A marketing plan is a written document that details the necessary actions to achieve one or more marketing objectives. It can be for a product or service, a brand, or a product line. Marketing plans cover between one and five years. A marketing plan may be part of an overall business plan. Solid marketing strategy is the foundation of a well-written marketing plan. While a marketing plan contains a list of actions, a marketing plan without a sound strategic foundation is of little use.
The marketing planning process
To be most effective, the plan has to be formalized, usually in written form, as a formal "marketing plan." The essence of the process is that it moves from the general to the specific, from the vision to the mission to the goals to the corporate objectives of the organization, then down to the individual action plans for each part of the marketing program. It is also an interactive process, so that the draft output of each stage is checked to see what impact it has on the earlier stages, and is amended.
[edit] Marketing planning aims and objectives
Abell suggested that the definition should cover three dimensions: "customer groups" to be served, "customer needs" to be served, and "technologies" to be utilized [1]. Thus, the definition of IBM's "corporate mission" in the 1940s might well have been: "We are in the business of handling accounting information [customer need] for the larger US organizations [customer group] by means of punched cards [technology]."
Perhaps the most important factor in successful marketing is the "corporate vision." Surprisingly, it is largely neglected by marketing textbooks, although not by the popular exponents of corporate strategy - indeed, it was perhaps the main theme of the book by Peters and Waterman, in the form of their "Superordinate Goals." "In Search of Excellence" said: "Nothing drives progress like the imagination. The idea precedes the deed." [2] If the organization in general, and its chief executive in particular, has a strong vision of where its future lies, then there is a good chance that the organization will achieve a strong position in its markets (and attain that future). This will be not least because its strategies will be consistent and will be supported by its staff at all levels. In this context, all of IBM's marketing activities were underpinned by its philosophy of "customer service," a vision originally promoted by the charismatic Watson dynasty. The emphasis at this stage is on obtaining a complete and accurate picture.
- Financial data—Facts for this section will come from management accounting, costing and finance sections.
- Product data—From production, research and development.
- Sales and distribution data - Sales, packaging, distribution sections.
- Advertising, sales promotion, merchandising data - Information from these departments.
- Market data and miscellany - From market research, who would in most cases act as a source for this information. His sources of data, however, assume the resources of a very large organization. In most organizations they would be obtained from a much smaller set of people (and not a few of them would be generated by the marketing manager alone).
- Review of the marketing environment. A study of the organization's markets, customers, competitors and the overall economic, political, cultural and technical environment; covering developing trends, as well as the current situation.
- Review of the detailed marketing activity. A study of the company's marketing mix; in terms of the 7 Ps - (see below)
- Review of the marketing system. A study of the marketing organization, marketing research systems and the current marketing objectives and strategies. The last of these is too frequently ignored. The marketing system itself needs to be regularly questioned, because the validity of the whole marketing plan is reliant upon the accuracy of the input from this system, and `garbage in, garbage out' applies with a vengeance.
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- Portfolio planning. In addition, the coordinated planning of the individual products and services can contribute towards the balanced portfolio.
- 80:20 rule. To achieve the maximum impact, the marketing plan must be clear, concise and simple. It needs to concentrate on the 20 percent of products or services, and on the 20 percent of customers, which will account for 80 percent of the volume and 80 percent of the profit.
- 7 P's: Product, Place, Price and Promotion, Physical Environment, People, Process. The 7 P's can sometimes divert attention from the customer, but the framework they offer can be very useful in building the action plans.
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It is only at this stage (of deciding the marketing objectives) that the active part of the marketing planning process begins. This next stage in marketing planning is indeed the key to the whole marketing process.
The "marketing objectives" state just where the company intends to be at some specific time in the future.
James Quinn succinctly defined objectives in general as: Goals (or objectives) state what is to be achieved and when results are to be accomplished, but they do not state "how" the results are to be achieved.[3] They typically relate to what products (or services) will be where in what markets (and must be realistically based on customer behavior in those markets). They are essentially about the match between those "products" and "markets." Objectives for pricing, distribution, advertising and so on are at a lower level, and should not be confused with marketing objectives. They are part of the marketing strategy needed to achieve marketing objectives. To be most effective, objectives should be capable of measurement and therefore "quantifiable." This measurement may be in terms of sales volume, money value, market share, percentage penetration of distribution outlets and so on. An example of such a measurable marketing objective might be "to enter the market with product Y and capture 10 percent of the market by value within one year." As it is quantified it can, within limits, be unequivocally monitored, and corrective action taken as necessary.
The "marketing objectives" state just where the company intends to be at some specific time in the future.
