Title: Rajeev M Dhawan
1Successful Marketing of Research Centers
Presented at the 58th AUBER Fall
Conference Tucson, Arizona October 19, 2004
Office 404-651-3291 email rdhawan_at_gsu.edu web
www.robinson.gsu.edu/efc
2Marketing of a Center
- Be in business, ala self-sufficiency
- Revenues strategies
- Message Consistency
- Analysis Targeting of Customers
- Get media profile
- --Loss leader strategy/products
- Media trips to DC, NY etc.
- Build bridges with academia
- Solely a function of your creativity
3Challenges of a Changing Revenue Model
- Unlike in the past, when data collection was
costly and thus valuable to reprocess and sell by
itself, the emphasis is now on the proprietary
economic analysis and forecast that is sold to
generate revenues as data has become a public
commodity. - Being a state university unit funded partially by
tax dollars, there exists the expectation that
the Centers products should be available
free-of-charge. Thus, conferences and forecast
booklets are considered by many to be a public
good. - Obtaining sponsorship funding, which forms the
bulk of the Centers external revenues, depends
critically on the external visibility of the
Director, who happens to be the only economist on
the team.
4EFC Marketing Strategies
- Create consistent marketing message
- Information
- Conferences (Qtr.)
- Forecast Booklets
- Website Presence
5(No Transcript)
6EFC Marketing Strategies
- Analysis - Get to know your customers
- Categorize them
- Who buys our booklets and/or comes to our
conferences? - 75 businesses
- 20 students/professors
- 5 press
- What size businesses?
- 45 small businesses
- 35 large public companies
- 5 medium-sized companies
- What Industries?
- 20 Education
- 15 Real Estate
- 10 Services
- 10 Government
7Other One person each from Engineering,
Hospitality, Insurance and n/a
8EFC Marketing Strategies
- Conference Preparation
- Brochures (4 weeks prior)
- Emails 1x/week (4 weeks prior)
- RA phone calls to Pay people in database
- 1,000 calls made over 3 weeks
- Success rate 1.1
9EFC Marketing Strategies
- Analysis - Get to Know Your Customers
- Track buyer behavior at conference
- 20 of people who register are no-shows
- 35 of comp people were no-shows
- 50 of students were no-shows
- 75 of audience has attended before
- Low booklet subscriber attendance
- Implement strategies
- No show problem
- Require comps to register online
- Inform students of 25 no-show charge
- Repeat attendees
- Call previous attendees from last two years to
remind them - Low booklet subscriber attendance
- Send letter about free conference ticket,
follow-up call
10EFC Marketing Strategies
- Analysis - Get to know your customers
- Survey opinion of products
- Conference rating always high
- Rajeevs speech gets high marks
- Varying industry speakers a BIG plus
- But some problems revealed and addressed
- Want more QA
- Coffee area too crowded
- Make slides easier to read
- Give us color slides (no can do - but we will
post online the day before for audience to print
out in color)
11EFC Marketing Strategies
- Target Most Probable Clients
- Surprise Trial and Error
- Investment/Financial firm campaign disaster
- AUBER members ?
- Libraries and local government - success
- Methods
- Letters
- Follow-up RA phone call
- 2nd letter 3 months later
- Repeat conference customers
- Encourage to buy subscription
12Strategies to Achieve Fiscal Balance
- Sell more Center Products
- -Paying conference attendees
- -Forecast booklets
- 2. Raise price of products
- 3. Seek more Sponsorship/Corporate Funding
13Viability of Selling More/Raising Prices
- --Intense selling efforts have resulting in EFC
now selling 25 more booklets compared to FY2001 - --Prices raised in Feb 2002, and then again in
May 2004 total increase over 3 years of 100. - --New paying customer attendance in last 2
conferences has correspondingly declined in light
of latest price increase -
- Conclusion Raising prices no longer viable
strategy. Forecast booklet and conference product
now seem to be unit elastic (see chart on next
page)
14Box Shows the 50 Drop of New Paying Customers
for the May August 2004 Conference Caused by
the Latest Price Hike
1st Price Hike
2nd Price Hike
15Sponsorship/CorporateDonation
- Sponsorship How you define it is critical. Pay
according to ability is the key while also
discriminating in services provided to them.
Again, limits are there because of the public
good perception and lack of resources. - Corporate Donations The cost is loss of
credibility with the media unless they are
quiet ones like sponsorships. Also, any
donation is a one time event and not a recurring
revenue base. It will help but solve the problem.
16EFC Marketing Strategies
17EFC Review 2003
- Status/Achievements
- Data is collected consistently, with all 3
forecasts booklets being published on time - In 2003, the Director was awarded the University
of Arizonas Most Accurate US Forecaster - In 2003, FRB Atlanta acknowledged the Center as
one of the most accurate in the Blue Chip Survey - 100 corporations and various government agencies
use the forecast for their strategic planning and
budgeting needs - Since FY2001, the Center has increased
sponsorship revenues by 60, and overall revenues
by 90 by initiating a price increase, as well as
recruiting new clients. - But, challenges remain due to the changing
revenue model
- Core Goals
- Collect economic data at the national, regional
and local economy levels - Provide consistent analysis of economic data
- Produce timely economic forecast and analysis
reports - Increase sponsorship, subscription and paying
conference attendees so that the Centers budget
is self-sufficient
18EFC Review 2003
- Achievements
- 121 speeches
- 350 media quotes
- 190 TV and radio appearances
- Go-To guy for the AJC, CNN, local TV, NPR and
Charlotte Radio - Participate in 12 forecast surveys
- Center profile article in NABEs journal
- EFC_at_RCB brand is being built
- Member Governors Council of Economic Advisors
- 2 university sponsors - UCSB and UNO - use
Centers forecast - FRB Atlanta calls upon the Director frequently
for speeches and advice - Speeches for GSU Real Estate, RCB and Exec. Ed.
Alumni
- Post-2001 Goals
- Enhance the visibility of the Center and Georgia
State University - Foster relationships with the FRB Atlanta, the
Governors Office, other national business
research centers and GSU alumni - Increase exposure to local and national media
outlets
19EFC Review 2003
- Post-2001 Goals
- Improve the quality and the attendance of the
quarterly forecasting conferences - Increase the interest and participation of
Georgia State faculty at the conferences - Improve the Centers web presence
- Achievements
- Wall Street style conference is in place with a
multiple speaker format (both from the academic
as well as the business community) - Attendance is up 300 in last the 3 years - from
70 to 200 75 attendees are from the business
community AJC regularly covers the conference
proceedings (front page news story in Aug 2003!) - 12 GSU faculty from RCB and AYSPS have spoken at
the conference. 1/4th of the audience is faculty,
students and staff of GSU. The Chancellor himself
has attended, President Patton attends
frequently, Provost and the RCB Dean do opening
welcome remarks on a regular basis - From almost no presence in 2000, the fully
developed website even allows people to register
online for the conferences
20Proposed Solution for Fiscal Balance
- 1. Invest in a state-funded economist to assist
in the following - - Forecast Modeling
- - Global Productivity Developments
- - Local Demographic and Real Estate Trends
- - Analysis of Local City Budgets
- - Contract/Sponsor Requested Industry Analysis
- 2. Utilize freed up Directors time for
- corporate fund solicitation ()
- consulting ()
- contract research ()
- elevate national visibility for EFC, RCB and GSU
(PRICELESS!!)