So what is a
Marketing Plan for?
Well, its purpose is to lay down, direct and co-ordinate all your marketing
activities and events. Think of it as a map. With a map it is easier to get
some place. With a marketing plan it is easier to get the business to where
you want it to head, hopefully to profits!
Perhaps you are the owner or director of a company seeking backing or further
investment? Well a good marketing plan can be really important in attracting
new investment or better bank facilities.
Perhaps you need help in making choices regarding which parts of the market
to focus on and how to compete in that target market (Marketing Strategy)?
Often the mere process of preparing a marketing plan will help you to develop
a successful marketing strategy through the discipline and process that you
go through.
A good marketing plan will describe all the marketing actions to be carried
out within a specific time period. It will contain details of your company,
its products or services, its marketing objectives and strategies and information
on how to measure the results of the marketing activities.
It might help if I give you a framework of basic elements that a Marketing Plan
should include.
Basic Elements of a Marketing Plan
So what do you need?
1.Executive Summary – introduces and explains the major features and recommendations
to executives (or your bank manager).
1.1 Introduction – a brief description of your organisation, its products
and or services.
The context and objectives of the plan should be described and a description
of what your business activities are. You should include current revenues, customers
and your market position. You can also blow your own trumpet here! Note your
accomplishments and successes to date.
If it is a new market entry or entirely new markets you are going for, then
here is the place to describe any experience, training or competencies that
your company has.
1.2 Vision, Mission Statement and Objectives
Mission statements focus on the long-range purpose of your marketing plan.
“To educate entertain and enlighten our clients so that they become more
successful Marketers.”
Company objectives should be more specific and oriented towards action.
“We will deliver a balanced range of Marketing Solution Publications to
the U.K. and Europe through mail order and Internet.”
1.3 Team description
Who will deliver the plan? What are the resources and structure of the team
who will do so?
Management skills and capabilities. List any Marketing knowledge, sales skills,
copy-writing ability, etc.
Agencies - Include any Marketing consultants, PR agencies you are using.
If there are any gaps honestly point them out and do a Training Needs Analysis.
1.4 Main marketing objectives
You need only give a brief statement of these here to close the Executive summary.
2.1 Current market conditions
What are the trends in your market?
What are the dynamics facing businesses such as yours?
Who are your target customers?
What competition do you face?
2.2 Market trends:
You should describe the macroeconomic trends that directly affect the target
market that your marketing plan is aimed at.
This is where the PEST Framework is useful to include. (Sometimes referred to
as PESTEL, SLEPT or PESTE) the components are:
Political
Economic
Social
Technological
Environment
Legal
2.3 Target market
It goes without saying that you should be aiming all your marketing efforts
precisely at a target market or you are heading for a disaster.
All good marketing planning should follow from a very detailed segmentation
of the market.
Size? Is it growing, staying the same, or shrinking?
Customer characteristics e.g. age, sex, income level, location, marital status,
number of children etc.
Habits, patterns and values of target customer.
What are their wants, needs and desires?
What are their buying habits? - How do they spend their disposable income and
when do they buy and how do they buy? How many times and when?
2.4 Competition analysis
In the micro environment analysis of a Marketing Audit you will hopefully have
identified your present and potential competitors. What are their key products
/ services? How do they differentiate them selves? You should briefly explain
the actions that you will take to oppose or overcome your competitor’s
offerings.
I highly recommend you use Professor Michael Porter’s Five Forces Model
for this and the four other threats he identifies. Space does not allow me to
go into detail here although I have written a more comprehensive report in which
I include a diagram of the Five Forces Model available from my own website.
2.5 Issues analysis
You should briefly list such key external issues as government legislation affecting
your business, or new technological development that impinges on your product.
3.1 SWOT analysis
Strengths
Weakness
Opportunities
Threats
A major component of any marketing plan is the SWOT analysis. Strengths and
weaknesses are born of internal elements while opportunities and threats come
from outside.
When opportunities and threats are recognised they can then be examined from
the point of view of your product strengths and weaknesses.
What could we change or improve about our product to make it easier for the
customer?
What are our customers’ wants and desires? – We may possibly find
new opportunities by thinking about such questions.
It is worth remembering that a threat can also be an opportunity to you, while
a strength may also be a weakness depending on your point of view!
A business offering a vast selection of products may see this as one of their
strengths. But for the customer, confused by the bewildering array of options
as they try to find what they need, sees it as a weakness.
4. Positioning Strategy
Decide how you want your clients to perceive you in your marketplace.
Lowest price?
Best service?
Highest quality?
This is all part of the differentiation process…
5. Differentiation
You want to ‘stand out from the crowd’ so you need to make some
decisions on segmentation and the positioning of your business. Combine this
with your competitive analysis and you should be able to differentiate yourself
from the competition.
