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If you are now or ever have been part of a large company or corporation, you are familiar with planning exercises?business planning, financial planning, marketing planning, all sorts of planning. Some of it is done in groups, while some of it is done by individuals. And if it?s done ?right,? there will be some kind of document at the end of process, which will either be used as a reference throughout the period the planning covered, or will get put away and never looked at again.
I have a theory that in large enterprises the more ?intangible? the plan, the more fanfare goes with it, and the less useful the outcome is. For example:
Though I?ve oversimplified and generalized these three types of plans, the bottom line is that, in my experience, the marketing planning process in large corporations tends to be a wastefully resource-intensive exercise that doesn?t provide much value to the actual pursuit of the marketing function. There are a lot of flourishing gestures and intense facial expressions, and not a lot of really useful work gets accomplished. No wonder that smaller businesses rarely proactively engage in marketing planning. They don?t see the point. But hold on. Isn?t that?pardon the clich?hrowing the baby out with the bath water? Just because marketing planning is ineffective in many cases, does that mean it shouldn?t be done at all? I say no. In fact, I say that smaller businesses must plan their marketing programs?map out what they need to accomplish and how they will do it?preferably prior to the start of their business year. They need to step back and think creatively about how to use marketing most cost-effectively to meet business objectives, and how marketing can help them gain or retain competitive advantage. Smaller enterprises cannot afford to waste their resources?either human or fiscal. They cannot afford to pursue ad hoc initiatives that may or may not produce results. And they definitely cannot afford to implement marketing tactics whose results can?t be measured in some way. A marketing plan does not need a lot of fanfare, facilitated meetings, or fancy graphics to be effective?quite the reverse, in fact. It needs to be a useful reference document that spells out what programs will be pursued and why, and how those programs relate to each other. It also needs to specify how the effectiveness of the programs will be measured and how often. Here is an overview of the steps to take to arrive at a useful marketing plan for your business: Clearly state where you are today. What was your marketing expense for 2004 (assuming you work on a calendar year basis)? What percent of revenue does this represent? What specific programs did you implement? What results did they produce? What does the competitive landscape look like today? How about your market? Have there been changes over the past year that could affect you? Define your marketing goals. Based on your 2005 business objectives, what specific marketing goals are appropriate? Clearly state these goals in active terms (e.g., ?Participate in five industry trade shows with at least a 20% qualified lead rate,? ?Realize at least fifteen media mentions in local and trade press.?). Identify appropriate marketing tactics. Considering your goals individually and as a whole, what marketing activities are most likely to be successful? Think about how the activities can interrelate to give you the most bang for the buck (e.g., a newsletter that is put on your web site, emailed to your contacts, and printed in hard copy format maximizes your preparation/publication expense). Also, identify activities or tasks that will require third party assistance (e.g., graphic design, copy writing, or?ahem?4-R Marketing?s services! Determine how and how often you will measure the effectiveness of your activities. Marketing results can be intangible?how do you know whether your web site leads to sales or whether your trade show exhibit was as effective as it could have been??but they still need to be measure somehow. Come up with proxy measurements that you have confidence in?the number of hits on a certain web page, for instance, or the number of visitors to your exhibit who stay for more than five minutes?and that you can use to measure the degree to which your activities are hitting the mark in terms of achieving your goals. That?s basically it. A marketing plan in four pages (more or less). A fifth page might be a marketing budget that encompasses all the activities you have planned; this can serve as another metric to gauge marketing effectiveness. Now that you have a marketing plan for the year, here?s what to do with it:
If you are in any kind of business, no matter how large or small, you do need a marketing plan. But your plan does not need to be accompanied by a herald blowing a trumpet, and does not need to be a huge document with loads of graphics and tables. Create a plan that is concise, actionable, and measurable?and you will have an invaluable tool that will help you grow your business the way you want to. |
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