Growth marketing: Why becoming a stoic is good for growth

If you are struggling to realise the gains, growth and engagement you want for your brand, perhaps start by looking at what is in your power to control. Kicking off with brand visibility, this article looks at three ways marketers can influence results, improve sales and drive better customer outcomes along the way.

Simon Breed

Simon Breed

Growth marketing: Why becoming a stoic is good for growth

Focus on what you can control.

With so many shiny new things around, it is easy for marketers to spread budgets and resources too thin. Instead, focus on the things you can actively influence that are most likely to pay dividends.

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If you want a deeper dive into the topics of visibility, buyer influence, or marketing automation, talk to us today. We can provide access to the expert resources needed to fast track growth and reduce uncertainties along the way.

Being a marketing stoic is good for growth.

As Kiwis, the uncertainties of the last year saw us embrace the opportunity to support local, explore our own backyard and make the best of things, with a typical "she'll be right" attitude.

The result is that despite the pandemic's best efforts, many organisations have flourished. Indeed, year on year, the economy has done remarkably well.

Among our immediate customer base, we have an insurance firm that has seen a 110% growth in new business (it was well-positioned to cope with the onslaught). We work with a global exporter that realised a 30% growth in B2B sales, a homebuilder that increased its nationwide lead pool by 54% and a national energy business that managed an impressive 24% growth in online-driven leads – both with similar lifts in sales.

So why, given this backdrop, are we advocating for marketers to become stoics?

Focus where you can make a difference.

The Letters of Seneca and Marcus Aurelias' classic are both ever-presents on my bookshelf. They contain the wisdom of the ages. Stoicism emphasises that we focus energy on things we can do something about and accept the rest for what it is.

This approach helped Aurelias, the famous Emperor Philosopher, navigate the uncertainties inherent in governing a war-torn Roman empire, and it can help us too.

A healthy dose of stoicism will be good for tackling the trivialities of strategic marketing today. There's so much in the mix that we can't do much about, so spend time and resources where we can make a real difference.  

The power to influence.

The good folk of Twenty CX have been fortunate enough to emerge well from the last year – something for which we are incredibly grateful. After the initial shock of lockdown (yep, we endured the inevitable early fee hits, too), we re-grouped and took advantage of the downtime to re-examine what brands could do to secure their futures and what part we could play in helping with that.

The outcome of this thinking is a planning framework that works to mitigate uncertainties and fast-track growth by influencing aspects of our audience engagement that we can at least exert some control over.

Across four strategic imperatives – Visibility, Digital Experience, Buyer Influence and Customer Experience - the P2i Framework (Power to Influence) unlocks opportunities to intelligently influence how people find, connect with and experience a brand.

Starting with visibility, here are three tangible ways that marketers can put this thinking into action.

1: Visibility: Show up when it counts.

Today, we flag our interest in a category by searching online. The moment we need inspiration, education, or just plain old information, we check in with Google – effectively raising a hand to any would-be suitor waiting in the wings.

Perhaps because this is so blatantly obvious, it's easy to overlook. Yet if our goal is to increase brand consideration, leads or sales, this is the low-hanging fruit.

Merely being present in these crucial moments is enough to win brand share.

What's more, we can directly influence how often we appear when someone does a relevant search.  

The key is to isolate what signifies a purchase intent when people search in your category. Benchmark your visibility for those search terms across both paid and organic – including competitor terms. Then invest up to an allowable cost per acquisition in paid search, SEO and content marketing, so your brand is found more of the time.  

If this sounds like a basic concept, it probably is, yet so many of us continue to miss low-cost sales opportunities by not showing up.    

2: Turn interested into action.

We all exhibit strong unconscious preferences when making purchase decisions. Google's Messy Middle study, released last year, proved that even unknown brands could significantly disrupt a category to win a high proportion of sales even when only some of the biases are activated.

Here's a warning for brand leaders: when supercharged across all these biases, fictional brands could steal up to 87% of preference. Google didn't undertake some lightweight study either – they tested this across many sectors and 310,000 purchase scenarios.

Six significant biases were identified: Category heuristics (the points of reference we all use to judge a product or service given its category norms); authority bias; social proof; "the power of now"; scarcity bias; and "the power of free" (we all love something for nothing).  

Here's how to use this insight. Score your performance against each of your competitors across all six biases. The outcome of this work may have implications for your product design, distribution, pricing, communications, and delivery. However, you will likely be able to tune and control aspects of your presentation to influence sales quickly (the study also proved that to be true).

As an example of the power of this in action, our client Mariner Insurance used Trustpilot to make it easier for people to review them. Social proof is the most powerful bias in the Google study. With almost 1000 reviews now and an 'excellent' rating, this is likely to have contributed strongly to Mariner's 110% lift in new business.

3: Get the experience right to convert more sales.

You also control your technology environment and how you deploy it. Marketing automation and CRM demonstrably contribute to improved CX and business growth, but the key is applying them well.

To help turn anonymous website traffic into known prospects, leads and sales, and to get full value out of your technology investment, start by mapping your critical customer journeys as they are now.

Identify the gaps and opportunities to create CX excellence. Customer service, sales, and marketing come together in this process. The outcome is a definition of what good can look like and a shortlist of immediate quick win action plans for implementation.

Get expert support.

One of the biggest challenges in the current environment is the availability of people with deep knowledge and experience of audience engagement in the world of digital CX.

While nothing we've talked about here is particularly complex, many are left short-changed by inexperience. The real opportunity is making the world of digital sing for your organisation as part of a wider actionable customer engagement plan. That takes knowledge and experience beyond the reach of many small general marketing teams. Partnering enables you to bring in the right experience at the right time to fast-track your results.

Back to Marcus Aurelius and those stoics. Remember, focus on what you can influence. The rest will be better taking care of itself. Here's to a positive year ahead! Thanks for reading.

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Simon Breed

Simon Breed

Managing Director
Simon cut his teeth in marketing for one of Europe's leading agencies, working on automotive CRM. He set up Twenty in 2006 to bring together data-driven marketing, technology and customer strategy under one roof for NZ brands.
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