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BY JOY GENDUSA

It’s the one that consistently makes them more money.

People don’t ignore advice because it’s wrong—they ignore it because it’s uncomfortable.

Saving money means spending less today. Eating healthy means passing up what tastes best right now. And effective marketing? That usually means doing more than what feels safe—or sane.

After providing 128,706 business owners nationwide with results-based marketing campaigns, I can tell you this with certainty: The marketing strategies that create real, lasting growth are rarely the ones people want to hear.

I’ve spent over 25 years helping businesses generate leads and grow revenue. Along the way, I’ve noticed something fascinating. There’s one piece of advice I give that consistently makes business owners uneasy. It’s questioned and debated. In fact, they flat-out hate it.

Here it is: To effectively grow your business, you have to market more than your competitors—more than you think is actually sane.

That statement alone turns people off. It sounds excessive. Risky. Maybe even self-serving, coming from someone in marketing. But the truth is it doesn’t matter who you market with—or even whether you do it yourself or hire help. The principle stands on its own.

But you don’t have to take my word for it—I come with receipts.

To reach growth goals, spend more on marketing

Gartner research demonstrates that the average 2025 marketing budget stalled at 7.7 percent of company revenue—and that is the same level as 2024. The recommended average marketing spend is 10 percent, but my mantra is do as much as you possibly can and then some!

You have to be willing to market yourself in quantities that feel insane to others. That’s what it takes to create real growth and momentum.

Take a look at these companies who spent far more than 10 percent within the last year, and it made a huge impact on their revenue:

  • Monzo, a UK-based bank, increased its marketing spend 77 percent in 2025 and surpassed £1 billion in revenue, a first for them.
  • Indian retailer Nykaa decided to increase sales and marketing spend 29 percent and reported a 61 percent increase in quarterly profit growth and a 27 percent rise in revenue as a result.
  • Guardant Health, a cancer screening biotech firm, increased sales and marketing spend 30 percent and reported a 21 percent year-over-year revenue increase.

I also have firsthand experience, so you know I practice what I preach.

To stay on top, be consistent with your marketing

I started PostcardMania in 1998 with no investors and no cash—just a marketing plan I refused to abandon. That commitment took our revenue from zero to over $100 million a year.

Early on, I spent more on marketing than I paid myself—and I still do. I drove the same paid-off Nissan well past our first $1 million because I understood one simple truth: The size and consistency of my marketing directly controlled our growth. Growth was my top priority then, and still is.

Today, I mail about 232,000 postcards weekly and invest roughly $50,000 a week in online ads just advertising my business. Since 2020, we’re averaging nearly 15 percent annual revenue growth every year after a decade of averaging 5 percent annual growth. Just last year, we set a new all-time company record in leads generated. I can point to many factors behind that success—but it all starts with my dedication to marketing more than anyone thinks is sane.

So when I say this works, I’m not speaking in theory. I’ve lived it.

I know committing serious dollars to marketing can feel scary—but discipline beats comfort every time. Trust the process, track everything, double down on what performs, and refine what doesn’t.

Do that consistently, and the payoff isn’t just possible. It’s inevitable.

Never let the economy affect your marketing investment

Unstable economic conditions are not a reason to cut your marketing budget—in fact, they’re the exact reason not to.

When things get tight, most businesses pull back or shut off their marketing entirely. That instinct feels safe, but it’s also one of the fastest ways to hamstring your revenue or even put your business at real risk.

When the pandemic hit, Coca-Cola cut its advertising budget by roughly 35 percent, but Pepsi didn’t make any cuts.

Due to this decision, Coca Cola experienced big losses in 2020. Their quarterly revenue shrunk over $1 billion in a single quarter, dropping 16.9 percent from Q1 to Q2. They went from being up 6.96 percent in 2019 to down 28.48 percent in June of 2020 in year-over-year quarterly growth.

