Skip to Content

4 Steps to Help You Build a Resilient Marketing Strategy

4 Steps to Help You Build a Resilient Marketing Strategy

Resilient marketing helps grow revenue and profitability through economic uncertainty. It also gives your team the ability to innovate and outperform your competition in the long run.

Nearly every business is worried about — or already facing — slowing or declining revenue growth, as many experts feel we’re heading toward challenging times. With this, the “growth at all costs” mantra of the past decade is quickly shifting to one of business resiliency and sustainable growth. Resilient marketing focuses on the ability to absorb stress, maintain healthy business operations, and adapt to new conditions.

Businesses that focus more on long-term sustainability can emerge from the current economic climate stronger than they were before. 

These are 4 ways leaders can build resilient marketing in their organisations.

Deliver success now

Learn how Customer 360 helps you increase efficiency, improve results, and lower costs.

1. Realise how resilient marketing helps optimise your marketing spend

Marketing budgets are often under increased scrutiny during economic uncertainty. You’ll need to defend your marketing efforts by validating their impact and demonstrating clear results.

Yet, 80% of marketers say their ability to track return for each marketing investment needs improvement. Investing in data analytics capabilities can help you:

  • Make the most of your marketing budget
  • Reallocate spend from low-performing campaigns
  • Quickly adjust current campaigns
  • Suppress marketing messages for customers with open service cases
  • Clearly demonstrate your team’s impact on revenue

2. Evaluate the efficiency of your current systems — and cut what doesn’t work

You’ve probably already felt the increased pressure to more strictly control — and in many cases — reduce marketing costs. Marketers are looking to reduce their spending on campaigns that aren’t resonating with customers and move that money toward bigger initiatives.

A great place to start is by evaluating your marketing technology tools to see how well they’re still working for you. Has this become increasingly complex and bloated over the past decade? Marketing teams use 23 different marketing systems, on average. Begin by evaluating your tech stack to identify redundancies, inefficiencies, and tools that your team doesn’t really use anymore. Identify areas where you can:

  • Consolidate systems and contacts
  • Eliminate inefficient tools
  • Reduce maintenance & support costs

Marketing leaders need to act now to optimise marketing spend with a slimmer budget, improve adaptability, and work to keep current customers.”


3. Find more efficient ways to achieve your goals, despite shifting budgets

Most marketing organisations are not growing as fast as they previously hoped, and in many cases they are shrinking. You may be grappling with how to make your department more efficient and agile in these rapidly-changing times.

For example, 29% of marketers spend at least one week or more every month preparing data — that’s time that could be better spent developing and executing resilient marketing strategies. To remain agile as marketing budgets shift, you need to make every marketing moment count: 

  • Automate time-consuming, error-prone tasks like Excel-based data integration and reporting, so your team is free to focus on bigger problems
  • Identify strategies to scale personalisation efforts, like using AI to tailor newsletter content to each reader, improving campaign effectiveness
  • Hold a call with your marketing team to identify bottlenecks like requiring IT to make basic changes to campaigns, so you can improve speed of campaign execution
  • Explore ways to better collaborate with remote teams, ensuring everyone is on the same page

Find ways to streamline your operations, placing a focus on agility. This way, you’ll be prepared — not panicking — when things change.

4. Lead with the value to the consumer

As new customer acquisition becomes more challenging during economic uncertainty, marketers should adopt a strategy that focuses on retaining current customers and making sure they feel they’re getting the most value. This helps protect existing revenue and is one of the surest paths to continued growth during times of uncertainty.

To help customers get the most value from your products, you should consider investments in the following areas:

  • Developing a first-party data strategy, making better use of data you collect from customer interactions
  • Making sure customers have what they need after the sale, anticipating needs such as onboarding, education or complementary products
  • Identifying and re-engaging customers who are undecided about purchasing
  • Improving customer experience through real-time personalisation
  • Starting a customer loyalty program
  • Building immersive and customer-first experiences, such as augmented and virtual reality

Keep your focus on moving forward

It can be tempting to pause innovation during times of economic uncertainty. However, research from McKinsey says otherwise. They found that organisations that maintained their focus on innovation throughout the 2009 financial crisis outperformed the market average by more than 30% in the following three to five years. 

Marketing leaders need to act now to optimise marketing spend with a slimmer budget, improve adaptability, and work to keep current customers. Resilient marketing helps grow revenue and profitability while also giving your team the ability to innovate and outperform your competition in the long run.

Dive deeper into all the trends and insights shaping the marketing landscape. 

Download the Marketing Intelligence Report.

This post originally appeared on the U.S.-version of the Salesforce blog.

Daniel Newman

Daniel Newman is a marketing strategist for the communications, media, and technology industries. He advises customers on how to build high impact marketing and CX strategies that address top industry and macroeconomic trends.

More by Daniel

Want Trailblazer tips and thought leadership straight to your inbox?