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Our primary role as marketers is to constantly solve new and different types of challenges and demonstrate this insight through an effective marketing brief. From a client-side perspective, this may be responding to a change in the market, for example, a new competitor disrupting the status quo or a sudden change in consumer demand as a result of a new trend. From an agency perspective, this will often involve responding to a client request to help formulate a strategy for a new campaign or initiative, usually in support of the challenge they’re attempting to solve!
I’ve written about the importance of an effective marketing brief before and its positive impact on both clients and agencies. However, whilst a written brief is essential, one of the keys to the success of any good brief is defining and articulating the precise marketing challenge you’re trying to solve. Only once you have achieved absolute clarity on this key aspect can you then proceed onto the proceeding stages with confidence.
Within this post, we’re going to cover some of the main steps marketers should follow to define the true marketing challenge they’re looking to tackle. In the context of a client/ agency relationship, there’s some debate as to who ‘owns’ this part of the process. I believe the client has a responsibility to define the challenge to the best of their ability based on their intimate knowledge of the brand, market research, and product/ service. However many agencies will have a planning function to help develop an informed and measurable strategy on where to take a brand/business. For this post, I’m going to consider each of the steps from an agency’s perspective, although I intend that the guidance I offer can be applied by marketers of all stripes.
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Start by evaluating where you are now and ultimately where you’re looking to get to. In other words, current state versus objective.
The strategy you will eventually develop can be seen as the bridge between these two elements and therefore a clear understanding of each is essential. This takes a lot of work from all sides involved and requires insight from key stakeholders from the client-side, including:
As this is just the beginning of the process the following questions can be helpful to start building an initial picture of what you’re dealing with:
The intelligence collected in the first step is extremely valuable but without organizing this in a way that can be effectively distilled into meaningful categories, you may find yourself drowning in information. The objective at this stage is to deep-dive into this information and look for a compelling insight:
“Insights are unspoken human truths, truths the subconscious recognises when it sees them. Often, insights are the arsenal of comedians and poets. A lot of creatives look up jokes about particular issues as inspiration for their ideas for this reason. One of the best ways to find them? Start with something that seems obvious and keep asking ‘Why?’ and ‘What if?’” – Mark Pollard, Lead Strategist at The Mighty Jungle
“Insights are unspoken human truths, truths the subconscious recognises when it sees them. Often, insights are the arsenal of comedians and poets. A lot of creatives look up jokes about particular issues as inspiration for their ideas for this reason.
One of the best ways to find them? Start with something that seems obvious and keep asking ‘Why?’ and ‘What if?’” – Mark Pollard, Lead Strategist at The Mighty Jungle
Four main areas make up a marketing problem, which either on their own or in combination with one another, can be the source of a potential insight:
Some examples of really unique insights that underpinned some very successful brand campaigns include:
The heart of defining the marketing challenge hinges on the identification of the obstacles preventing a business from achieving their commercial objectives:
The previous step told us where to look for insight. This stage is about how we can go about finding the insight and gain a sound understanding of the root cause behind the marketing challenge.
Whilst facts related to the business, market, and/ or product/ service are all extremely valuable, there’s often an audience-centric element at the core of the challenge. This requires us to consider what we need the target audience to think or do differently what may be preventing that desired change in behavior from happening. We need to be able to complete the following:
The customer currently ____ but we need them to ____. They currently won’t / can’t because ______.
So how do we get to the bottom of this puzzle and identify the marketing challenge? Through a combination of curiosity, precise questioning, and perseverance. Ask ‘why’ and keep going until you reach a satisfactory answer. For example: “Why are we behind our monthly sales target?”:
Through a series of simple ‘why’ questions, we have found a potential source for the overarching problem that was originally identified.
As soon as you are clear on the marketing challenge you’ll be in a position to start developing the strategy. The key components of a good strategy will include:
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The final stage in the process is to put all this work together as part of a clear, concise brief. This involves a distillation of all the elements we’ve reviewed so far and the GET – (WHO) – TO – BY format is a very effective way of summarising the communication task:
GET – the primary audience (a person or cohort) plus your insight
Get ABC1 25-45 multi-taskers in the UK
WHO – an attitudinal expression/ insight into current behavior (this part may not always be required)
Who are looking for a convenient way to snack more healthily without compromising on taste
TO – the belief or behavior we want to re-frame
To discover and try our innovative new healthy snack that gives them the perfect way to snack on the go
BY – a summary of how the campaign Big Idea provides an opportunity to reframe behavior, encouraging the target audience to act/ respond differently
By showing them that our innovative new health snack is as tasty is traditional snacks but is lower in sugar, fat and saturates
With a strong, effective Get – (Who) – To – By you will be able to clearly articulate the communication task and summarise the marketing challenge for everyone involved in the campaign. This helps ensure everyone is aligned to the task at hand and you can progress to the campaign execution stage with confidence.
The ability to identify and define the marketing challenge allows marketers from all sides to solve problems and produce great work. Without a clear view of where you’re trying to go, it becomes very difficult to get everyone on board and aligned to a set of agreed objectives.
Unfortunately defining the marketing challenge is not a quick or easy process and it takes time and due diligence. And whilst there is no definitive ‘right’ or ‘wrong’ way, the process outlined within this post will hopefully allow you to seek out and identify an insight that might explain why a problem is occurring and give you the opportunity to develop a winning campaign strategy.
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