In fact, Coca-Cola revenue was down the entirety of 2020 and didn’t rebound until 2021. Meanwhile, PepsiCo returned to growth mode after being down a single quarter. That growth ended up lasting years as they gained more market share.

I made the same call PepsiCo did. When shutdowns began, I refused to stop marketing—and I refused to lay anyone off. That decision wasn’t easy—PostcardMania’s weekly revenue dropped about 40 percent, a swing of more than $500,000 a week—but it paid off.

I stuck to my guns and kept our marketing budget fully funded. And recovery came fast.

By April, revenue was back to pre-shutdown levels. By July, we set a new company record for monthly revenue—and broke it again in October. Despite the economic chaos, we finished 2020 up 10 percent over 2019. Then the momentum compounded. We entered 2020 as a $60 million business, and today we’re at nearly $120 million.

Marketing aggressively—when it feels uncomfortable or even “insane”—has been a massive growth lever for my company and countless others. And it can do the same for you.

So when you are at that fork in the road to take the shortcut or the uphill one, take the challenge. You’ll be far stronger and happier you did.

Feature image credit: Getty Images

BY JOY GENDUSA

Sourced from Inc.

By Robin Landa

A blueprint for galvanizing marketing that yields results.

Feature Image Credit: Getty Images

By Robin Landa

Sourced from Inc.

By Sneha Lundia

A go-to-market strategy is a plan for reaching the largest number of potential customers with the most effective marketing efforts. It is a plan to attract and grow your customer base by targeting the customers who are most likely to purchase your product or service. It allows businesses to focus their resources on the most important channels and target the right people with the best messaging. It is the way a business establishes, maintains and expands relationships with key customers.

This strategy should include how the business identifies, reaches out to and sells its products or services. There are a lot of articles and books written on how to go to market, but there is no one right way to do it. The goal is to find what works best for your business and then stick with it. Here are five steps that can help you get started.

1. Define your business and marketing objectives.

When starting a business, it’s important to have a clear vision and set of goals. Defining your business and marketing objectives will help you stay on track and achieve success. Defining these objectives can be difficult, but it is essential for businesses to have a clear idea of what they want and need in order to grow. A few key factors should be considered when creating marketing objectives, such as the target market, product or service offerings and pricing.

The following are some key questions to ask yourself when developing your objectives.

• What do I want my business to achieve?

• What am I willing to do and/or sacrifice to achieve that goal?

• How can marketing help me achieve my business goals?

Set measurable goals. It’s important to track your progress and make course corrections as needed. Are you looking to increase sales, gain new customers or improve customer loyalty?

2. Know your audience.

Market research is an important part of any business. Not only does it help you to better understand your target market, but it can also help you to create a product that appeals to that market. Identifying your target market can ensure your product will be successful.

• Start by understanding who in your market uses or could use your product.

• Next, research what interests and concerns these people.

• Based on the research, create your ideal customer profile and buyers’ personas.

3. Choose a distribution channel.

The process of choosing a distribution channel can be daunting for startups and small businesses. With limited resources and time, it is important to make the right decision that will reach the most customers in the most efficient way possible. When selecting a distribution channel, business owners face many choices. Email marketing, social media, events and advertisements are a few viable options. But which one is the best for your business depends on your goals and the demographics of your target market.

Email marketing is a great way to reach existing and potential customers. It’s affordable, and you can target specific demographics with your messages. However, not everyone uses email, so you might also want to consider using social media to reach those who don’t use email. Social media platforms are free to use and offer many ways to target your audience. Events are a great way to reach potential customers in person. They allow you to interact with customers and get feedback directly from them. However, they can be expensive to produce and attend to.

Ask yourself a few questions when making this decision.

• Where does your target market hang out?

• How do they prefer to receive information?

• What is your budget?

• Are you willing to invest in marketing and advertising?

• What is your timeline?

