Black Friday Sale! 50% Off All Access

The Market is Evolving, Your Marketing Strategy Should Too The world is changing quickly, and so is the overall marketplace. Here are three fundamental tenets to ensure companies can evolve alongside their market and succeed in their business efforts.

By Jaxon Parrott Edited by Micah Zimmerman

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Evolution is inescapable, and it permeates every aspect of life. Many of us tend to resist this fact, inherently leaning on the comfort of what we know. However, it is a cold reality that those who do not evolve are inevitably left behind. This applies both to life and business. If a company fails to evolve and adapt to the constantly changing market environment, it will eventually fail.

At my company, we take this idea a step further with one core tenet:

"To be at the forefront of technology and innovation, we must be willing to not only embrace change but lead it."

This is a simple statement, but profound if taken to heart and applied relentlessly. If you want to be the best, waiting for change to happen — or embracing it after it comes — means you're already behind the curve. To have a massive impact, it is crucial to lead the change, not just react to it.

So, how does this apply to marketing, and what are some tangible steps you can start taking today? Here are three key ideas to ponder and implement to ensure you resonate deeply with your audience and lead the pack in your industry.

Related: 3 Ways to Get Comfortable With Changing Times

1. Market backward approach

Many businesses try to think of a new innovative idea out of thin air, constantly racking their brains to create "the next big thing." However, this is the wrong approach. The market doesn't care about you or your ideas; it cares about how you can solve problems and provide results. Instead of being selfish and thinking in your own head, spend that time getting to know your target market. What are their biggest problems? What do they truly desire? Why haven't they been able to fix these problems or get their desired results already?

This is an opportunity to talk to as many market participants as possible, ask intimate questions and take detailed notes. Don't stop until you find the deepest answers to these questions. If done right, you will strike gold by uncovering a common problem and, eventually, a scalable solution. From here, you can devise an effortlessly innovative business plan, followed by a marketing strategy that truly resonates in your key market.

Related: Best Practices for Operating Your Business in a Rapidly Changing Market

2. Relentless focus

We live in a chaotic world where focus is nearly impossible to harness and master. In the constant noise of day-to-day operations, businesses get taken through the wringer with trivial tasks, eventually losing sight of the few important items. The only thing that matters, however, is the result.

In a perfect world, all hiring, marketing, sales and operations should be optimized to this end. To lead the pack and succeed in your marketing objectives, it is critically important that you never lose sight of this goal. Write your end result down everywhere. Ensure every team member is constantly reminded of the target and that the end result is at the core of your company culture. If you can stay focused on this, all branding, outreach and even sales will become exponentially more powerful, and your customers will see you as their saving grace. In a market environment where everyone else is distracted, double down on your focus to surpass your competition.

Related: Master These 5 Leadership Skills to Increase Your Results Tenfold

3. Feedback optimization

Many companies don't have adequate systems to gather market feedback and can't efficiently optimize their messaging. In all business disciplines — even more so in marketing — gathering and understanding feedback is vital to company success. Even if you follow the first two steps laid out above, there is always room for improvement in messaging. With the goal to resonate at the deepest level with your ideal customer, monitoring sentiment every chance you get is crucial.

From a PR standpoint, the best way to do this is to use a modified A/B testing model to create multiple story angles with different narratives. From there, you can track which stories gain the most attention, double down on the messaging that resonates and then cull the under-performing narratives. The key here is to be relentless in scrapping what does not resonate, no matter how "good" you think it is or how well it serves your ego. Remember, the only thing that matters is the customer's feedback, so listen and adapt. When it becomes evident that you know them better than they know themselves, your customer will not only put you on a pedestal; they'll help you build it.

To summarize, the market is changing rapidly, and the days of "doing things the old way" are over. If you follow the three fundamental tenets above, you will be in a tremendous position to lead your market and drive its evolution. If you don't, you risk being sent to live in memory with the average and forgotten. The choice is yours.

Jaxon Parrott

Entrepreneur Leadership Network® Contributor

CEO @ Presspool.ai

Jaxon Parrott is a marketing and AI expert based in Austin, Texas. He currently serves as the CEO of Presspool.ai, an AI-enabled marketing software platform with a customer base of over a dozen unicorns and high-growth emerging tech startups.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Living

These Are the 'Wealthiest and Safest' Places to Retire in the U.S. None of Them Are in Florida — and 2 States Swept the List.

More than 338,000 U.S. residents retired to a new home in 2023 — a 44% increase year over year.

Business News

DOGE Leaders Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy Say Mandating In-Person Work Would Make 'a Wave' of Federal Employees Quit

The two published an op-ed outlining their goals for their new department, including workforce reductions.

Starting a Business

He Started a Business That Surpassed $100 Million in Under 3 Years: 'Consistent Revenue Right Out of the Gate'

Ryan Close, founder and CEO of Bartesian, had run a few small businesses on the side — but none of them excited him as much as the idea for a home cocktail machine.

Starting a Business

This Sommelier's 'Laughable' Idea Is Disrupting the $385 Billion Wine Industry

Kristin Olszewski, founder of Nomadica, is bringing premium wine to aluminum cans, and major retailers are taking note.

Business News

These Are the Highest Paying Jobs Available Without a College Degree, According to a New Report

The median salaries for these positions go up to $102,420 per year.

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.