In 2008, while most Australian brands slashed marketing budgets and hunkered down for the global financial crisis, Domino's Pizza did something remarkable. They increased their marketing spend by 40%, launched aggressive new product lines, and systematically acquired struggling competitors' market share. By 2010, they'd doubled their stock price and emerged as the undisputed leader in their category.
This wasn't luck. It was predatory strategy.
Right now, across boardrooms from Sydney to Perth, marketing teams are having the wrong conversation. They're discussing how to "weather the storm," how to "maintain position," how to "protect share." Meanwhile, a handful of savvy CMOs are asking entirely different questions: How do we use this moment to fundamentally restructure our market? Which competitors are showing weakness? What customer relationships can we steal while others retreat?
Economic uncertainty doesn't create victims and survivors. It creates predators and prey. The question for every Australian CMO is simple: which one are you?
Here's what most brands get wrong about economic downturns: they assume consumer behaviour becomes more rational. The opposite is true. When uncertainty peaks, consumers become more emotional, more tribal, and paradoxically, more willing to pay premiums for the right kind of value.
Consider what's happening in Australian supermarkets right now. While generic brands should theoretically thrive as budgets tighten, premium categories like artisan bread, specialty coffee, and organic produce are showing remarkable resilience. Why? Because in uncertain times, consumers don't just buy products, they buy emotional anchors.
This creates an unprecedented opportunity for brands willing to reject conventional recession wisdom. While your competitors retreat to price competition and value messaging, you can capture the emotional high ground and lock in customer relationships that will last a decade.
During the 1990-91 recession, something curious happened in Australia's automotive market. While mainstream car brands fought over shrinking middle-market share with aggressive discounting, luxury vehicle sales remained remarkably stable. BMW and Mercedes-Benz actually increased their market share during this period.
The lesson? Economic pressure doesn't eliminate premium markets, it concentrates them. The customers who remain are more valuable, more loyal, and more responsive to the right positioning. But you need the intelligence to find and capture them.
While your competitors cut research budgets, you should be doubling down on intelligence gathering. But not the traditional brand health tracking everyone talks about. You need predatory intelligence, the kind that reveals exactly where competitors are vulnerable.
The Vulnerability Audit Instead of tracking your own brand health, map your competitors' weaknesses. Use social listening and review mining to identify where competitor customers are expressing frustration. Deploy mystery shopping programs to understand where their service is failing. Commission comparative product testing that reveals quality gaps.
One Australian electronics retailer recently discovered through this approach that their main competitor had quietly reduced their after-sales support to cut costs. They immediately launched a campaign highlighting their "Australian-based support team" and captured thousands of defecting customers within three months.
The Defection Trigger Analysis Traditional research asks why customers choose you. Predatory research asks what would make them leave competitors. There's a critical difference. Understanding defection triggers allows you to design targeted raids on competitor bases rather than broad market campaigns.
Key questions that reveal defection triggers:
The answers reveal precise pressure points you can exploit.
The Segment Poaching Map Not all competitor customers are worth stealing. Use advanced segmentation to identify which competitor segments are:
This isn't broad market segmentation, it's surgical targeting of specific pockets of competitor strength.
Conventional wisdom says to move down-market during recessions. Conventional wisdom is dead wrong. Economic uncertainty creates a flight to quality among consumers who can still afford it, and these consumers become incredibly valuable as the middle market evaporates.
The Polarisation Principle: Markets don't shrink uniformly during downturns, they polarise. The middle disappears while the value and premium ends strengthen. Trying to hold the middle is like standing on melting ice. You either move up or down, and moving up is often the smarter play.
Research by McKinsey across multiple recessions shows that brands that maintained or increased prices during downturns achieved 20% better margins post-recession than those that discounted. But this only works if you understand the psychology of premium positioning during uncertainty.
The Reassurance Premium During uncertain times, consumers will pay more for psychological safety. This isn't about luxury, it's about confidence. Brands that provide reassurance through quality guarantees, superior service, or emotional connection can actually increase prices while others discount.
An Australian furniture brand recently tested this by introducing a "10-year guarantee" program while simultaneously raising prices by 15%. Their sales increased by 8% year-on-year while competitors offering 40% discounts saw declining revenue. The guarantee cost them almost nothing but provided immense psychological value.
The Tribal Effect Economic pressure strengthens in-group identification. Consumers cluster around brands that reflect their values and identity, and they'll pay premiums to maintain these associations. The key is understanding which tribal identities are strengthening and positioning accordingly.
Research techniques for identifying tribal opportunities:
Downturns create acquisition opportunities, but only for brands that have positioned themselves as consolidators. This requires specific research and positioning work that most brands overlook.
The Consolidator Signal Markets need to know you're a buyer, not a seller. This requires careful signalling through your research and communications. Commission industry studies that position you as a thought leader. Publish research that demonstrates your financial strength and strategic vision. Make it clear through your actions that you're planning for growth, not survival.