4. Define key performance indicators.

In order to effectively measure and track marketing progress, it is necessary to understand what marketing metrics are and how they can be used. The definition of marketing metrics can be summed up with one word: effectiveness. Effectiveness is the ability to measure how well a company’s marketing efforts are working in order to achieve its desired outcomes. Marketing metrics can help track and improve key performance indicators (known as KPIs) such as website traffic, leads generated and conversion rates.

Startup marketing, in particular, relies heavily on metrics to track progress and optimize campaigns. Many businesses use free or low-cost tools like Google Analytics to measure website traffic and engagement. For lead generation, you might use tools like Mixpanel or Kissmetrics to track how many people sign up for a trial or download a white paper. And for measuring conversions, startups might use Crazy Egg or Hotjar to see where people are clicking on their website.

5. Measure, learn and repeat.

If you want to improve your marketing campaign, you need to track your progress and analyse what works and what doesn’t. Make sure to also track qualitative data, such as customer feedback or satisfaction ratings. This will help you understand how well your marketing efforts are resonating with customers. You can constantly improve your marketing campaigns and get better results by tracking your progress and analysing your results.

In conclusion, developing a go-to-market strategy can be easy with the right steps. By defining your objectives and knowing your target market, what you offer and how to reach your consumers, you can create a successful plan that will help your business grow. Remember to tailor your strategy to your specific business and keep your customers in mind. Good luck and happy marketing!

Feature Image Credit: getty

By Sneha Lundia

Founder & CEO, Step2Growth – Helping Startups Reach Self Sufficiency | Women of Influence | Startup Mentor & Marketing Strategist. Read Sneha Lundia’s full executive profile here.

Sourced from Forbes

By Daniel Todaro

The concept of building brand loyalty used to be relatively straightforward. Effective marketing and delivery of a positive customer experience would create a positive association for a brand. The lifetime value of that relationship could then be hugely profitable, with consumers unlikely to switch.

However, we now live in a world of choice and information overload. An increasingly digital landscape, dominated by tech giants who hold many of the cards. In this new world, run by algorithms and AI, traditional long-held attachments are being unwound. As we culturally shift in shopping habits, people are more likely to remember what they bought from Instagram or Amazon but not the actual name of the brand. Does this mean brand loyalty is dead or at the very least waning?

Brand communication – from top-down to influencer-led

In the old world, brand marketers would use above-the-line platforms to create a strong identity and desire for a product. The brand direction was determined in a very top-down fashion, often based on the instinct of the CMO. A ‘needs’ state was identified and answered and an advertising campaign was launched highlighting the brand’s unique qualities.

In today’s world, we have shifted to digital and younger generations will see campaigns on Tik Tok and Instagram where the product is being advocated by a brand ambassador or a paid-for ad placed on social. In this new era, the control of the brand’s identity has been repackaged, personalized, and filtered through the lens of influencers. Having never heard of the brand, the influencer’s recommendation can be enough to create a consumer of a brand.

In fact, large segments of audiences will have never even seen an advert on TV or in a newspaper because they don’t touch a newspaper or they don’t switch on a TV. Or the brand has not included it as part of its media planning. According to recent research by Nielson, only 10% of Gen Z rank watching TV as their most popular entertainment activity. In fact, across the 18-34 bracket, live TV viewership dropped by 23% year on year.

The changing nature of brand loyalty

So, this digitally dominant world has created an entirely different mindset when it comes to brand loyalty. For socially digital natives, brand loyalty is about what it offers to them in value. A brand like Paul Smith will have a huge amount of brand equity among Gen X or baby boomers for its quality, tailoring, or painstakingly built partnerships and marketing campaigns. However, this will mean nothing for younger generations living in the moment and wanting to know what a brand can deliver here and now.

For younger consumers, if it is a relevant brand, it will be popular for them. If it’s not, they are just not interested. Quality has given way to relevance or price consciousness. Indeed there has been a huge rise in interest among younger audiences in mobile phone brands that offer a lot of the same features as iPhones but for a fraction of the price, like Xiaomi built with an Android skin. The tease here is the freedom an Android device offers a user who doesn’t want to be part of or associated with ‘that crowd’.

