A Formula for Budget-based Marketing
Not long ago, I sent a memo to a select group of clients informing them that as of January 9, 2009, pharmaceutical representatives would no longer be distributing the so-called dry goods. These are the branded premium items, such as pens and note pads, on which many offices have come to depend. One client recognized the opportunity to be a hero and asked an extremely important question: “How much should we spend?”
This particular imaging center has been marketing for years and it was no surprise that its response did not even question whether it should try to fill the gap left by pharmaceutical representatives; that was a given. The budget question, however, was confirmation of the high level of sophistication of its marketing effort. In a profession turned upside down by the DRA, hospital outpatient imaging centers and freestanding imaging centers are increasingly dependent on sales and marketing, not just to maintain scan volume, but to help that volume become more profitable. One of the best ways to maximize the sales-and-marketing effort is to create a written marketing plan. One of the best ways to make that plan effective is to assign it a budget: a dollar amount that closely estimates the total investment to be made over the following 12 months. For 2009, your budgeting process should have begun about 30 days ago, but if you haven’t started, don’t worry. You still have time.
There are still many imaging decision makers who view sales and marketing as necessary evils. Some don’t even see the necessity and look at them as just plain evil. For those who have embraced the concept and established a sales-and-marketing process, however, life is much simpler. Those people understand that planning ahead helps everyone in the organization get behind a strategy for growth and protection that will improve efficiency; improve morale; and help create a unique, defining message that can be embraced by every department.
A marketing plans helps those in key positions think strategically instead of tactically—to work on the practice instead of just working in the practice. That plan must have a budget. For those who bristle at the notion of setting aside revenue for sales-and-marketing activity, I have a special message: You’re already doing it.
The fact is that every imaging center is investing money on sales and marketing, even if there is no written marketing plan. Here are but a few of the hidden places that money is going: online ads and listings;
- telephone-directory ads and listings;
- brochures;
- Web sites;
- annual holiday gifts; and
- sponsored events, such as CME or non-CME lunches or dinners.