Innovation - A Tool for Prosperous Growth

Homepage  | Add to Favorites

 

Search
Recommended Products
Related Links


 

 

Featured Articles

I Just Lost My Job: How Am I Going To Tell My Kids?
One of the responsibilities of a human resources professional is to let employees know that their job has been eliminated. It is seldom easy to do and often painful for the person who is hearing the news. Just recently, I was involved in...



First Contact: The Source of Customer Loyalty
With customers being smarter, more cost conscious, more product knowledgeable and more demanding, improving customer service has become a major focus within many businesses. In Customer Satisfaction is Worthless; Customer Loyalty is Priceless,...

The Wages of Science - Part II
In the absence of efficient capital markets and adventuresome capitalists, some developing countries have taken this propensity to extremes. In the Philippines, close to 100 percent of all R&D is government-financed. The meltdown of foreign direct...


Innovation Management – trying out new ideas
As innovation is characterised as a break with the past, it is useful to analyse the potential take-up of new creations. These categories apply to organisations as much as people. Creativity can be defined as problem identification and...

 
Google
Financial Services Marketing Insights: A Marketing Compass


What we now call “marketing” began long before the name was coined. In the mid-1800s, traveling salesmen dressed “snake oil" and other tonics in fancy packaging and extolled their virtues to a gullible public. New marketing applications soon proliferated in the belief that marketing could make many new things possible in virtually any business situation. For more than a century, implementation, experience and ultimately strategy have helped marketing evolve from crude beginnings into today’s sophisticated practices.

Consumer product firms have been the pioneers in the marketing field and have taken the undisputed lead as the creators of marketing’s best practices. While sophisticated marketing techniques have spawned consumer giants, most financial services firms had to be dragged, kicking and screaming, into the era of sophisticated marketing.

The Advancing State of Financial Services Marketing

Financial services marketing has, however, evolved rapidly over the last decade. As a result, the very nature of the marketing function in financial services firms is undergoing a dramatic modification as more attention is paid to marketing-driven processes that impact the entire firm. Our observations suggest that the more progressive financial services organizations are currently going through an intellectual and practical transition that is forcing the reexamination of the role of marketing within their firms. Many have begun to realize that financial marketing responsibilities include not only developing the firm’s mission statement and key messages, but also defining its business focus, relevant differentiation, competitive advantages and value proposition.

At the same time, however, a number of financial services marketing directors must engage in long-term turf battles with other departments before they can implement worthy financial marketing initiatives that will help accelerate the achievement of corporate goals. In many financial organizations, the persistent problem of differentiating financial marketing from sales still remains largely unresolved. In addition, some financial services marketing directors must still enlist substantial management support just to maintain equilibrium and obtain the opportunity to accomplish even limited objectives.

Focusing on the Customer

Peter Drucker, a sage of the financial marketing discipline, discussed customer defined value almost 50 years ago. During the last decade his concept of a customer-centric focus has become part of popular marketing


literature and is now the guiding principle of financial marketing. Drucker’s fundamental mandate that ‘the customer’s interests must come first’ can be summarized by the following statements paraphrased from his extensive writings:


  • The only valid definition of business purpose is to create a customer.

  • What the business thinks it is producing is not as important as what customers think they are buying; what customers consider to be value is decisive.

  • Every business has only two basic functions: marketing and innovation.

  • Marketing is your whole business as seen from the customer’s point of view.


While easy to articulate, customer-centric practices are difficult to implement in most financial services organizations. Obstacles include a prevailing product-push mentality, a focus on short-term profitability, under-investment in financial marketing activities, and the lack of solid market intelligence about the needs and wants of target markets. We believe, however, that in the future the most successful financial services marketing organizations will be those that make Drucker’s principles their own through extrapolation, adaptation and creative application. As effective financial marketing evolves to a cross-functional, multi-disciplinary activity, successful firms will create a culture of customer orientation throughout the organization and incorporate advocacy for customer welfare in all corporate decision-making.

With the financial services industry currently going through a transformation, management’s challenge is to provide the leadership to displace the status quo and create a culture of opportunity. Early adaptors who apply the concept of “integrated marketing” on an organization-wide basis will not only develop a customer-orientated culture, but also create opportunities for innovation, improved performance and incremental profitability.

Mr. Jay Nagdeman, the Founder and President of Suasion Resources, has recently been identified as "One of the financial industry's most innovative marketing minds” by Research Magazine. Mr. Nagdeman previously served as Director of Marketing in financial services firms and as a contributing editor for Barron’s. Prior to that, he taught at the business school of the University of Chicago.

Copyright © 2004 Suasion Resources Inc. All rights reserved.

For additional information, please visit us online at www.suasionresources.com.


 


Visit these sites in the Information Organizers Network
Government Grants for Youth | Cars for Non Profits | Great Affiliate Sites | Environment Grants | Stay at Home Jobs | Government Grants for Individuals | Fix Credit Report | Social Services Employment | Federal Government Grants | Home Based Business Ideas | Education Grants | Arts Funding | Federal Grant Money | Dogs Beds | Business Grants for Women | Government Mental Health Grants | 100 Popular Baby Names | County and Community Foundation Map | Government Funding | Fundraising Auction Tips | List of Girls First Names | Federal Grant Money | Building a Mind of Prosperity | Sitemap | Privacy Policy
Edited by:Michael Saunders

©2011 Information Organizers, LLC