For digital natives, there is a checklist of what is really important for them when they spend their money. In recent research, price promotion was rated as crucial for this audience, but ethics are also vital. How long is a product going to last and what are they going to use it for? Does it meet my needs and values?

The life cycle of brands

In this new age, the life cycle of brands is also shorter, almost sonic. Brands can spring up quickly to consciousness but equally, their success can be shorter-lived. This has been evidenced by the spate of high-street retail brands that have disappeared.

Glossier is a D2C brand that sprung up in relatively short order. They have quickly scaled up the ladder of investment based on perceived digital growth that would continue endlessly. The direct-to-consumer beauty brand has raised an astonishing $80 million in Series E funding and reversed the traditional model.

They have latterly embraced physical retail with a pop-up store in Covent Garden, London,  and the swift ascent to being a much-loved brand is highlighted by the queues of people outside. However, they recently had to lay off staff as the growth they have experienced has not been maintained. Could the bubble burst as quickly as it was created?

How do brands build loyalty today?

It is certainly difficult for brands to build loyalty in the modern world because they are having to think about a very different culturally younger generation and manage a more traditionally minded older audience.

To square up this circle, value and values are two unifying themes that can be focused on, although realized in different ways. As consumers, we are all more interested in the purpose of brands and this is a clear differentiator. Brands today, particularly consumer goods products, have to think not only about how they make a product but also how they produce it. According to a study by Cone/Porter Novelli, 77% of consumers say they have stronger emotional bonds to purpose-driven companies.

Also, what added value are brands able to offer beyond the immediate product or service? How are they innovating to remain relevant? An excellent example of this is the Google Pixel 6 device, which enables users to remove photobombers and unwanted objects so that they “disappear like magic” using a “magic eraser”. Also, Portraits on Pixel represent the nuances of different skin tones for all people beautifully and authentically, to take true, accurate portraits. It’s innovations like these that create an immediate way for brands to build loyalty in the modern era.

Canny partnerships unite different audiences

Additionally, partnerships can be a great way of uniting seemingly disparate groups around common themes. CK1 Palace was a great example of this. A new collaboration between Calvin Klein and Palace Skateboards was launched with a tongue-in-cheek film celebrating cities that came to define these two labels. For streetwear brand Palace, it was London and its lively skate scene, with grainy film textures creating some retro cool.

Also included are high-contrast, black-and-white style studio shots, synonymous with Calvin Klein. The combination of nostalgia and modern relevance was a canny move that other brands would do well to replicate. Calvin Klein has opened new stores and you will see members of Gen Z proudly walking around Carnaby Street in London with a Calvin Klein shopping bag. This shows an effective strategy by a heritage brand to remain relevant and build loyalty with different audiences.

Towards a new approach

Creating brand loyalty today is far more difficult in a digital, social media-dominated world of increasing fickleness. Heritage brands are in trouble with a younger generation who has no interest in timeless qualities built up over many years. But brands can succeed if they adopt a new playbook. This needs to focus on the values and value of their product and on leveraging partnerships to remain relevant.

According to author Maurice Franks, “Loyalty cannot be blueprinted. It cannot be produced on an assembly line. In fact, it cannot be manufactured at all, for its origin is the human heart.”

Feature Image Source: Keagan Henman

By Daniel Todaro

Daniel formed Gekko in April 2002 and, over a decade on, it has grown to become one of the UK’s leading retail, field marketing, and experiential agencies providing results-driven solutions to technology and leisure brands. Whilst FMCG has been the traditional domain of the field marketing and impulse purchases, Gekko has carved out an impressive niche in a sector dominated by considered purchases. Through understanding great customer experience to motivate distinct shopper tribes, Gekko converts shoppers into customers of global consumer electronics brands. Daniel is a regular industry commentator in his capacity and experience as a business leader, tech champion and in brand marketing.

Sourced from Brandingmag