Friday, November 29, 2013

Leftovers


Hope you had a great Thanksgiving.  Your leftovers are now put away.  If you are a MOT (if you don’t know what that is – you aren’t), your leftovers may be a little different this year.  Latkes and applesauce to go along with the turkey and stuffing. 

So now you may be spending the rest of the weekend in shopping mode, not worrying about work for a few days.  And, of course, enjoying your leftovers.  But when you get back to work, start thinking about your work “leftovers.”  Of course, I am talking about your marketing budget leftovers…those leftover dollars you’ll lose if you don't spend them by year-end. Here are some thoughts about consuming these "leftovers."

  1. Don't do anything until you know you have authority to spend those dollars, even if you have budget. Organizational profitability requirements may prevent you from spending those dollars
  2. Don't spend just for the sake of spending. Figure out strategically how your money can be best spent. If you can't think of anything, don't spend the money.  
  3. If you can spend your “leftover” money, here are just a few things you can do:   

    • Get all your online efforts for next year in line. Finalize your Website. Optimize it. Get your social media programs going. Get any videos done.
    • Instead of mailing your direct mail campaign just after Jan. 1, mail it just before Jan. 1 to expense the postage. But don't mail it too soon - you'll want it to hit after the first of the year.  And yes, direct mail still works.
    • Have any miscellaneous writing projects initiated in December.
    • Begin the process of initiating a market research project in December, and see how much of it you can pay for up front.
    • Prepay planned 2014 advertising expenditures. You might even be able to get a discount.
    • Talk to other providers about paying them in December with 2014 money, even if your schedule doesn't permit them to start working on a project until after the first of the year.
    • If you are a B2B company, try using this strategy with your clients. Have them commit to spend IT money, buy office supplies, whatever. It works.

 What other ideas do you have? Let me know


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