Everyone loves to swagger when the market’s booming.
Chest out. Pipeline fat. Every guru suddenly a genius, every
agency “crushing.”
But then the wind shifts. The headlines are heavy with gloom
and doom. Budgets sneeze and the whole world catches fear. And even brave brands
become timid little field mice whispering the same sentence: “We’re just going
to wait this one out.”
But markets don’t actually “go bad.” They don’t rot like
fruit, they morph like weather.
Clients don’t stop needing help. They start needing different
help. Problems don’t vanish, they upgrade into new, weirder, scarier shapes.
Slow markets are just crowded markets where everyone stopped
talking at once. Which means there’s suddenly more oxygen for the ones still
breathing.
Separating the builders from the bunker-dwellers: When
the environment changes, builders don’t fold. They mutate. Listening harder. Studying
what’s breaking.
You gotta look for the “oh shit” moments inside your
clients’ heads and run toward them while everyone else is guarding their
lunch money.
You think it's optimism, but it's evolution.
Your offer isn’t carved in stone , it’s clay … re-shape it
to serve the moment.
A “bad market” is not a crisis. It’s a diagnostic
tool. It reveals who was riding the wave … and who can surf when the ocean’s
angry. It shakes out the hobbyists. It rewards the ones who bother to
stay in the water when the weather shifts.
You don’t grow in spite of slow markets. You grow because of
them. Because when the world panics, attention gets cheap. When your
competitors curl up, loyalty goes on sale.
When buyers get scared, they cling to the ones who actually
show up with a plan.
The market isn’t bad. Your old strategy is. Thank God,
because stale strategies deserve to die. Let the timid conserve their courage. Let
the cautious take long naps. Let the “we’ll pick things back up later” crowd
rehearse their comeback speeches … while you’re rewriting offers, solving the
new problems, reallocating budgets, and planting seeds where the soil is suddenly wide open. Because
slow markets aren’t a winter. They’re spring dressed as winter … waiting to see
who still believes in growth.
And if you do the work now? You won’t just survive the
storm. You’ll own the forecast when the sun comes back.
_________________________
Here are some responses to “Bad Market” concerns from your
clients (courtesy of Jamie Brindle):
From the Client: We’re pausing all marketing until things pick up.
Response: That’s when growth stalls for good. While others go quiet, let's build something that steals the attention they just gave up.
From the Client: Budgets are frozen right now.
Response: Understood. What’s still funded this quarter? Let’s align to that instead of waiting for the thaw.
From the Client: We just need to conserve cash.
Response: Then every dollar needs to perform. Let’s focus on the channels already producing and amplify what’s working.
From the Client: People just aren’t buying right now.
Response: They are. They’re buying from whoever helps them save, survive, or get leaner. Let’s reposition to speak to that.
From the Client: We’ll restart when the market rebounds.
Response: By then you'll be fighting every company who waited. Let’s build while they sleep so you’re ahead when the rebound hits.
From the Client: Maybe it’s just not the right time.
Response: Everyone in your industry is saying that. Which is exactly what makes this the right time.
From the Client: You really think we can grow right now?
Response: Absolutely. Slow markets concentrate opportunity ... but only for the ones still playing.