James Quinn succinctly defined objectives in general as: Goals (or objectives) state what is to be achieved and when results are to be accomplished, but they do not state "how" the results are to be achieved.[3] They typically relate to what products (or services) will be where in what markets (and must be realistically based on customer behavior in those markets). They are essentially about the match between those "products" and "markets." Objectives for pricing, distribution, advertising and so on are at a lower level, and should not be confused with marketing objectives. They are part of the marketing strategy needed to achieve marketing objectives. To be most effective, objectives should be capable of measurement and therefore "quantifiable." This measurement may be in terms of sales volume, money value, market share, percentage penetration of distribution outlets and so on. An example of such a measurable marketing objective might be "to enter the market with product Y and capture 10 percent of the market by value within one year." As it is quantified it can, within limits, be unequivocally monitored, and corrective action taken as necessary.
- Price - The amount of money needed to buy products
- Product - The actual product
- Promotion (advertising)- Getting the product known
- Placement - Where the product is located
- People - Represent the business
- Physical environment - The ambiance, mood, or tone of the environment
- Process - How do people obtain your product
- Packaging - How the product will be protected
[edit] Detailed plans and programs
At this stage,you will need to develop your overall marketing strategies into detailed plans and program. Although these detailed plans may cover each of the 7 P's (marketing mix), the focus will vary, depending upon your organization's specific strategies. A product-oriented company will focus its plans for the 7 P's around each of its products. A market or geographically oriented company will concentrate on each market or geographical area. Each will base its plans upon the detailed needs of its customers, and on the strategies chosen to satisfy these needs. Brochures and Websites are used effectively.
- Clear - They should be an unambiguous statement of 'exactly' what is to be done.
- Quantified - The predicted outcome of each activity should be, as far as possible, quantified, so that its performance can be monitored.
- Focused - The temptation to proliferate activities beyond the numbers which can be realistically controlled should be avoided. The 80:20 Rule applies in this context too.
- Realistic - They should be achievable.
- Agreed - Those who are to implement them should be committed to them, and agree that they are achievable. The resulting plans should become a working document which will guide the campaigns taking place throughout the organization over the period of the plan. If the marketing plan is to work, every exception to it (throughout the year) must be questioned; and the lessons learnt, to be incorporated in the next year's planning.
[edit] Content of the marketing plan
- Description of the product or service, including special features
- Marketing budget, including the advertising and promotional plan
- Description of the business location, including advantages and disadvantages for marketing
- Pricing strategy
- Market Segmentation
[edit] Medium-sized and large organizations
- Executive Summary
- Situational Analysis
- Opportunities / Issue Analysis - SWOT Analysis
- Objectives
- Strategy
- Action Program (the operational marketing plan itself for the period under review)
- Financial Forecast
- Controls
- Title page
- Executive Summary
- Current Situation - Macroenvironment
- Current Situation - Market Analysis
- Current Situation - Consumer Analysis [5]
- Current Situation - Internal
- Summary of Situation Analysis
- Marketing research
- Marketing Strategy - Product
- Marketing Strategy [6] - segmented marketing actions and market share objectives
- Marketing Strategy - Price
- Marketing Strategy - promotion
- Marketing Strategy - Distribution
- Implementation
- Financial Summary
- Scenarios
- Appendix
[edit] Measurement of progress
[edit] Performance analysis
[edit] Sales analysis
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- overall market share
- segment share - that in the specific, targeted segment
- relative share -in relation to the market leaders
- annual fluctuation rate of market share
- also the specific market sharing of customers.
[edit] Expense analysis
[edit] Financial analysis
- market research - including customer panels (which are used to track changes over time)
- lost business - the orders which were lost because, for example, the stock was not available or the product did not meet the customer's exact requirements
- customer complaints - how many customers complain about the products or services, or the organization itself, and about what
[edit] Use of marketing plans
[edit] Budgets as managerial tools
[edit] References
- ^ Abell, "Defining the Business: The Starting Point of Strategic Planning"
- ^ "The Marketing Imagination"
- ^ J. B. Quinn, "Strategies for Change: Logical Incrementalism" (Richard D. Irwin, 1980)
- ^ a b Baker, Michael The Strategic Marketing Plan Audit 2008. ISBN 1902433998
- ^ Quick MBA Marketing plan based on consumer and competitor analyses
- ^ Marketing plan basics Table of marketing targets, actions, means and results
- H. A. Simon, Rational decision making in business organisations, 'American Economic Review'
- J. Pfeffer and G. R. Salancik, 'The External Control of Organizations'
- K. Paolo Sumagaysay, "The oversaturated world"