changing, year on year”.

In tandem with her ‘day’ job as a Business Development Manager for upmarket restaurant chain, Gusto, Kiesha honed her communications skills as a regular Radio Presenter for Cheshire’s Silk 106.9, BBC Radio Manchester and Capital (formerly Galaxy 102). It meant she had her finger on the pulse of all kinds of media. “I’m a natural-born communicator,” she says, “I was increasingly drawn to digital channels and I could see that the major draw of digital is its level of accountability and significant ROI”.

Photo credit: Jonathan Farber

Photo credit: Jonathan Farber

As well as running Icon, Kiesha has spent the last year completing her Google Ads certifications and working on SEO projects with a number of clients.

Kiesha continues; “There is still a need for an integrated marketing communications strategy to support and strengthen the digital aspect, including PR, events and traditional print and radio advertising”.

Kiesha says; “While we’re based in Wilmslow, we often work from The Workspace in Handforth, a beautiful co-worker environment that has flexible terms – it’s great for businesses who want to collaborate. We work with businesses of all sizes to provide one-off support or ongoing marketing management (across the mix) in and around Manchester and Cheshire. We create tailor made packages in line with our clients’ budgets or we can offer bespoke solutions to suit their needs.”

The Workspace Handforth Meeting RoomPhoto credit: Compton Harry Photography

The Workspace Handforth Meeting Room

Photo credit: Compton Harry Photography

It’s not every day a company can benefit from marketing experience of the kind Icon can deliver, without the international agency price tag. With so many success stories under her belt – and plenty more waiting to happen, Kiesha is more than happy to spread the good news.

For more information visit www.iconmarketingcommunications.co.uk .

To celebrate its fourth year. Icon Marketing Communications Ltd is offering all readers a 1 hour complimentary marketing consultation. For more details, please contact Kiesha on kiesha@iconmarketingcommunications.co.uk or call 07979940526.

The Workspace can be contacted on 01625 522209 or via email info@theworkspace.uk

For more information visit www.theworkspace.uk.

Hello! Is anyone listening? The magic of Radio and its similarities to running successful Social Media campaigns

It’s a while since I last wrote a blog, the truth is working in marketing you tend to neglect your own promotion in favour of your clients. But that’s no excuse it is important to be consistent. So today I wanted to talk a little about the wonderful world of social media. I remember being one of the first of my friends to sign up to Facebook in April 2007. Back then there was no Instagram, Snapchat, Pinterest and Twitter was only in its first year.

How far social media has come since then? Facebook now has in the region of 2.23 billion users. They’ve recently had a ‘rough’ time losing £90.8 billion of their share value following the Cambridge Analytica scandal (I must hasten to add the company is still valued at nearly £400 billion – yes billion).

facebook.jpg

What is true is that businesses of all sizes are looking to harness the power of social media. Just like any other media there are different channels which may be more suited to your target audience. Instagram users for example are predominantly aged between 18 and 29 and there is a greater tendency for them to be female over male. Whereas Twitter and LinkedIn users, tend to be older and more business orientated. Effectively utilising social media reminds me a lot of my time as a Radio Presenter. Different stations appeal to different audiences.

But the similarities don’t stop there. Just like the world of radio particularly commercial radio;

You need to plan

Before each show I’d spend at least an hour prepping. My prep would include reading the local and national papers, checking on upcoming events, researching in to any new music that was added to the playlist, creating topics to encourage listener interaction. Planning was imperative to an enjoyable show (for me and the listener).  The same can be said for social media, making the time to produce a fortnightly or monthly social media plan will make the process of generating regular content a far less onerous task.

You’re promoting…

 In radio this is usually the station you work for, other presenter’s shows, local events or special guests. But equally as a business owner utilising social media to promote your business is a wise choice. What other media gives you the opportunity to directly promote your product/service to your customer?

You’re conversing…

Encouraging listener participation brings the show to life. One of my favourite features was my topical themed final song of the show, during this feature I would get listeners to get in touch suggesting a song themed around a news story from that day. People love to receive a direct response from a company, favourite brand or business . I once tweeted Screwfix about a great experience I’d had with their Cheadle store. They passed the message on to the store who responded to my tweet with a thank-you – I was touched. Conversing with your social media supporters encourages brand loyalty and sets you ahead of your competition.

