Logic.
There’s a period at the end for a reason. It says “that’s it.” It’s cold. It’s final. Unfortunately, it’s also very hard to define right now. The vast majority of Americans (and American businessmen) haven’t actually had to survive this kind of crisis before (at least not as an adult). It’s interesting to hear so many people blame this on everyone else. Whether it’s an evil corporation, or that liberal pinko baby-killer in office, nobody seems to want to take a minute and think. And it’s a problem. Instead of trying to solve our problem or putting our minds together, we continue to pull back and attempt to survive with blame as one of the primary defense mechanisms. It’s used as though identifying the cause of the trouble will somehow miraculously bring us back from the precipice
Well, it won’t.
Since I try to write about design, I’m going to make my point in terms of design. Currently, the marketing world is seeing a dramatic loss. Ad revenues in the first half of ‘09 were down 14% according to the Wall Street Journal, and marketers, ad agencies, and other ad-based companies are seeing huge losses. People are getting cut. Budgets are slashed. Special projects are lucky if put on hold, but are usually tossed in the bin. And it doesn’t make a lot of sense.
We in the ad business could start blaming people. We could blame our clients for being stingy. We could blame the past or current president for making a bad economic situation. We could blame our congress for general foolishness. We could blame global warming if we got really creative (it is what we do after all…). The reality is far more distressing it seems: we have nothing to blame but a clear lack of logic. In this market, one of the first things slashed is marketing and advertising budgets. It’s money wasted that’s not directly spent on business. Right?
Unfortunately, wrong. Marketing is what drives business to stores, what brings in innovation, what informs the people of new products, services and functions, and what makes sure that your product is where it should be. So why, when people have stopped spending money, are these companies placing the burden on the marketing departments (or hires)? When your opponents have similarly slashed their marketing budgets, you continue to play on an even playing field. You’re still competing for the same amount of business while people are spending less. Wouldn’t it make more sense to inform people about your product and promote it more aggressively when your competition can’t keep up? Doesn’t it seem clear that disengaging your consumers only leads to a loss of business rather than a cost cut?
It’s an odd problem to have, and seems indicative of our current situation as a nation: we’re running around with our heads cut off. When was the last time your community banded together to create local economic growth? Locally, I see the Indy metro area tearing itself to pieces to try and compete with different sides of the city rather than promoting the whole area to compete with other metro areas. In the process, we not only divide our city but we also see a plummeting import of tourism in an other-wise tourist friendly city.
It’s time to step back, think, and work together to help things move forward. Blame won’t solve our collective problem, nor will it really make us feel any better to have someone be the scapegoat when we’re still swimming in issues. Let’s be responsible. Let’s be mature. Let’s use a bit of logic.