How to Develop a Marketing Plan
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by Michael Fleischner February 17, 2006
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| Michael Fleischner |
| Michael Fleischner is the founder and President of MarketingScoop.com.
He has appeared on major media including the TODAY Show, Bloomberg
Radio, and more. With more than 12 years of marketing experience,
Michael has developed major brands as well as a variety of businesses
in need of leading marketing programs. Visit http://www.marketingscoop.com for more free marketing articles. |
| Michael Fleischner
has written 27 articles for PromotionWorld. |
| View all articles by Michael Fleischner... |
If you’re thinking about developing a marketing program, you need to
begin with a marketing plan. Having been in marketing for more than a
decade, I have seen my share of marketing plans. Some are short and to
the point, others are hundreds of pages thick and cost thousands of
dollars to produce.
The irony is that many of the expensive marketing plans end up on a
shelf and rarely get implemented. The simple plans, if researched and
implemented effectively, have the greatest impact.
Regardless of the scope of your marketing plan, you must keep in
mind that it is a fluid document. Every business needs to begin with a
well structured plan that is based in thorough research, competitive
positioning and attainable outcomes. Your plan should be the basis for
your activities over the coming months. However, you should always be
willing to enhance or redirect your plan based on what proves
successful.
Marketing Plan Basics
1. Market Research
Collect, organize, and write down data about the market that is
currently buying the product(s) or service(s) you will sell. Some areas
to consider: •Market dynamics, patterns including seasonality
•Customers - demographics, market segment, target markets, needs,
buying decisions •Product - what's out there now, what's the
competition offering •Current sales in the industry •Benchmarks in the
industry •Suppliers - vendors that you will need to rely on
2. Target Market
Find niche or target markets for your product and describe them.
3. Product Describe your product. How does your product relate to
the market? What does your market need, what do they currently use,
what do they need above and beyond current use?
4. Competition
Describe your competition. Develop your "unique selling proposition."
What makes you stand apart from your competition? What is your
competition doing about branding?
5. Mission Statement
Write a few sentences that state:
•"Key market" - who you're selling to
•"Contribution" - what you're selling
•"Distinction" - your unique selling proposition
6. Market Strategies
Write down the marketing and promotion strategies that you want to use or at least consider using. Strategies to consider:
•Networking - go where your market is
•Direct marketing - sales letters, brochures, flyers
•Advertising - print media, directories
•Training programs - to increase awareness
•Write articles, give advice, become known as an expert
•Direct/personal selling
•Publicity/press releases
•Trade shows
•Web site
7. Pricing, Positioning and Branding
From the information you've collected, establish strategies for
determining the price of your product, where your product will be
positioned in the market and how you will achieve brand awareness.
8. Budget
Budget your dollars. What strategies can you afford? What can you do in house, what do you need to outsource.
9. Marketing Goals
Establish quantifiable marketing goals. This means goals that you can
turn into numbers. For instance, your goals might be to gain at least
30 new clients or to sell 10 products per week, or to increase your
income by 30% this year. Your goals might include sales, profits, or
customer's satisfaction.
10. Monitor Your Results
Test and analyze. Identify the strategies that are working.
•Survey customers
•Track sales, leads, visitors to your web site, percent of sales to impressions
By researching your markets, your competition, and determining your
unique positioning, you are in a much better position to promote and
sell your product or service. By establishing goals for your marketing
campaign, you can better understand whether or not your efforts are
generating results through ongoing review and evaluation of results.
As mentioned earlier in this article, be sure to use your plan as a
living document. Successful marketers continually review the status of
their campaigns against their set objectives. This ensures ongoing
improvements to your marketing initiatives and helps with future
planning. |