Screwfix tweet.PNG

You’re sharing…

 I remember a few years ago whilst I was working for Cheshire Silk 106.9 there were a number of school closures due to excessive snowfall. Silk became the go to station to find out whether your local school was closed. That’s one of the things I loved most about radio was its speed. If you were on air when a big story broke you could share it with you listeners instantaneously. That speed still puts radio ahead of other media such as print. You can utilise your brands social media to share something relevant in your industry or to your followers.

Sharing, conversing and promoting is the holy trinity as far as establishing a successful social media presence. But I would encourage you to exercise caution when utilising social media. Unlike the world of radio which is regulated by Ofcom anyone can get online through social media and share news, views, pictures and videos. Without the necessarily having the knowledge on what you should or shouldn’t share. I once received a piece of advice whilst working in radio which I still reflect on today ‘If in doubt, leave it out’.

Also avoid the temptation to sell too much. I once took a call from an irate listener during one of my shows for a commercial radio station following a particularly long ad break who asked ‘Are you running an advertising agency or a radio station?’ the truth was a little bit of both. But they raised a good point effective selling should blend in to overall content and be informative not overpowering,  if you ‘sell’ too much people will switch off or in the case of social media at a click of a button they have unliked/unfollowed your page.

Radio is a medium which will always remain special to me, my five years working for stations in Manchester and Cheshire has taught me so much. If you’d like to have a friendly chat about your social media or broader marketing strategy  feel free to get in touch kiesha@iconmarketingcommunications.co.uk

Working from home...

Make your space an Oasis

With the rise in the cost of living, individuals starting families later in life and the challenge of striking a work life balance many females are setting up their own businesses and opting to work from home. Companies still have reservations surrounding ‘telecommuting’. But for educated working Mums this presents an opportunity to ‘have it all’.

I set up my business after the arrival of my first son (Icon is an anagram of his name Nico). I looked into office space initially but decided that working from home would work best for me allowing me to keep my overheads low and pass these cost savings on to my clients.

As a working Mum being home-based has many advantages, popping a load of washing in whilst working, being home to receive deliveries, being home for ‘workmen’ not to mention fitting around my children’s school and nursery schedules. That said it does come with disadvantages. Working as a sole trader can be a lonely time (the prospect of cold-calling strikes fear in me to my very core). Although I have a team of freelancers that I can utilise it’s difficult to keep motivated when you don’t have a regular team around.

IMG_3445.jpg

Over the last couple of years I have learnt a great deal about home-based working. Here are some helpful tips for fellow entrepreneurs;

1.       Make sure you have a designated space to work

It’s easy to lose focus when working from home and to become distracted by chores. Having an area set aside to work means you are entering into your office space just like going into work.

2.       Make a to do list

It may sound obvious but having a list of jobs that need to be completed each day and crossing them off is like giving yourself a pat on the back at the end of the day.

3.       Don’t forget to take a break

I tend to be at my desk each day by 8:45 and can easily become engrossed in a task. By making sure you take a break you can keep your productivity at a premium. I have a hula hoop at the side of my desk to use when work gets too much.

4.       Make your space an Oasis

Just like you would when going into the office it’s important to make sure that your workspace is inviting. I have a selection of photos on my desk and even a potted plant to ensure that my workspace is as appealing as possible.

5.       Find a good radio station

Listening to the radio is a friendly companion I have a selection of digital stations which I listen to which keep me focused depending on what work I have on. A dance station if I’m busy a bit of jazz if I’m feeling stressed music is a powerful medium.

6.       Make sure you network

Finding new business opportunities can be difficult when you’re home-based so it’s wise to broaden your network. Most towns have a networking organisation and the government business helplines can also provide details of networking events in your area. It’s good to have a reason to look business-like as working from home you can dictate your own dress code.

So there it is my tips on how to survive the home-working jungle. If you’ve recently established a new business and need some help to get it off the ground feel free to speak to me about your Business Development opportunities by calling 01625 533102.