Recently, I attended an International Women’s Day conference where I was inspired and encouraged by the women and men alike who spoke truth, offered guidance, and provided leadership on how to come together within our society. Many topics were expanded upon, but one stuck out in particular: How to approach failure and how to get back up when you fall.
I get it. This is a tough subject. It’s hard to admit when we’ve failed. As the old saying from Gene Kranz goes, “Failure isn’t an option.” But unfortunately, sometimes it’s just something we can’t avoid. We’re human. It happens.
Not only do we make mistakes in our personal lives, but sometimes we run into failed ideas, failed products, and failed campaigns in our work-life.
And as much as some marketers would love to promise you the clicks, likes, impressions, leads, and sales they're going to get you from a future campaign, it takes a brave and authentic marketer to look you in the eyes and say, “We are going to launch this in a few different ways and closely monitor the response we're getting so that we can adjust and continually improve this campaign for you. We have set goals, but we expect that we'll have to optimize this along the way. There is no guarantee, but we are going to work with you until we figure it out together."
So, the real question is, whether you’re a marketer, a business executive, or a team member, how should you approach failure if your marketing campaign didn’t go as well as you expected it to?
Here are 3 tips that were taught during the conference that can easily transfer to how to approach a failed marketing campaign with your team.
Let’s get one thing straight. Dr. Guy Winch, licensed psychologist, author, and speaker explained that it’s never actually you, your co-workers, your employees, or anyone in your life that actually fails as a person. It’s the system that was used that had failed.
In the marketing world, that could mean that it was the lack of time you put into researching your target market, when you’ve been posting your social media statuses, what list you’re sending your emails to, the type of content you’re using for your audience, or a whole string of things along those lines.
What do all of these things have in common? Well, none of them have to do with the person themselves. They all had to do with the way things were done.
This is exactly why it’s so important to have a way to measure the results of your campaign. Take the small bets first. Start performing a mini version of your marketing campaign and test it out. To avoid a major fail, see how a small campaign goes first. That should ultimately show you the results you can expect for performing that campaign at a larger scale.
The key takeaway is to look for the facts behind the campaign. When did you post that social media post? Who did the email get sent out to? What kind of target market research did you perform and was it enough? Once you start evaluating these facts from your campaign, you’re able to easily adjust and try a new system of operations. Rather than jumping to conclusions and blaming specific people for the campaign failure, look at the statistics, then make reasonable adjustments to the campaign.
Buhle Dlamini, an award-winning entrepreneur and author, explained that to understand your full potential as an organization is a key part of continuing to pursue excellence in everything you do. If you find yourself unmotivated after a failed marketing campaign, try bringing your team together to discuss these 5 things:
Bring your team and co-workers together and reflect on these 5 things. How can you make your campaign fit under these aspects?
When you fail at a task, you become less creative at the next task. So when it comes to a marketing campaign, those who believed their campaign failed would most likely produce less innovative ideas on the next campaign. Failure leaves us feeling helpless.
However, Manon Rheaume, known as “The First Woman in Hockey,” explained that beating the odds, experiencing failure, and getting back up again is just something we have to get used to. She offered 3 simple tricks to getting back up again after things don’t go as planned:
Keep moving forward, keep inspecting your data, and keep setting up reasonable action plans to get you back on track towards accomplishing your marketing goals.
How do you normally approach a failed marketing campaign? Let us know your thoughts in the comments!
If you seem to be running into failed marketing campaigns often, try taking the small bets first. Test your campaign out, see what results you get, then adjust from there. It's important to take a look at what your data has been telling you about your campaigns. This will often show you underlying patterns that you might not have noticed before.
Don’t have a way to measure your marketing? Not a problem! Contact us and we’ll help you get started.
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