Business
As Usual
by Bob Cermak, 9 July 2003
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In recent days we’ve been inundated with media
coverage and information regarding The Federal Trade Commission’s
(FTC) National Do Not Call Registry. President Bush signed the Do
Not Call Implementation Act on March 11, 2003. As consumers we can
now block interruptive telemarketing calls at our homes.
As marketers of products or services to businesses,
we need to review what this act means in the conduct of business-to-business
activity. The answer is, Business as Usual.
The implementation of the National Do Not Call Registry
does not preclude businesses from conducting revenue generating
sales and marketing campaigns directed to other businesses. Fortunately,
the strategies used by businesses for prospect reaching are ethical
and varied in design and approach. Business marketing uncovers opportunity,
investigates opportunity, creates awareness, assists with decision-making
options, and provides a positive experience for the purchase-to-delivery
of products or services.
The FTC’s roll-out does not prevent businesses
from utilizing well established marketing practices directed to
business customers such as rolodex marketing, cold calling, direct
mail, and print advertising. Target marketing by business-to-business
firms is historically focused on performance execution.
Businesses, attempting to improve their revenue streams,
prospect during normal business hours. The callers identify themselves
by name, company affiliation, the objective of the call, followed
by a presentation of product or service. In most cases the caller
knows the decision maker, has established a by-name relationship,
and/or is implementing a follow-up procedure based on a pre-introductory
considerations.
The FTC recognizes that best practice sales and marketing
strategies used for business-to-business development are effective
and efficient when properly designed, developed, implemented, and
performance measured. That is why the FTC has listed “calls
from one business to another unless nondurable office or cleaning
supplies are being offered” as an exception to the new regulation.
In the conduct of establishing business-to-business
relationships, fraudulent practices, scams, or misrepresentations
are unacceptable. These practices are a path to business demise.
The defensive strategies described for consumer protection
aren’t generally required for the business-to-business market
and relationship building effort. These relationships are based
on the mutual need, and delivery of a product or service. The outcome
is economic growth and employment stabilization.
For Business Markets, it’s BUSINESS AS USUAL.
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