Opinion

Starting a new conversation with marketing

The retail property industry is missing a trick when it comes to marketing. Ironically, marketing has an image problem.

BY ZOE ELLIS-MOORE

That’s a result of both the industry’s misperception of what marketing is and the value it can deliver and the marketing profession’s own shortcomings in making a robust case for what marketing can do and why it’s increasingly at the heart of successful retail property strategies.

The industry has suffered historically from underinvestment in marketing. That’s largely as a result of the challenge involved in attributing clear financial metrics to marketing spending. Retail property is hardly alone in this. For many industries, capturing marketing’s ROI is notoriously elusive. Without those “hard numbers” easily to hand, marketing is largely seen as more art than science. Marketers frequently have to defend and justify their budgets. Their activity is often only visible in tactical promotions like events, websites, adverts, etc.

Consequently, discussions with the business tend to revolve around what a marketing effort will cost, not the value it will deliver, even though it’s the latter that should be the only topic of conversation. By way of illustration, I was responsible for the marketing of the UK’s first Business Improvement District in Kingston-upon-Thames, London. That involved a detailed five-year action plan that drew on the full repertoire of strategic marketing activities—from analysis to implementation. The result? Reversing a downward trend and an increased footfall level of two million. The point is: Marketing was at the heart of that success. The retail property industry needs to take note and begin integrating marketers at the very heart of its plans for the future.

That’s going to be more and more important as the demands on the retail property industry to create compelling experiences and destinations in their own right increase. From tenant mix to the delivery of customer service, marketing has an important role to play in understanding and designing the retail experiences that digitally-savvy and increasingly demanding consumers want.

The responsibility to secure that central position rests with both the industry and the marketing profession. To do that requires a new approach and toolset. Classically, product marketing revolved around what’s known as the four P’s – product, price, promotion, and place – and, in a later evolution, service marketing around the seven P’s. While these have been augmented over the years, there has not been an equivalent set of measures designed specifically for the retail property industry.

That is, until now. I’ve developed the 12 P’s[1] of retail property marketing to achieve two principal aims. First, to demonstrate the diverse mix of marketing skills, insights, and activities that contribute to successful retail properties. Second, to give marketers a framework to support productive discussions with the business that highlight the value that marketing brings to every aspect of retail property development and operation.

It’s a timely development. With marketing very much a “frontier” career in property, with few senior careers to set the example, it’s up to today’s professionals to blaze the trail. With a tool kit like the twelve Ps, we should be able to switch the focus of conversations from cost to value and demonstrate marketing’s essential contribution.

[1] 12 P’s of Retail Property Marketing: Performance – Planning, Productivity, and Price; Proposition – Promotion, Processes, and People; Property – Place, Physical Environment, and Product.

OpinionAt

What is your opinion on this topic? Discuss it with us! Send your opinion to opinion@across-magazine.com !

Sign up for our ACROSS Newsletter. Subscribe to ACROSS Magazine.

Opinion MORE

Multi Poland: Marketing is a Key Value Driver for Real Estate Assets

In times of unpredictability, marketing spending is usually the first candidate for budget cuts. Marketing management in the commercial real estate sector must be highly focussed on the issues that are fundamental to the business of property owners which directly contributes to increasing their value.

Chase The Right Numbers

Racing after numbers, reading year-end reports, statistics and percentages: this chase is not but characterized by a kind of tunnel view, which limits the possibilities of growth. If you want to adapt, you need to consider every aspect of your target audience to keep on top of the changes in consumer behavior. Footfall is reflecting your detailed expertise, not producing it. What businesses need is direct connection to their customers: establish a relationship, explore needs and demands, and use the right tools to aid this pursuit.

Why outlets are the place for the independent retailer

Since the beginning of the pandemic, the message to the UK has been to shop local and support your community during the incredibly difficult period that we all faced. Even as town and city centers began to open up again, independent retailers have maintained their position in the spotlight of the retail industry, be it bricks and mortar or online.

Focus buys Turawa Park shopping center in Poland

Ukrainian real estate investor Focus Estate Fund has acquired the Turawa Park shopping center in Opole, southern Poland, from Edinburgh-based Abrdn for an undisclosed sum.

It is time for shopping centers to embrace e-commerce

“It is imperative for shopping centers to become part of the e-commerce economy; otherwise, your business will decline in the upcoming years.”

When there’s a will, there’s a way: The path to net zero carbon retail real estate

“Our addiction to fossil fuels is pushing humanity to the brink. We face a stark choice: Either we stop it–or it stops us. It’s time to say: enough.”