The Integration Blueprint Before opportunities arise, develop clear integration models based on careful research of potential targets. Understand their customer bases, their operational strengths, and most importantly, their cultural dynamics. When opportunities emerge, and they will, you can move faster than competitors who haven't done this groundwork.
The Talent Raid The best acquisition might not be a company but its people. Use LinkedIn data mining and recruitment research to identify high-performers at struggling competitors. Understand what would make them move beyond just compensation, career growth, stability, culture. Build a talent acquisition war chest while others freeze hiring.
Traditional brand research asks the wrong questions during downturns. Here's the predatory research toolkit that actually drives competitive advantage:
Map not your own customer journey, but your competitors'. Identify every touchpoint where customers interact with competing brands, then research which touchpoints create the most friction. These become your attack vectors.
Implementation Method:
While everyone assumes price sensitivity increases uniformly during downturns, reality is far more nuanced. Some segments become more price sensitive, others less so, and some develop entirely new value equations. Understanding these variations allows for sophisticated pricing strategies that capture maximum value.
The Multi-Dimensional Price Test: Don't just test price points, test price architectures. Bundle configurations, payment terms, guarantee structures, and service levels all affect perceived value. The brands winning during this downturn are those offering creative price structures that feel like better value without being cheaper.
Example methodology:
Most brands measure satisfaction. Predators measure defection intention, a completely different and far more valuable metric. Satisfaction tells you about the past; defection intention tells you about the future.
Early Warning Indicators:
Build a real-time dashboard that tracks these indicators weekly, not quarterly. When defection intentions spike, you have days, not months, to intervene.
During uncertainty, emotional territories become more valuable than functional benefits. But most brands don't know which emotional territories they can credibly own or which ones are becoming available as competitors retreat.
The Territory Assessment Framework:
One Australian insurance brand discovered that "empowerment" was being abandoned by competitors focusing on "protection." They repositioned around helping customers "take control" and captured significant share from paternalistic competitors.
Start with competitive intelligence that reveals vulnerabilities. This isn't traditional competitor analysis, it's reconnaissance for market raids.
Week 1-2: The Weakness Scan
Week 3-4: The Opportunity Map
Week 5-6: The Attack Vector Prioritisation
Week 7-8: The War Game Simulation
Before attacking, ensure your own position is defensible. This means understanding exactly which customers you cannot afford to lose and why they stay.
The Retention Fortress Audit:
The Premium Position Test:
Execute targeted raids on competitor weaknesses while maintaining defensive strength.
The Surgical Strike Approach:
The Sustainability Test:
Australian markets have unique characteristics that create specific opportunities during economic uncertainty:
Australians' cultural scepticism of market leaders intensifies during tough times. This creates opportunities for challengers who position themselves as authentic alternatives to "corporate" competitors. But this must be backed by genuine differentiation, not just messaging.
Research shows that Australian consumers are 40% more likely than Americans to switch brands based on corporate behaviour concerns. This creates vulnerability for multinationals and opportunities for locals who can authentically claim community connection.
Australia's economy doesn't slow uniformly, it fractures along geographic, demographic, and industry lines. While some segments struggle, others thrive. Mining regions might boom while retail struggles. Inner-city professionals might maintain spending while outer suburbs cut back.
This creates opportunities for sophisticated targeting that most brands miss. Instead of broad "recession marketing," you can identify and capture pockets of growth while competitors waste resources on declining segments.
Australian consumers are increasingly sophisticated digital users, and economic pressure accelerates digital adoption. Brands that can identify and exploit digital experience gaps in competitor offerings can capture significant share.
Key digital vulnerabilities to research:
Traditional marketing metrics don't capture predatory success. Here are the KPIs that actually matter:
Economic uncertainty is not a weather event to be endured, it's a strategic moment to be seized. While your competitors debate how much to cut their marketing budgets, you should be planning which pieces of their business to acquire. While they retreat to generic value messaging, you should be strengthening premium positions and emotional connections.
The research tools and strategies outlined here aren't theoretical, they're being deployed right now by the brands that will dominate the next decade of Australian business. These brands understand a fundamental truth: downturns don't distribute pain equally. They concentrate it among the weak while creating extraordinary opportunities for the strong.
But strength isn't about size or resources, it's about strategic clarity and the willingness to act while others hesitate. It's about using intelligent research not to confirm what you hope is true, but to reveal what others miss. It's about having the courage to invest when everyone else is cutting, to raise prices when everyone else is discounting, and to attack when everyone else is defending.
The economic pressures facing Australian businesses are real. Consumer confidence is fragile. Competition is intensifying. But within this chaos lies the opportunity to fundamentally reshape your competitive landscape. The brands that recognise this, that shift from defensive to predatory thinking, won't just survive the downturn. They'll use it as a springboard to market dominance.
The tools are available. The strategies are proven. The opportunities are emerging. The only question is whether you have the predatory instinct to seize them.
Your competitors are hoping you'll follow conventional wisdom, cut costs, discount prices, and wait for better times. Prove them wrong. While they're playing defence, you should be planning your attack. While they're trying to survive, you should be preparing to feast.
The hunt begins now. Are you ready?