Small firms told to increase marketing

Print E-mail
Sales and Marketing
Written by Gary Howes   
Wednesday, 13 August 2008

As sales slip strategies need to be reviewed.

 Increase marketing spend and take a pay cut is the advice to small firm owners from fellow entrepreneurs as the latest research into the health of UK’s small and medium-sized enterprises is published by the Small Enterprise Research Team (SERTeam) at the Open University.
 
The survey of over 700 business owners reflects trading conditions in the second quarter of 2008 and shows annual sales performance down again and expectations at their lowest ever for this time of year.
 
However, tactics to stay afloat include increasing marketing expenditure to win new business, advocated by over 49% of the most entrepreneurial respondents and refocusing the business into new markets/business areas (42%).

Over half (53%) of small business owners say that if the current uncertainty became a more severe downturn then they would expect to cut their own personal drawings/salary.
 
Small businesses which have been forewarned have been forearmed and may be able to follow the example of Maidstone-based Secure Engineering Ltd, installers of CCTV.

Director of Finance Linda Doherty remarks: “Fast assessment of the economic downturn almost one year ago has meant that the owners of our business have been able to act quickly in limiting any potential damage. We undertook a complete staffing and costing review to maintain quality of service as well as profit margins.  The company is actually emerging stronger than before as a result”.
 
For many small firms, particularly in retail, construction, hotels and leisure, trading conditions remain a challenge but for some, especially in manufacturing and business services, sales appear to be rising. Over three-quarters (77%) are operating at less than full capacity and red tape as well as the economy continue to test all respondents’ resilience.
 
Professor Colin Gray, Chairman of SERTeam says: “In the midst of this turbulent churn, there are thousands of small firms that have stood the test of time, surviving various cycles of downturns and upturns. This it is not just a matter of luck. Our surveys reveal that resilient small business owners have adapted to managing the vagaries of business life and that they help carry the whole economy through the bad times, as they are now.”
 

Share this: Digg It! digg   Post to del.icio.us del.ico.us   Seed in Newsvine Newsvine   Post to reddit Reddit   Post to Furl Furl   Post to Technorati technorati   Facebook
Comments (0)Add Comment

Post a comment
quote
bold
italicize
underline
strike
url
image
quote
quote
By posting on this website you are agreeing to abide by our website comment policy and all posts are subject to the approval of the website editor. We will remove posts that contain offensive or threatening language, personal attacks on the writer or other posters, posts that are off topic and posts that are considered spam or specifically used to promote any commercial products or services. Any poster who repeatedly contravenes the policy will be banned from posting on the website.

busy