6. Key messages
Thinking about differentiation should also help you to decide on your ‘Key
messages’. Be warned that it usually takes time for these to make an impact,
to ‘sink in’, as it were. This means it is important to keep repeating
your consistent messages throughout any marketing campaigns.
7. The Marketing Mix
The 4 P’s…P is for:
Product – List your companies products and services. Include their key
features. Is there something unique about them? If you are launching a new product
or service include it here.
Price – There are many ways to set a price, some more scientific than
others are! Remember that pricing is an integral part of the marketing strategy.
Ask yourself is the customer willing to pay the price proposed and will it give
you any profit? Some prices may be set on a cost-plus basis – adding a
profit on to the costs of producing the goods or services. A better way is the
‘market-based’ price because it takes into account what your competitors
are charging.
Place – where do you sell? Direct, through an intermediary? Bricks and
mortar or virtual outlet?
Promotion – what activities are you going to use to create awareness of
your product or service to generate sales? This is also referred to as Marketing
Communications and includes direct selling, corporate events, brochures, web-sites,
advertising. You should be warned that many inexperienced marketers think that
the promotional plan is the entire marketing plan. It is, as you can see, but
one component of the marketing plan.
7a. Integration of Promotional activity
Have you got a consistent look and feel to all your marketing mix? It is wise
to make sure all your communications, brand positioning, propositions, messages,
etc are derived from a single brand position so it is not confusing to the consumer
by being fragmented. Also are there cross selling opportunities for you to exploit?
Only 4 Ps? – Funny, I thought I heard there were 7!
Before leaving the marketing mix I need to tell you about the Extended mix,
which adds People, Process and Physical evidence to Product, Price, Place and
Promotion.
If you are a service, or a not-for-profit organisation, then the extra three
Ps are most important for you. But don’t just assume that because you
are not, that they don’t apply!
People oriented organisations have to consider how their personnel make the
marketing activities more, or less, effective when dealing face to face (or
on the phone) with their public.
Process makes it easy for you to deal with the organisation. If it is a charity,
for example, today people expect to be able to go on-line, set up direct-debits,
pay by card and not just put money in the street collectors tin.
Physical evidence is expected to result from paying for a service or donating
to a charity. You expect to see some physical evidence of the use your money
has been put to.
8. Marketing Budget
You need a detailed budget for the next year showing the budgeted costs for
each of your promotional items.
9. Measurement
Results and feed back must be gathered each month and compared with the marketing
plan. When they are going astray you need to take corrective action.
Another tip is to ask your customers how they found you so that you can monitor
what parts of your communications plan are working. Note this and include this
in your measurements.
10. Milestones
It is a good idea to announce in the plan some marketing milestones you will
strive to achieve. When you pass them celebrate!
So there it is a step by step process to create yourself a professional Marketing
plan.
“A Marketing Plan to Copy” a more detailed
report, is also available by Nicholas Thorne MCIM from the Home
page at www.promarketer.co.uk.”
This report goes into more detail and includes marketing theory and models to
use, plus a Free template and a copyright-free cut and paste example plan.
It will show you some of the tools and theory that the CIM, one of the world’s
most prestigious marketing professional bodies, believes that their members
studying for the Professional Diploma in Marketing should know how to use. It
is not meant to replace a properly structured course from a CIM accredited training
centre, but to merely show you one marketing professional’s template for
approaching a marketing plan in a practical way.
Of course if you are studying for the Professional Diploma then this may well
help you create an answer with the attributes the examiners are looking for.
If, on the other hand, you simply want a quick Marketing Plan to apply to your
business then at the end is a chance for you to see an actual example that can
be cut and pasted for your own use.
It will also appeal to those who want more theory and models than you have read
in this article.
My name is Nicholas Thorne and I have a small business that I run - an independent
bookshop and a gift business on the net.
I have a degree in Business Studies (with a Marketing specialisation) awarded
back in 1985 at Leicester Polytechnic. At that time I became a Graduate member
and then, in 1989, a full member of the Chartered Institute of Marketing. But
last year I decided to be a marketing student again in order to keep up to date
with current thinking and to refresh my knowledge. I studied for and obtained
the CIM’s Professional Diploma in Marketing by doing a convergent learning
course on the net and in four intensive workshop days in my local town. It brought
home to me that what we did in our own business was fine up to a point. As the
course was very practical, with the chance to use an organisation of the student's
choice in the assignments we had to submit, I ended up formally setting down
the Marketing Plan on paper, that had been up there in my head for no one to
see!
To read it and get a package of tools including a more in-depth treatment of
Marketing Planning see: www.promarketer.co.uk
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