Firms that are successful in marketing invariably start with a marketing plan. Large
companies have plans with hundreds of pages; small companies can get by with a
half-dozen sheets. Put your marketing plan in a three-ring binder. Refer to it
at least quarterly, but better yet monthly. Leave a tab for putting in monthly
reports on sales/manufacturing; this will allow you to track performance as you
follow the plan.
The plan should cover one year. For small companies, this is often
the best way to think about marketing. Things change, people leave, markets
evolve, customers come and go. Later on we suggest creating a section of your
plan that addresses the medium-term future--two to four years down the road.
But the bulk of your plan should focus on the coming year.
You should allow yourself a couple of months to write the plan,
even if it's only a few pages long. Developing the plan is the "heavy
lifting" of marketing. While executing the plan has its challenges,
deciding what to do and how to do it is marketing's greatest challenge. Most
marketing plans kick off with the first of the year or with the opening of your
fiscal year if it's different.
Who should see your plan? All the players in the company. Firms
typically keep their marketing plans very, very private for one of two very
different reasons: Either they're too skimpy and management would be
embarrassed to have them see the light of day, or they're solid and packed with
information . . . which would make them extremely valuable to the competition.
You can't do a marketing plan without getting many people
involved. No matter what your size, get feedback from all parts of your
company: finance, manufacturing, personnel, supply and so on--in addition to
marketing itself. This is especially important because it will take all aspects
of your company to make your marketing plan work. Your key people can provide
realistic input on what's achievable and how your goals can be reached, and
they can share any insights they have on any potential, as-yet-unrealized
marketing opportunities, adding another dimension to your plan. If you're
essentially a one-person management operation, you'll have to wear all your
hats at one time--but at least the meetings will be short!
What's the relationship between your marketing plan and your business plan or vision statement? Your business plan spells
out what your business is about--what you do and don't do, and what your
ultimate goals are. It encompasses more than marketing; it can include
discussions of locations, staffing, financing, strategic alliances and so on.
It includes "the vision thing," the resounding words that spell out
the glorious purpose of your company in stirring language. Your business plan
is the U.S. Constitution of your business: If you want to do something that's
outside the business plan, you need to either change your mind or change the
plan. Your company's business plan provides the environment in which your
marketing plan must flourish. The two documents must be consistent.
The Benefits of a
Marketing Plan
A marketing plan, on the other hand, is plump with meaning. It
provides you with several major benefits. Let's review them.
·
Rallying point: Your marketing plan gives your troops something
to rally behind. You want them to feel confident that the captain of the vessel
has the charts in order, knows how to run the ship, and has a port of
destination in mind. Companies often undervalue the impact of a "marketing
plan" on their own people, who want to feel part of a team engaged in an
exciting and complicated joint endeavor. If you want your employees to feel
committed to your company, it's important to share with them your vision of
where the company is headed in the years to come. People don't always
understand financial projections, but they can get excited about a well-written
and well-thought-out marketing plan. You should consider releasing your
marketing plan--perhaps in an abridged version--companywide. Do it with some
fanfare and generate some excitement for the adventures to come. Your workers
will appreciate being involved.
·
Chart to success: We all know that plans are imperfect things. How
can you possibly know what's going to happen 12 months or five years from now?
Isn't putting together a marketing plan an exercise in futility . . . a waste
of time better spent meeting with customers or fine-tuning production? Yes,
possibly but only in the narrowest sense. If you don't plan, you're doomed, and
an inaccurate plan is far better than no plan at all. To stay with our sea
captain analogy, it's better to be 5 or even 10 degrees off your destination
port than to have no destination in mind at all. The point of sailing, after
all, is to get somewhere, and without a marketing plan, you'll wander the seas
aimlessly, sometimes finding dry land but more often than not floundering in a
vast ocean. Sea captains without a chart are rarely remembered for discovering
anything but the ocean floor.
·
Company operational
instructions: Your
child's first bike and your new VCR came with a set of instructions, and your
company is far more complicated to put together and run than either of them.
Your marketing plan is a step-by-step guide for your company's success. It's
more important than a vision statement. To put together a genuine marketing
plan, you have to assess your company from top to bottom and make sure all the
pieces are working together in the best way. What do you want to do with this
enterprise you call the company in the coming year? Consider it a to-do list on
a grand scale. It assigns specific tasks for the year.
·
Captured thinking: You don't allow your financial people to keep
their numbers in their heads. Financial reports are the lifeblood of the
numbers side of any business, no matter what size. It should be no different
with marketing. Your written document lays out your game plan. If people leave,
if new people arrive, if memories falter, if events bring pressure to alter the
givens, the information in the written marketing plan stays intact to remind
you of what you'd agreed on.
·
Top-level reflection: In the daily hurly-burly of competitive
business, it's hard to turn your attention to the big picture, especially those
parts that aren't directly related to the daily operations. You need to take time
periodically to really think about your business--whether it's providing you
and your employees with what you want, whether there aren't some innovative
wrinkles you can add, whether you're getting all you can out of your products,
your sales staff and your markets. Writing your marketing plan is the best time
to do this high-level thinking. Some companies send their top marketing people
away to a retreat. Others go to the home of a principal. Some do marketing plan
development at a local motel, away from phones and fax machines, so they can
devote themselves solely to thinking hard and drawing the most accurate
sketches they can of the immediate future of the business.
Ideally, after writing marketing plans for a few years, you can
sit back and review a series of them, year after year, and check the progress
of your company. Of course, sometimes this is hard to make time for (there is
that annoying real world to deal with), but it can provide an unparalleled
objective view of what you've been doing with your business life over a number
of years.
Source: The
Small Business Encyclopedia and Knock-Out Marketing.
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