Drilling for success

clock

Companies can get ahead in the recession by investing money in a marketing plan. Justin Rees explains how lead-generation spend should be analysed.

With a bleak economic outlook, companies will be looking at cost-cutting exercises to help them through the difficult times ahead. Marketing budgets are often the first to be slashed when companies look to save money despite a raft of research and case studies proving that they can benefit significantly in a recession by spending money in this area. Cutting costs is, of course, only half the solution and, whether a large national brand or a small IFA firm, companies need to generate revenue meaning that they still need customers. Companies have a number of choices in this environment: cu...

To continue reading this article...

Join Professional Adviser for free

  • Unlimited access to real-time news, industry insights and market intelligence
  • Stay ahead of the curve with spotlights on emerging trends and technologies
  • Receive breaking news stories straight to your inbox in the daily newsletters
  • Make smart business decisions with the latest developments in regulation, investing retirement and protection
  • Members-only access to the editor’s weekly Friday commentary
  • Be the first to hear about our events and awards programmes

Join

 

Already a Professional Adviser member?

Login

More on Protection

Kevin Carr on AI: I don't think we've even seen the tip of the iceberg

Kevin Carr on AI: I don't think we've even seen the tip of the iceberg

'The technology is evolving faster than many of us can imagine'

Kevin Carr
clock 13 May 2026 • 4 min read
Life insurance: Complexity vs cost and the confidence gap

Life insurance: Complexity vs cost and the confidence gap

Complexity and uncertainty create frustration for consumers and operational drag for advisers

Kevin Carr
clock 30 April 2026 • 4 min read
Holloway Friendly and Wiltshire Friendly to merge

Holloway Friendly and Wiltshire Friendly to merge

No job losses anticipated

Jaskeet Briah
clock 20 April 2026 • 2 min read